| finished digging
his trench and was attaching PVC pipe. The mayor had gone back
inside.
The
driver-side door had been bashed in, and it would have cost
more to fix than the car was worth. The driver had to work
his way over the stick shift and then exit on the passenger
side.
The personalized license plate read: X RAY.
“Armpit!” X-Ray shouted as he
crossed the street. “Armpit!”
The guys at work didn’t know him by
that name, but if he didn’t say something X-Ray would
just keep on shouting. Better to answer and shut him up.
“Hey,” he called back.
“Man, you’re really sweating,”
X-Ray said as he came near.
“Yeah, well, you’d sweat too
if you were digging.”
“I’ve already dug enough dirt
to last one lifetime,” said X-Ray.
They had met each other at Camp Green Lake.
“Look, don’t call me Armpit around
other people, all right?” Armpit said.
“But that’s your name, dawg.
You should never be ashamed of who you are.”
X-Ray had the kind of smile that kept you
from hating him no matter how annoying he was. He was skinny
and wore glasses, which were now covered with clip-on shades.
He picked up Armpit’s shovel. “Different
shape.”
“Yeah, it’s for digging trenches,
not holes.”
X-Ray studied it awhile. “Seems like
it would be harder to dig with. No leverage.” He let
it drop. “So you must be making a ton of money.”
Armpit shrugged. “I’m doing all
right.”
“A ton of money,” X-Ray repeated.
Armpit felt uncomfortable talking about money
with X-Ray.
“So really, how much you got saved
up so far?”
“I don’t know. Not that much.”
He knew exactly how much he had. Eight hundred
and fifty-seven dollars. He hoped to break a thousand with
his next paycheck.
“Got to be at least a thousand,”
said X-Ray. “You’ve been working for three months.”
“Just part-time.”
Besides working, Armpit was also taking two
classes in summer school. He had to make up for all the schooling
he’d missed while at Green Lake.
“And they take out for taxes and stuff,
so really I don’t take home all that much.”
“Eight hundred?”
“I don’t know, maybe.”
“The reason I’m asking,”
X-Ray said, “the reason I’m asking is I got a
business proposition for you. How would you like to double
your money in less than two weeks?”
Armpit smiled as he shook his head. “I
don’t think so.”
“I just need six hundred dollars. Double
your money, guaranteed. And I won’t be taking out any
taxes.”
“Look, things are going all right for
me right now, and I just want to keep it all cool.”
“Don’t you even want to hear
me out?”
“Not really.”
“It’s not against the law,”
X-Ray assured him. “I checked.”
“Yeah, you didn’t think selling
little bags of parsley for fifty dollars an ounce was against
the law either.”
“Hey, it’s not my fault what
people think they’re buying. How is that my fault? Am
I supposed to be a mind reader?”
X-Ray had been sent to Camp Green Lake for
selling bags of dried parsley and oregano to customers who
thought they were buying marijuana. That was also why his
family had to move from Lubbock to Austin shortly after he
was released.
“Look, I just don’t want to do
anything that might screw things up,” Armpit said.
“That’s what you think? That
I came here to screw things up? Man, I’m offering you
an opportunity. An opportunity. If the Wright brothers came
to you, you would have told them it’s impossible to
fly.”
“The Wright brothers?” asked
Armpit. “What century are you living in?”
“I just don’t get it,”
said X-Ray. “I don’t get it. I offer my best friend
an opportunity to double his money, and he won’t even
listen to my idea.”
“All right, tell me your idea.”
“Forget it. If you’re not interested
I’ll find somebody else.”
“Tell me your idea.” He actually
was beginning to get just a little bit curious.
“What’s the point?” asked
X-Ray. “If you’re not going to even listen . .
.”
“All right, I’m listening,”
said Armpit.
X-Ray smiled. “Just two words.”
He paused for effect. “Kaira DeLeon.”
It was eleven-thirty in Austin, but it was
an hour later in Atlanta, where Kaira DeLeon, a seventeen-year-old
African American girl, was just waking up. Her face pressed
against Pillow, which was, in fact, a pillow. There wasn’t
much oomph left in the stuffing, and the edges were frayed.
The picture of the bear with a balloon, which had once been
brightly colored, had faded so much it was hardly visible.
Kaira groggily climbed out of bed. She wore
boxer shorts and was unbuttoning her pajama top as she made
her way to what she thought was the bathroom. She opened the
door, then shrieked. A thirty-year-old white guy, sitting
on a couch, stared back at her. She clutched the two halves
of her pajama top together and slammed the door.
The door bounced back open.
“Doofus!” Kaira shouted at the
man, then closed the door again, making sure it latched this
time. “Can’t a person have some privacy around
here!” she screamed, then made her way to the bathroom,
which was on the opposite side of her bed.
Over the last three and a half weeks she’d
been in nineteen different hotel suites, each with no fewer
than three rooms, and one with six. So really, it was no wonder
she went through the wrong door. She didn’t even remember
what city she was in.
