Chris McCormick - Desert Boys

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A VIVID AND ASSURED WORK OF FICTION FROM A MAJOR NEW VOICE FOLLOWING THE LIFE OF A YOUNG MAN GROWING UP, LEAVING HOME, AND COMING BACK AGAIN, MARKED BY THE STARK BEAUTY OF CALIFORNIA'S MOJAVE DESERT AND THE VARIOUS FATES OF THOSE WHO LEAVE AND THOSE WHO STAY BEHIND. This series of powerful, intertwining stories illuminates Daley Kushner's world — the family, friends and community that have both formed and constrained him, and his new life in San Francisco. Back home, the desert preys on those who cannot conform: an alfalfa farmer on the outskirts of town; two young girls whose curiosity leads to danger; a black politician who once served as his school's confederate mascot; Daley's mother, an immigrant from Armenia; and Daley himself, introspective and queer. Meanwhile, in another desert on the other side of the world, war threatens to fracture Daley's most meaningful — and most fraught — connection to home, his friendship with Robert Karinger.
A luminous debut,
by Chris McCormick traces the development of towns into cities, of boys into men, and the haunting effects produced when the two transformations overlap. Both a bildungsroman and a portrait of a changing place, the book mines the terrain between the desire to escape and the hunger to belong.

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“Roxanne? No. She was with Linda.”

Watts pondered this. He knew I had nothing to gain by telling him of my sighting. But he also knew why I’d done it: I was from here, a place where gossip — not ambition — served as the driving force of stories.

“She looked good,” I said.

“Of course,” he said, hanging his head so his curls covered his face. “Of course she did.”

Just as my mom called off a second glass of wine, telling Teresa we ought to be going, Watts flipped his hair back and punched me lightly in the thigh. “You owe me a favor.”

“Oh, God,” I said.

“Stay here tonight.”

“What?”

“Just don’t go home.”

Our mothers were hugging. They made plans to see each other again, soon, just the two of them.

“Shit,” I whispered. “It’s my last night in town. You know I promised my mom I’d stay with her.”

“Look, I’ll take you back to the airport tomorrow, free of charge. But you have to help me tonight.”

“Daniel,” my mom said, coming over to hug him. “So good to see you.” Then, to me: “Ready?”

I rubbed my thigh where Watts had hit me. He’d been kind to pick me up from the airport, and generous to offer another ride in the morning. But that’s not why I owed him my loyalty. I owed him because he was still here. I owed him my loyalty because he’d given the Antelope Valley — and me — his.

“Actually,” I told my mom, “I thought I’d stay the night with Watts — with Dan — if that’s all right with you? And with Teresa, of course. We’ve got a lot of catching up to do.”

“But you leave tomorrow,” my mom said, maintaining her smile. “Don’t you think you should come home tonight, get a good night’s rest?” She put her hand on Teresa’s back. “They’ve got workers coming in and out, too, remember, so it’s better if you’re not in the way.”

“Oh,” Teresa said. “We can handle one more boy, no problem.”

“And we were going to have hatz banir tonight.” She fiddled with the Band-Aid on her thumb. “And I made all that boreg for you.”

“I’ll have some of the boreg we brought here,” I said.

“But who will eat all the ones we have at home?”

I didn’t have to answer that — my mom knew she was beginning to sound desperate. To cover this up, she offered a little laugh to our host and said, “I guess it’s already been decided.”

When we hugged, my mom said she could call off work again tomorrow, if I wanted, to spend another hour or so together before she drove me to the airport. But I told her I already had a ride, and plus, she couldn’t keep doing that, calling in sick. What I meant was she couldn’t afford to, but speaking of money always embarrassed her. So I made a joke instead. “Stop pretending to be sick,” I said, “or karma’s gonna catch up with you, and you’ll get sick for real.”

