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    Sharp Teeth

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      even sleepy, he’s a bear you wouldn’t poke at.

      “Long time, Tati.”

      “Yeah, long time.” Tati, waking up, smiles

      as he watches Lark help himself to the fridge.

      “Tati, I’m going to need your car for a while.”

      “How long?”

      “Does it matter?”

      Tati’s smile wavers. “My car?”

      Lark nods as he drinks the water.

      Tati was once someone in certain circles

      ten years and twenty pounds ago,

      but things happened back then

      leaving deep scars and comeback debts

      that are thicker than blood.

      It’s all dancing fast across the inside

      of Tati’s mind right now.

      His smile grows again, big and true.

      “Sure, man, take the car.

      Far as I’m concerned,

      it’s yours.”

      Driving out of the city center

      Lark sees the sun rising up in the east.

      He thinks of her, he thinks of Baron, he thinks of the boys

      the fallen and the ones who are still out there

      reaching onward toward

      the fingers of the coming light.

      He pulls up in front of Bonnie’s.

      He knows the key is in the cactus pot

      He knows the security code is 323

      He has the computer on.

      He has a week till she comes back.

      And now he has a car.

      One thing that’s nice about this town,

      just like seeded soil on sunshine days,

      LA will blossom for you.

      All you need is intelligence, time,

      and a solid automobile.

      In moments he’s found six churches

      worth a visit, each one a new age variety

      where the lost ones land like dandelion seeds.

      He’s found a methadone clinic

      near the beach, sure to be populated

      with souls as empty

      as cracked swimming pools,

      and he’s posted a notice

      on an extreme sports site

      offering “Self-Reformation,”

      a radical technique

      for anyone seeking

      “discipline, adventure,

      and dynamic physical

      transformation.”

      Out of these three paths

      he might be able to sew together something

      resembling

      a somewhat decent pack.

      V

      Game day.

      Cutter and Blue are up, showered fresh

      as springtime ducklings, they’ve even got

      ties and church shoes on.

      Hair parted like choirboys.

      These are the regional finals

      goddamn it.

      Let’s get serious.

      The smooth carpet

      feels like luxury, the staff

      nod and smile as they pass.

      It’s been a month of generous tipping and

      now everyone working here treats them

      like champagne kings.

      Hitting the tournament room,

      Cutter greets Sara Dudley

      from the oversight committee.

      Blue pours them each a glass

      of orange juice from the buffet table

      which is overflowing with pineapple, melon,

      pastry, and cream. It’s all as abundant

      as any civilization

      could ever hope to be.

      They’ve seen these fellows around here before.

      Cutter sizes up Mr. Venable.

      The man looks sharp and cagey,

      he smells like bay rum and lavender.

      The big fellow, Mr. Goyo, wears the same scent.

      Cutter wonders what else they share.

      Blue looks at them too.

      He notices the way Venable’s eyes

      don’t match his smile, eyes warm,

      smile cold, eyes alive,

      smile dead. Blue doesn’t know what this means

      and he can’t read Goyo any more than

      he can read a stone.

      But he figures the play of the cards

      will say a lot, it always does.

      Cutter and Blue have their own conventions.

      Their play has mystified

      everyone from San Luis Obispo to Laguna Beach.

      Their bidding leaps like electricity arcing.

      Venable and Goyo have a quieter style.

      Cutter can tell that Goyo is the machine.

      Venable lets him lead them, Blue can almost smell

      the numbers burning in Goyo’s mind.

      Prim Sara Dudley announces the end of the first session.

      It is now eleven thirty.

      Cutter and Blue are up, two rubbers to one.

      But it’s been tough, a battle won by small degrees.

      At the coffee station they’re huddling, reviewing their hands,

      when Venable comes over and interrupts

      with some simple words that

      throw the entire day

      completely upside down.

      “I’m sorry,” he says,

      “to hear about your friends.”

      Cutter’s and Blue’s eyes lock, everything stops as

      they survey the quiet room.

      In other times, the blood would start flowing

      but now, there’s Sara Dudley checking the cards

      as a waiter methodically refills the water pitchers

      and Mr. Venable saunters back to his table

      to whisper in Goyo’s ear.

      Cutter’s hand goes to Blue’s shoulder.

      “Let’s finish the game,” he says.

      “The guy could just be fucking with us.”

      Fires devouring mountains inside him

      need to be quenched. Soon.

      But first, there are cards

      to be played.

      Predictably the next rubber goes poorly.

      For the good part of the early afternoon,

      their rhythm is off.

