FRESH
YARN presents:
Running
on Empty
By Julia
Borcherts
Part One
The minute I pushed open the glass door of that ghetto gas station, baby
on my hip, I realized that the clerk had been shot. He wasn't behind the
counter on the left; no, he was splayed across the back wall as though
he'd tried to make a break for it, blood pooling through the two holes
under the patch that said "Kevin" on his blue uniform shirt,
one mangled and bloody hand stretched out in front of him as though he'd
been pleading for mercy or trying to block the final shot that pierced
the front of his skull and blew out the back of his head. Bits of his
long, light-brown hair hung from the chunks of blood and bone smeared
along the wall where he'd hit and then slid down. He'd been a tall man,
I noticed, because his legs, positioned awkwardly akimbo in ways that
would have been too painful to maintain if he'd been alive, had knocked
over a display of motor oil three feet to the right. He was a young man,
too, I realized, probably younger than I was then, which was twenty-three.
I froze in
the doorway, $10 clutched in my hand, until my daughter wiggled on my
hip.
"Bottle,"
she demanded punching me on the shoulder. That, not Mama, had been her
first word, and she used it often. It was eight p.m. and she should have
eaten an hour ago, but we'd run out of gas and had to trudge through a
blizzard in this bombed-out stretch of neighborhood on the west side of
Rockford, Illinois.
"Bebop,
be quiet, we'll be home soon," I lied, sliding my own back away from
the glass front of the building and across to a rack of roadmaps. I didn't
know whether to bend down and try to get a pulse or go back out into the
dark, and I kept asking myself, what would my mother do, but she
was way too competent for something like this to happen to her in the
first place, and this was exactly the kind of situation that made her
judge me as inept. There was a pay phone across the lot, but I hadn't
seen or heard anyone screeching out into the street, and I'd been staring
at the gas station for half a mile as we walked down Auburn Street, willing
it to not close before we got there. This meant, to me, that the perpetrator
could still be skulking around the building, and if I tried to use the
phone, my back would be exposed.
There'd been
a series of murders that week, and I knew as soon as I saw this gas station
clerk slumped on the floor that I'd walked into another one by the same
killer. The day before, an attendant at the EZ-Go Service Station up the
street had been murdered, and the day before that, two clerks at Willie
Fredd's corner grocery store had each been shot in the head five times.
Later that week, two shoppers would be gunned down at a Radio Shack twenty
minutes away in Beloit, WI. By the next week, we would learn that the
killer's name was Ray Lee Stewart. His own father would turn him in for
the reward money, Stewart would get the death penalty, and in 1996, he
would be executed.
But that
night in January, 1981, I didn't know any of this. All I knew was that
I was trapped in a gas station with a dead body and a nine-month-old baby
crying for her bottle. I shivered as she squirmed in my arms. She reached
over my shoulder with her fat little hand, and I felt the wisps of her
hair, light-brown and fine like those on the dead man, brush against my
cheek as she grabbed a road map and threw it across the room, where it
hit the open cash register. The window rattled as the freezing rain hit
the glass and I realized that I could stay in there all night but aside
from the weather, we weren't any safer inside than we were out in the
parking lot and that sooner or later, someone would show up and at this
point, I'd rather it was the police. So I pulled Bebop around to the front
of my chest, pushed the door open and staggered back out into the snow.
Part Two
So, what the hell kind of mother, I can hear you asking, takes her kid
out in a blizzard, during a killing spree, in a car with no gas, and doesn't
even bring a bottle? Well, the easy answer is that my husband and I had
separated a week earlier, I was exhausted from shuttling my kid between
babysitters while I worked two jobs, I was taking my work clothes and
a load of shitty diapers to the Laundromat, and I had no idea how I was
going to make the house payment, let alone fix the broken gas gauge on
the car.
