Page 14 of Saving Rain


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Would Mom notice if I took five or six?

Hell, what about ten?

I wasn’t the best at math, but my mind raced with equations and possibilities. Ten pills would equate to a hundred dollars. A hundred dollars could feed us for a couple of weeks. A hundred dollars was worth the risk of Mom finding out and yelling at me. She was going to yell anyway. She always did.

But above all else, what made me open that bottle and count out ten of those little pink pills was the thought that, if I took them and stuffed them into my backpack, Mom would have ten less pills to take. And that was worth it—even if my thirteen-year-old brain couldn’t compute that she would always, always, always find the money for more … regardless of if the lights were on or not.

CHAPTER THREE

ROTTEN APPLES

Age Sixteen

“Thanks so much, Soldier,” Billy’s mom said after I finished loading a dozen bags of groceries into her trunk. “Am I allowed to tip you?”

My boss, Gordon, had told me I wasn’t supposed to accept tips. Sweeping the floor, bagging groceries, and helping people load them into their cars were what I was paid to do, he had said on more than one occasion, and accepting extra money for it was strictly prohibited.

Still, I hesitated for a moment as I watched her dig atenout of her purse. I stared at the bill in her hand as the very end of the green paper flapped gently in the breeze, tempting me with every flutter. Iheard the sound ofit like an alcoholic heard a cap pop off a beer—amplified ten times over, resounding louder than the rest of the world around me. I wanted to reach for it, grasp it in my greedy hand, and spend it on something. A nice, juicy burger or maybe a new pair of jeans down at the thrift store. Something I needed more than I wanted.

But I didn’t.

“Oh, I can’t accept tips,” I finally told her, peeling my eyes away from the bill after too many seconds went by. “Gordon doesn’t let us.”

Billy’s mom eyed me with more sympathy than I preferred. Then, she whispered, “You can take it, Soldier. I won’t tell anyone. You know that.”

She was tempting me too much. If she’d pushed just a little harder, I probably would’ve taken it and blamed it on her insistence and not on how badly I needed some new socks. But I shook my head profusely and thanked her anyway with a forced grin, and she sighed and tucked the money back in her purse.

“What about dinner?” she asked hopefully. “Can you at least come over for dinner? You haven’t been by in such a long time, and we’d love to have you.”

It wasn’t an exaggeration. I couldn’tactually rememberthe last time I’d been to Billy’s house for anything, let alone a meal. Hell, I only ever saw Billy at The Pit these days, when he wanted to get high after school or over the weekend. Sometimes, I walked him home if there wasn’t anybody else hanging around, but usually, I hung back to mingle and watch for the hungry eyes that always came my way.

No point in leaving if business was good.

But now, I wanted to eat dinner at his house. I wanted to remember what life used to be like before Gramma and Grampa died, back when I could afford to have a life outside of work, The Pit, and making sure Mom was still alive after she passed out on the couch. I wanted to remember,just foronce, that I was still just a sixteen-year-old kid, and I wanted desperately to simplyhave fun.

So, I lifted one side of my mouth in a smile and said, “I’d really like that.”

And later that night, I did like it. No, scratch that—I loved it.

God, I loved everything.

I loved the meatloaf shehad made. I loved the mashed potatoes and buttery green beans and gravy. I loved the fresh iced tea and cornbread. I loved how Billy’s mom didn’t care if I ate seconds or thirds. I loved hearing his dad talk casually about his workday. I loved that Billy’s mom asked her son how school had been that day and how Billy answered in aboredkind of way, as if she asked him that question all the time and he was sick of hearing it. I loved that they all listened to each other and cared, and most of all, I loved that his parents had no idea what their kid was up to after school and on Saturdays.

I loved that they couldn’t fathom the idea that he’d ever want to do shit like get high on little pink pills.

But I also hated it just as much because I knew the truth.

Billy was messed up, and I wished I knew how to stop it. I wished I could say something to his mom, I wished she knew the same things I did, but …

To tell her about him would be to tell her about me—and I couldn’t afford to do that. I couldn’t afford the lack of money or the way I knew her disapproval and disgust would pierce my heart and make mebleed outon her living room floor.

So, I said nothing about that. In fact, I said so very little about myself all night, afraid Billy’s mom might see between the lines and discover every dirty truth I tried to hide. Then, when it was time for me to leave, I thanked her repeatedly for dinner. She wrapped the rest of the meatloaf up and sent me home with it, insisting that I could stop by whenever I wanted, and then I wished for something else. Something I hadn’t wished for since Ihad beeneight years old and in the middle of my one and only birthday party.

I wish she were my mom instead.

***

“Where the hell have you been?” Mom demanded angrily the second I walked through the door. She said it like she’d been waiting for me, like she gave a crap where I’d been.

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