      It’s as if Cutter and Blue are trying to communicate

      through rusty, broken radios.

      Cards fall uselessly on the table,

      as hand after hand fall dead beneath

      the engine of the big fellow’s mind.

      It churns on as Venable hums concertos,

      his game gaining

      the sort of momentum

      that has always helped the assured

      crush the confused.

      Blue can’t hear anything but his heartbeat

      while Cutter has flashes of the past, the pack

      Lark, Baron, Con, the girl, Bone, Zack, the rest.

      Aces are seizing the tricks,

      and tricks are slipping away like time.

      Cutter just wants to change now and run out

      all the strength in his bones.

      Run past the concierge.

      Run down the street.

      Run into the hills.

      Run to the lakes and rivers where the pack

      would find the peace that comes away from the city.

      Where these animals all once ran,

      where they belonged,

      together.

      His concentration is shattered, his eyes filling with tears.

      And then he goes for the one strategy that might just

      buy him some time.

      He falls hard to the floor and closes his eyes.

      In the banquet room’s bathroom

      Blue throws water on his own face

      while Cutter breathes deep.

      “I haven’t thought about them,” he says.

      Blue crouches down to where Cutter is sitting

      on the gray tile floor, beneath the fluorescent lights.

      “I know. But now, we just need to win.”

      “Why?” asks Cutter.

      “Because Lark told us to.”

      Then they d
    o something they have never done.

      They reach out and hold one another, embracing

      like brothers.

      Five minutes later, they emerge

      and engage.

      They grit their teeth and

      gnaw through the rest of the day

      feinting and thrusting while

      defeat ebbs away

      like the end of a red tide.

      “We are wolves,” Cutter chants

      in his mind.

      “We don’t find the weak. We

      don’t prey on the slow.

      We simply eat absolutely

      fucking everything.”

      The answer is literally there

      in the cards.

      If you were watching

      you would see four men

      playing classical music

      with nothing but cards for an orchestra

      and, in the end,

      Cutter and Blue’s song

      is just a little bit sweeter.

      Sara Dudley and the other associates

      present the boys with their check.

      There is a picture taken for Bridge Monthly.

      As Venable and Goyo rise, Venable extends his hand.

      “We should play again,” he says, smiling.

      “Yes. Soon,” Cutter replies, shaking

      the man’s small, soft hand. “Let’s do that very soon.”

      “Why don’t you come to my suite tonight?” Venable grins

      with all the confidence of a sure winner,

      leaving Cutter to wonder exactly what he’s won.

      “Yeah, okay.” Cutter is

      exhausted, curious, and hungry.

      “We’ll see you there.”

      VI

      Frio and Jorge have been beaten bloody

      every day. Waking up

      sometimes in rooms filled with men

      other times they rise in rooms

      filled with barking, snarling dogs,

      teeth bared with growling wet spit

      spraying out onto

      the boys’ cowering bodies.

      Ray feeds them meat stew

      and offers cryptic advice:

      “The change is in you, boys.”

      “The power comes from within.”

      “There is your destiny, take it.”

      Then the men come from behind.

      The boys raise their arms but the

      blows persist, raining down again and

      again till the blackness returns.

      One morning, the beatings are coming down,

      as they always do—like cruel, unrelenting storms—

      Frio and Jorge have their backs to the concrete wall, they are

      struggling, shouting, begging, crying

      when there is a new sound, a strange one.

      Jorge turns to see Frio’s

      eyes squeezed shut. A gurgling, growling noise is

      coming out of his guts as he bows over.

      Jorge thinks, that’s it, he’s dead.

      But Frio’s body trembles and then

      in a wild spasm, his flesh starts to

      swell, bulging pink and raw.

      Frio’s eyes flare with panic as his bones shift

      beneath the changing skin, he reaches for his friend’s hand

      but finds his fingers curving in, as bone yields to claw.

      Jorge screams now too, high pitched and unrestrained

      he shakes with fear as

      furred needles puncture Frio’s face and arms.

      Angry teeth and pointed snout mouth and eyes that hold

      nothing familiar.

      His clothing is torn as his body, in thrusts and jerks,

      reshapes itself down to all fours.

      Jorge screams louder. Frio barks back.

      The men step back now

      and bend down,

      beginning their own dark change.

      Within moments Jorge is surrounded by

      a room full of angry dogs.

      As Jorge leans against the wall,

      the sound of his heart beating in fear

      almost drowns out the barking of the dogs

      who stare up at him with knowing eyes.

      Frio is no different from the rest of them.