But the true
answer is that I really wasn't ready to be a mother. I was twenty-one
when I discovered I was four months pregnant, and while that may not seem
criminally young, it had taken me four months to discover this because
my husband Greg, a lazy but patient roofer with spiky, dark hair who moonlighted
as a drug mule for the Hell's Angels, was bringing home so much speed
that I hadn't gotten my periods for almost a year. Right around the time
Bebop was born, I had stopped speaking to my mother-a good-looking, no-nonsense
brunette who reminded me of Emma Peel from the Avengers: proficient
at everything from needlepoint to martial arts, which I was not. She was
funny and generous, a great companion for Scrabble games and old movies,
and I always felt like nothing truly bad could happen as long as she was
around to watch over me, but she couldn't help pointing out how I was
to blame when any event in my life went wrong, no matter how trivial the
consequences. The last straw was when I asked her for advice on how to
get my newborn to sleep through the night and rather than suggest any
actual techniques, she'd insisted that I was so completely inept as a
mother, that Bebop subliminally understood that it wasn't safe to fall
asleep around me. Then she insisted that Bebop and I stay with her for
a week so that she could try to undo whatever damage I must have done.
To make matters worse, I overheard her telling Greg to keep an eye on
me because I wasn't dumb, exactly, I just had no common sense.
So,
by the time I discovered I was pregnant, it was too late for a legal abortion
and even as self-absorbed as I was, it occurred to me that there was no
good reason for a married couple, even Greg and me, to give up their kid
for adoption. To my credit, I did give up drinking and drugs and signed
up for Lamaze classes as soon as I got the news, but I spent most of the
pregnancy smearing my belly with cocoa butter and examining my hips for
stretch marks. All I cared about was when I could start drinking again,
and how I was going to get my figure back. Greg responded to my badgering
about how we were going to afford to raise a child by picking up roofing
jobs in Southern Illinois, where it was warmer, making additional runs
for the Hell's Angels, and smoking a lot of weed.
But since
he was now gone approximately all the time, and I was stone-cold sober
and getting fatter by the minute, we did nothing but fight. By the time
I was seven months pregnant, I was sick of waddling around with a forty-two-inch
belly and he was sick of hearing me complain about how the baby bruised
the inside of my ribs and smashed my internal organs flat with her kicking.
But still, that was no reason for him to out me to the Lamaze instructor,
Martha, a fidgety redheaded nurse in her mid-thirties with plastic glasses
and three chins, who was a rabid fan of breastfeeding.
"Does
anyone have questions?" she'd asked the eight couples assembled around
the long, Formica-topped table with the "Breast is Best" signs
hovering over us. I almost stabbed Greg in the neck when he raised his
hand.
"My
wife drinks a six-pack of Coke a day and I can tell the baby has hiccups,"
he said to everyone, ignoring my kick on his shin. "And I think that
all that caffeine is probably making it nervous and all that carbonation
is probably giving it gas."
It was this
exact attitude in Lamaze class that led to our eventual divorce, but he
had a point. I wasn't about to admit this in front of Martha, though,
or the other couples, all of whom were at least ten years older than I
was and who had already, I could tell, begun to judge me because they
saw me lighting up a cigarette every week as we pulled out of the parking
lot. I was a little ashamed that they'd pegged me as trailer trash, but
I quietly judged them, too, and their eagerness to join the club of dull
moms whose conversation revolved around the feeding, sleeping, and pooping
habits of their kids. I was only twenty-two by then, and I'd decided that
I wasn't going to change anything about myself just because I was about
to be a mother, and that I would never, EVER, use the phrase "going
down" to refer to my kid's nap rather than my husband's activity
around my vagina.
"You
JERK!" I snarled in a whisper that he pretended not to hear. How
dare he complain about me when he's out snorting coke with the Hell's
Angels?
All of Martha's
chins began to wobble as she nodded at me. "You should give up cola
now," she said. "You certainly won't want that in your system
when you're breastfeeding."
