Cures for Hunger by Deni BĂ©chard (story books for 5 year olds txt) đ
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- Author: Deni BĂ©chard
Read book online «Cures for Hunger by Deni BĂ©chard (story books for 5 year olds txt) đ». Author - Deni BĂ©chard
My father appeared contemplative, as if this were no longer about him. The other cop wanted to run his fingerprints and found a match. My father fit the description given by the man with the burned eyes.
âThe cop whoâd talked with me about boxing couldnât look at me,â he said. âHe was embarrassed to have spoken to a criminal the way you talk to a normal man.â
He cleared his throat, sounding embarrassed himself. I had the impression he was discovering his past, trying to see where it fit in his life.
âBut after the arrest,â he said, forcing a smile, âafter thatâthat was funny. The police wanted me to fly to California. My trial was going to be there, but you canât force a convict to fly. Itâs not legal.
âThey offered me a big meal, wine even, if Iâd take the plane. I said I would, and I stuffed myself. It was a great meal. Steak, lobster, wine. But when I got to the airport the next day, I said I wouldnât fly. I shook my head and told them, âIâm not getting on. I just remembered Iâm afraid of planes.ââ He laughed and repeated the line. âAfter that big meal they bribed me with, they were furious. They had to drive me across the country, from Florida to California. I didnât like the drive either, but I figured I stood a better chance of jumping out of a moving car than out of a plane.â
Seeing his face, I knew that I was right, that this was new for him. He smiled like someone hearing a story for the first time, losing himself in it.
âDuring that trip, I spent every night in a different jail. Whenever I got to a new one, a local cop had to fill out a form with my personal information. Each time, when he asked my occupation, I said, âUnemployed bank robber.â Most of those guys laughed, but there were some real hard-asses who asked over and over. I guess they finally just wrote down unemployed, because I didnât change what I was saying.â
âŽ
OUTSIDE THE SNACK bar window, the fog broke beneath occasional rain, but the sun never appeared.
âHow long will you be staying?â Jasmine asked.
âI donât know,â I said and sank deeper into my jacket, breathing against its collar to warm my throat. I closed my dog-eared novel. âHow long have you been living here?â
âA few months, I guess.â
âWhere do you know AndrĂ© from?â
âHe was friends with my parents. He offered me a job.â She explained that her stepfather was a drunk and my father had helped her leave home. I couldnât see the appeal in living at a ferry landing on a lonely stretch of river. She didnât even have a car.
I told her my own stories, about life in Virginia, stealing the motorcycle, but she didnât smile. She squinched up her face. âThatâs stupid.â
Drivers had shut off their engines, and a few customers braved the rain, hurrying toward us.
âWhat? Iââ
âItâs dumb. Does your father know?â
She got up, went to the orange counter, and took an order for coffee.
The rain fell harder, rushing from the overhang onto the shoulders of the man reaching for the sugar.
I couldnât imagine my life after Christmas. If I didnât return to school, Iâd have to repeat the year. With a rage that surprised me, I hated my father.
âIâm going inside,â I told Jasmine and ran through the rain and sat on the couch.
From the window, I could see the orange counter and, just inside, in the angle of unmoving light, the curve of her breasts beneath her sweater. Shadows hid her face. At the docks, the green light lit up, and the traffic crept forward.
After dark, as rain fell past the strand of colored bulbs, the red and gray GMC pulled into the driveway. I hid my book. Jasmine had just closed the snack bar, and my father came inside with a grease-stained bag of Chinese food. But once we were at the table together, we hardly spoke. He asked a few questions about sales and then looked at the cassettes next to the radio.
âOne time,â he said, âwhen I was traveling in the States, I pulled into a gas station right after Elvis had been there. I even saw his Cadillac leaving, and the attendant told me it was Elvis. Itâs too bad I didnât get there earlier. Iâd have liked to see the King.â
I considered this other brand of story, innocuous, innocent, a groupieâs celebrity sighting. He couldnât tell his real stories with Jasmine there.
She glanced between us, and not wanting to seem like a boy, I looked at him evenly.
His hand rested on the table, half curled into a fist. Slowly, he flattened it against the wood and studied it. He put it in his lap, rolled his shoulders, and swallowed. He met my gaze and stared.
âI canât believe I have to stay here,â I told Jasmine after heâd left.
âWhy? Whatâs wrong with being here?â
âHe wants to start a new family. Thatâs why heâs making me live here.â I repeated some of what heâd told me and explained his interest in Sara. She listened intently.
âIs she his girlfriend?â she asked.
âI donât think so. He just likes her, but sheâs too young.â
She pulled her knee to her chest and wrapped her arms around it. Her bottom lip was slightly loose, as if in a pout. She traced the leg seam of her jeans with a fingertip.
After a moment, she got up and went into the bathroom. I could hear her brushing her teeth. Then the door clicked shut, and there was only the sound of water whining in the cold pipes. I sat at the table and opened the notebook in which Iâd started a fantasy novel.
When she returned, she was wearing her
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