      Jorge breathes deep and tastes vomit in his throat.

      The door is unbolted and Ray enters.

      He’s holding a .44 and the barrel

      quickly finds its way

      to the side of Jorge’s head.

      “You’ve seen the change,” Ray growls.

      “You’ve seen the destiny.

      Either find it within, man,

      or accept the end.”

      The steel is so real

      as Jorge inhales his fear

      and screams a new sound

      that can only be called

      a howl.

      VII

      Reading the paper, she scans an article

      while hummingbirds outside drink with their

      insatiable, jittery thirst

      compulsively sucking the nectar

      from the violet curling petals.

      Anthony turns the pages of the sports section.

      She smiles because she loves his every motion.

      She’s never felt it quite like this,

      where the love runs so deep

      and plays out as simple

      as any child’s game.

      She turns back to her paper,

      reading in the lifestyle pages about

      how some psychologists believe

      a few hidden secrets

      can actually help the average relationship.

      Yes, it’s true, they say, surprisingly

      the stupid drunken office kiss, a love sonnet from a neighbor,

      an in-law’s sloppy groping

      during dinner’s dish clearing,

      these can all be buried happily beneath

      the small and constant waves

      of studious devotion until eventually

      it is all simply

      carried out to sea.

      Yes, it turns out,

      the open, completely honest relationship

      may be as much of a myth

      as unconditional love itself.

      Even one good-size secret, these scientists say,

      even an affair that rises and then falls within a few seasons

      even this won’t rock the foundation

      if the foundation is granite strong.

      As she reads, her foot plays with her bag beneath the chair.

      She has three cell phones in there

      each wiped clean of the blood.

      The owners have left the world,

      their pain ended,

      screams silenced

      and much of what they ever were

      is now buried within her.

      The pack is drying up like a puddle in the heat

      and she is as unforgiving and uncaring as the sun.

      She is merely killing the spiders

      as she always does

      whenever she sweeps out the house.

      She drives to the ocean with Anthony once a week

      they swim and kick high against the waves,

      his boyish smile ear to ear as

      she hears laughter that’s so loud and full

      she doesn’t even recognize it

      as her own.

      This is love.

      And now here in this morning,

      this is love.

      She looks up at Anthony,

      thinking how, if he knew,

      if he had any idea,

      then the soil of her Eden

      would be ripped away

      leaving her alone

      on this unforgiving rock.

      The secret must stay

      and—according to the scientists—

      the love will live.

      The heart is quite comfortable with secrets.

      After all, its home is a dark wet place

      tucked in among all the other organs

      who aren’
    t talking either.

      She smiles, touches his toe

      with hers.

      The idle morning trickles on, pages of the paper turn

      until a crime scene photo

      leaves her thinking about her own recent acts.

      They were all so stupid,

      these weren’t victims, they were fools.

      Why do they go out solo?

      Who’s running that damn pack?

      Lark would never let his men go out alone

      unless it was undercover

      but each one she has called has appeared

      as lone as a lost lamb.

      They think they are strong, after all

      they have guns in their pockets,

      but bare teeth to an arm slow

      a gun’s progress considerably.

      Cocky men’s eyes grow bald with fear

      when their flesh is torn open

      and they face

      their weakness.

      Tomorrow she knows

      the tactics will have to change

      her luck has held three times

      and as Lark has always said,

      luck is stupid as a cow

      and as blind as a bat.

      What would you do

      to protect the love you have?

      Would you kill?

      Would you hunt to kill?

      Would you kill without mercy?

      And if you wouldn’t

      then how precious is your love?

      She comes around the table

      and straddles Anthony’s lap,

      he laughs, still trying to read his paper as

      she smiles and lifts her shirt.

      Within a few simple, fevered beats

      his lips are tasting the salt of her skin

      while she grabs a handful of his hair

      and holds him tight.

      Later, think later,

      for now there is only this moment

      his hands, his body

      and limbs stretch, muscles expand

      as his breathing reaches

      deep within her.

      The heart is a bloody thing.

      VIII

      Peabody turns onto the block

      ready for another night of the endless stakeout.

      Watching the nothing unfold, as his partner used to say.

      Twelve slow nights.

      He’s about to switch off the ignition when he sees the dog

      trotting down the street

      cock of the walk, so self-assured.

      It looks like the one back at Calley’s.

      Peabody coasts just behind,

      ready to throw the beast in the back of the car

      drive it to animal control

      and wait to see who shows up.

      Suddenly the dog stops

      looks back over its shoulder

     


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