I was debating
whether or not to ask Martha if that would be better or worse than the
kid getting a contact buzz from her dad's rampant weed-smoking when Greg
popped in with, "Well, she's not breastfeeding. She wants to wear
a bikini this summer and she's afraid it will ruin her tits."
Martha began
zipping and unzipping her sweater as the other couples collectively swiveled
their necks to stare at me and my rampant selfishness. "I can't believe
you don't realize how much more nutritious mother's milk is for the baby
than" -- Martha paused for emphasis -- "CANNED formula."
"She
eats Doritos for breakfast," Greg continued, glaring at me, his dark
eyes narrowing. "I don't think that's so healthy for the baby."
"And
she smokes," chimed in one of the nebbishy dads-to-be from the end
of the table.
Martha made
eye contact with everyone in the group except for me. "Well, maybe,"
she said, "in THIS case, formula might be a better choice."
It was, I am sure, the first and last time she ever made that statement.
So I was
going to get to keep my tits, but as Martha moved on to the next question,
I could see the other parents sneaking sidelong glances at me and I knew
they already felt sorry for my kid.
I wondered,
a week after Bebop was born, what Martha and those other couples would
say if they'd seen me almost drop her on her head at three in the morning
when I fell asleep on the couch while feeding her a bottle of, yes, formula.
And I thought about them again and how they'd judge me the night that
my husband and I split up.
Greg had
just returned home from Mexico, where he'd brought back something like
ten kilograms of heroin, most of which was shoved into our freezer. He
had smoked a joint while I unpacked his suitcase and we'd gone to bed
at ten, but I'd had to get up at midnight with Bebop, who was nine months
old by then and teething. I was crabby because it was my mother's birthday
and even though I missed her, my feelings were still too hurt to call
her or send her a card. I was also exhausted because while Greg enjoyed
playing with Bebop and never lost his temper with her, he was the kind
of dad who passed her right back to me as soon as she got fussy. I gave
her a teething biscuit to gnaw on, but she just kept whining, so I finally
rubbed some Jack Daniels onto her gums, poured a few shots for myself
and brought her into bed with us. I passed out and didn't feel her climbing
up onto my back like a little possum, where she fell asleep, too. Everything
was fine until I rolled over and Bebop flew off my back, screaming through
the air till she hit the wood floor.
She
was fine, it turned out, as she always was despite me. But Greg, who wasn't
happy about being woken up, started yelling.
"I'm
afraid to leave town half the time because I never know what'll happen
to my kid if I'm not there to watch you," he shouted, stomping in
his boxer shorts to the bathroom for a glass of water.
I cuddled
Bebop into my chest and kissed her sore head. "You think I'm a bad
mother?"
"Look,
even your own mother thinks you could use some help."
I jumped
off the bed. "You talked to my MOTHER behind my back?"
"She
only wants to help," he said quietly, running his hands through his
flat-top.
"YOU
don't help me," I yelled.
"I'm
trying to make money," he said. "And I never wanted kids. And
you're the mother. It's your responsibility, not mine."
That did
it.
"You
know what? I want a divorce," I said. I stomped into Bebop's room
to put her in her crib, and it broke my heart when I realized that she
was safer alone in her own bed than she was with me.
Greg slept
on the couch that night, and when I got home from work the next day, his
clothes were gone. He called a few days later to give me his new phone
number, but by then, I'd gone out and gotten a second job. He said that
he missed Bebop but that he couldn't take her with him, since he was always
leaving town for work. I didn't answer my phone for a week, afraid that
if I picked up, it would be my mom or Greg. I was trying to prove that
I didn't need anyone's help. But I realized that night -- two weeks into
our separation-- on my way to the Laundromat, even before I ran out of
gas but around the time I discovered I'd forgotten Bebop's bottle, that
I was failing.