She suspected that Polly, her psychiatrist,
would tell her she had done that on purpose; something about
wanting to show her body to her bodyguard. Maybe she was better
off not telling Polly about it. Everything she said in her
therapy sessions was supposed to be confidential, but Kaira
suspected that Polly, like a parrot, repeated everything to
El Genius.
She had no privacy–not in her hotel
room, not even in her own thoughts.
The problem was that, except for Polly, there
wasn’t anybody on the tour she could talk to. Certainly
not her mother. And not her doofus bodyguard. The guys in
her band were all at least forty years old, and treated her
like she was a snot-nosed little kid. The backup singers were
in their late twenties, but they seemed to resent her being
the center of attention.
The only time she felt at peace was when
she was singing. Then it was just her and the song and everybody
else just disappeared.
Her concert tour would take her to a total
of fifty-four cities, so she wasn’t even half done yet.
She was now on the southern swing. From Atlanta they’d
be going to Jacksonville, then Miami, Birmingham, Memphis,
Nashville, Little Rock, and Baton Rouge, and on to Texas:
Houston, Austin, and Dallas. Originally the tour was supposed
to include San Antonio instead of Austin, but that was changed
at the last minute due to a monster truck rally at the Alamodome–not
that Kaira cared, or even knew about the change.
Other people took care of things like that.
Other people took care of everything. Kaira had accidentally
left Pillow behind in New Haven, and Aileen, the tour’s
travel coordinator, took a flight back to Connecticut and
personally searched the hotel laundry until she found it.
_ _ _
Kaira emerged from the bathroom thirty minutes
later wearing a hotel robe. She called room service and ordered
a glass of orange juice, pancakes, a cappuccino, and French
fries. It would have to last her until the concert. If she
tried to eat before the concert she’d puke. After a
concert she usually had a bowl of ice cream.
She got dressed, then stepped back out to
the sitting area. Fred, her doofus bodyguard, was still there,
going through her mail.
“As soon as I turn eighteen, you’re
going to be the second person I fire.”
Fred didn’t even look up. It wasn’t
the first time he’d heard it.
The television was on CNN. Kaira changed
the station to the Cartoon Network.
The first person she’d fire would be
El Genius. He was her business manager and agent, and also
happened to be married to her mother. They had gotten married
shortly before the tour. His real name was Jerome Paisley,
but he actually wanted people to call him El Genius. No matter
how hard Kaira tried to sound sarcastic when she used that
name, he always took it as a compliment.
Her father had been killed in Iraq. His name
was John Spears. Kaira’s real name was Kathy Spears,
but there was already a famous singer with that last name.
El Genius had come up with the name Kaira
DeLeon.
“You mean like Ponce de León?”
Kaira had asked him.
“Who?”
Some genius.
Kaira explained to the genius who Ponce de
León was, which was why her first CD was titled The
Fountain of Youth El Genius thought it looked classy for DeLeon
to be spelled as one word, with a capital letter in the middle.
Kaira had learned all about Ponce de León
when she was in fourth grade and living at the Pensacola Naval
Air Station. She had to learn the history of Florida. By year’s
end she was living at Fort Myer, where they’d been studying
the history of Virginia all year. She had never spent an entire
school year in the same place.
“So, anything from Billy Boy?”
she asked Fred.
Fred shook his head.
“Aw, too bad,” Kaira said. “He
writes such charming letters.”
“It’s not funny,” said
Fred.
“I think it’s hilarious,”
said Kaira. She sang, “Oh, where have you been, Billy
Boy, Billy Boy? Oh, where have you been, charming Billy?
”
Billy Boy had sent her four letters so far. He told her he
thought she was lovely, she sang like a bird, and someday
he would kill her.
El Genius hired Fred after the first letter.
Kaira wouldn’t have been surprised if El Genius had
actually written the letters, to scare her into staying confined
to her hotel room. He was such a control freak. She was sure
Fred told him everything she did.
“You got another marriage proposal,”
Fred said.
“White or black?”
A photograph had been sent with he letter.
Fred looked at it. “White,” he said.
“What is it with you guys?” asked
Kaira.
It was her seventh proposal, and every one
had been from a white man.
Fred carefully put the letter and the photograph
in a plastic bag.
“What are you doing that for?”
“FBI.”
“He said he wanted to marry me, not
kill me,” Kaira pointed out.
“For some people, it’s the same
thing,” said Fred.
Kaira glanced at him, surprised. The Doofus
had actually said something kind of profound.
“Let me see what he looks like?”
Fred handed her the plastic bag.
Kaira laughed when she saw the picture. “He
looks like you!” The photograph was that of a very muscular
man wearing no shirt. The only difference between him and
Fred was that his hair was long and wavy, while Fred had a
buzz cut.
“You ought to grow your hair out,”
Kaira told him as she handed the plastic bag back to him.
Seven marriage proposals, and she’d
never had a boyfriend.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpted from Small Steps by Louis Sachar
Copyright © 2006 by Louis Sachar.
Excerpted by permission of Delacorte Books for Young Readers,
a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part
of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission
in writing from the publisher.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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