I arranged to swing by the house later to pick up my bag and say good-bye. Any pain I felt for choosing Watts over her was swept aside by the conviction that my mother and I had decades more to spend together. For another fifty years or so — an impossible amount of time to imagine — I would sit in traffic with her, run errands with her, taste-test her cooking. And eventually, once the drought ended and the town exploded into a true city around us, we would huddle together in the crammed aisle of a bullet train and reveal to each other the various occasions on which we’d sacrificed for each other in the name of loyalty. All the times we’d survived more than a cut.

* * *

The truck his father had outgrown started on the second try. It was just after midnight. In the hours since dinner, the only idea Watts had come up with was to head over to Roxanne’s house.

“To do what?” I asked.

“I don’t know,” he said. “Karinger would’ve had a plan. Even you might have something in mind. But my motto’s always been, ‘Just be there,’ and usually whatever needs to happen will happen.”

At this time of night, the roads were unlit and empty. The Antelope Valley seemed to revert back to the town I knew as a kid, and the drive toward the Karinger house seemed less like a distance to traverse than a stretch of time.

We arrived at a streetlight that had been switched to a flashing red, and Watts came to a complete, unnecessary stop. Nobody else was around. The rosary hanging between us reflected the red light, on and off, in perfect time. Watts didn’t move the car. Instead, he started to talk.

“It sucks being here without you guys,” he said.

I wanted to tell him that the word “here” was unnecessary, that I felt the same way in an entirely different place. But the truth was, leaving and being left produced two distinct species of nostalgia, and I could speak to only one. So I said, “Go on. I’m listening.”

He checked the mirrors constantly while he spoke, making sure we were alone on the road. “I lied the other day,” he said. “I know why Roxanne stopped talking to me.”

“I knew it,” I said. “It’s because of me. She hates me and doesn’t want you keeping in touch with me.”

Watts laughed. “Dude, not everything’s about you. Roxanne likes you a lot, actually. She thinks her brother was an asshole to you. She’s always trying to get him to apologize. No, this is about me, for a change.”

“For a change?” I asked, though — considering how badly I wanted to ask for more information about Roxanne helping me and Karinger be friends again — I knew he had a point.

“I don’t know if you can get how hard it is growing up in a place where all your friends look alike except for you. Like, nobody’s blatantly mean or anything, but there were a lot of times with you and Karinger where I felt kind of invisible. I don’t know if you knew that about me, but there it is.”

“No,” I said. “I didn’t know.”

“What I mean is, I’m trying to figure out how to tell you this story. I guess the best way is to just come out with what I did, which is I ratted out one of the workers at my parents’ company. For months I heard this guy — our age, maybe a little older — talking shit about my dad to another worker. He must’ve thought I couldn’t understand Spanish or something. My dad can be a prick, but he’s a good guy. He treats his employees fair, is what I mean. So I was pissed at this worker, who kept saying petty things about my dad — making fun of his weight, for example. Then one day I heard him mention to another worker that he was undocumented, and I sort of filed it away. I told myself, the next time he makes a joke about my dad, I’m going to — and, the next time he did, I went straight into my parents’ office and ratted him out.”

He paused. Then he said, “He’s always called me Danner, you know.”

“What?”

“My dad. He calls me Danner.”

We laughed, sort of.

“When I fucked up in school or something, he’d say, ‘Danner, you got that from your mother’s side of the family.’ He’s always wanted me to be more—”

“White?” I said. “So you told your dad about the undocumented worker because you wanted him to know you weren’t just your mother’s son, but his, too? You wanted to make your dad proud, and you didn’t care if you hurt someone along the way.”

“I don’t think so,” Watts said. He turned to look at me, and the already cramped cab of the truck seemed to shrink. I rolled down my window to breathe.

“Like I said,” he went on, “I think it was more about me, for a change. I think I wanted to feel that kind of power, the power of having somebody’s life in my hands. I also think I wanted the worker to know I wasn’t invisible. That I’d been there when he was talking, that I’d heard what he’d been saying and understood him. That I was like him, in a way, and also not. That I had something he didn’t have, which is that I could be two things at once. I think that’s why I had him deported.”

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