Part Three
The wind was still blowing sideways at 30 mph and I could feel, through
the back of my coat and the scarf I'd wrapped around my face, that the
temperature had plunged below zero, but the snow, at least, was starting
to let up. I made it to the pay phone without incident and managed to
call 911. Then, I swallowed my pride and made a quick second phone call
to my estranged husband. Fortunately, he answered on the second ring.
"I can't
talk because I just discovered a murder and the killer might still be
here, but I need you to pick me and Bebop up at the Clark gas station
at Auburn and Kilburn right now," I told him.
I heard an
exasperated sigh. "Christ, Julia, what the fuck is wrong with you?"
I wanted
to slam down the phone but I didn't have anyone else to call. My mother?
I didn't want to speak to her till I was on top of the world and could
rub her nose in it, and tonight was definitely not that night.
"Can
you please just come?" I pleaded. "The car's out of gas and
the police are on the way but I don't want to walk home with the baby
in this blizzard."
My kid had
commenced to howling. I didn't want to go back into the gas station --
after all, there was a dead man on the floor and who knew if the killer
was hiding in the bathroom? But Bebop needed something to eat, and as
we walked back up to the building to wait for the police, I saw through
the plate glass window that there were a couple of vending machines I
hadn't noticed before, along the side wall across from the counter --
one for cups of pop and coffee; the other for snacks. Bebop didn't have
too many teeth yet, so, true to my white trash roots, I bought her a Hostess
Twinkie for dinner, which at least seemed less likely to choke her than
a candy bar or chips.
She was contentedly
gumming her Twinkie when a dozen squad cars careened into the parking
lot, sirens blaring, lights flashing -- the first set of cops leaping
out and running into the gas station without even slamming their doors.
The detective
arrived at the same time as my husband, who snatched Bebop out of my arms,
his heavyset frame quivering with aggravation. I snatched her back, handed
him my keys and asked him to go get her car seat so that the police I
was getting to know wouldn't feel compelled to arrest us for illegally
transporting the kid on my lap.
The snow
had stopped completely, but the temperature had plunged to 30 below by
the time the detective finished asking me questions and Greg returned.
Shivering, we strapped Bebop into the back seat and she fell asleep as
soon as he started the car, which is when I started crying. It was 1:00
a.m. and I was going to have to get up in four hours to get to work. I
was also going to have to wear a dirty, frozen uniform to my second job
as a waitress, because the laundry baskets were in the trunk of my car
and the Laundromats had closed while I was busy running out of gas.
"Do
you think," I sniffled, as we pulled out of the parking lot behind
a patrol car that was cruising slowly down the street, "that we could
come home with you instead?"
"You've
had a rough night," he sympathized, his dark eyes softening as he
put his arm across the back of the long bench seat.
"Maybe
if you were around a little more, we could have worked this out,"
I suggested, unbuckling my seat belt to scoot closer to him.
He retracted
his arm. "You should have thought of this before you told me to leave."
"Maybe
I made a mistake," I offered, and took his hand.
He pulled
off onto a residential street and we sat and watched a few squad cars
circle around the block while Bebop snored in the back seat, snuffling
through what sounded like a dream.
Finally,
he let go of my hand and leaned back against his window, shaking his head.
"This
sounds like an attempt at regeneration," he said. "And if we
learned one thing from zombie movies and Stephen King novels, it's that
regeneration is not a good thing."
I know I
shouldn't have done what I did next, but I was desperate. I leaned over
to put my arms around him, thinking that maybe if we started kissing,
I could talk him into taking us home with him, at least until I could
figure out what else to do. But he saw it coming and pushed me away with
both hands.
"Don't,"
he said, but he said it with some sadness. "It's too late for that."
And I realized
then that he was through with me. But I was going home to an empty house
on a freezing January night with a serial killer on the loose. And goddamn
it, I was only twenty-three years old. If I was going to get through this
and not fuck up completely, I needed help. I turned to my soon-to-be-ex-husband.
"I want
my mom," I said.
He nodded
his head and shifted the car into gear. And as the snow fell quietly around
us, he drove me to her house.
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