Nine.

Nine had always found the house on Joshua Tree Court dystopian. The entire community, lined with imported saplings and prefabricated town-homes, felt like something shiny the leaders of a New World would build after decimating every person, place, or thing that came before them. That the shutters were painted a pretty shade of purple was little consolation.

While her parents were picking out cheap interior fixtures—railings that would become rickety within a year of wear; faucets that would soon lose water pressure; sinks that never seemed to drain right; and taupe-colored carpeting that would mottle within months–Nine wistfully imagined her family back in their two-bedroom apartment across town, where the high school she’d attended for the past three years was just two streets away and her semi-estranged grandmother lived in a building one block over.

After her family settled in, Nine’s stepfather, Paul, who she’d been inexplicably calling “Dad” since she was ten years old, planted star-gazing lilies in the tiny front yard, because they were her mother’s favorite flower. This also did little to hearten Nine, who felt a prickling heat crawl up her arms, like a warm-legged troupe of invisible tarantulas, for the entire first year that they lived there.

“Dis child so insolent she doan know a good ting when she see it,” Paul lamented, watching Nine drift sullenly from room to room of their new home, openly, if silently, pined for the days before he was a part of her family. “In time she come to realize what she have.”

But Nine’s uneasiness persisted, as did the idea that she was living in some alternate world, where dread numbed emotion better than Icy Hot.

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Baptism

She didn’t know there was a man in the lighthouse. When she peeled off her white halter, wiggled out of a denim mini, and slipped flat, straw sandals from her feet, Kylie Stevens didn’t know she was being watched. The descent to shore was long and familiar. Her heels and toes slid along the steep sand drifts, leaving behind broad grooves instead of scattered footprints.

It was by those wide swaths that the watchman led two coroners down the beach hours later. And it was from that shore that four local news affiliates interviewed them  the next morning, crediting them with finding the body of former child star, Kylie Stevens. Her trademark blonde tresses were splayed and limp like wheat after rain. Seaweed tangled itself around her neck and ankles. The more highbrow reporters referenced Shakespeare’s Ophelia and Tennyson’s Lady of Shallot. The more sensational ones spared cultural reference in favor of overblown coroner’s photos and jarring headlines like, “Once-Beloved Star Takes Own Life.” The watchman was on record as saying it was a “definite suicide,” because he’d seen her with his own two eyes, and she walked straight out there, naked, like she was sure she could walk on water, and no matter how high the waves rose around her, she kept on, not even bothering to swim. She just… walked until she was under. When he saw that she wasn’t bobbing back to the surface, that she wasn’t kicking or splashing or flailing, he rushed down the beach, stumbling the whole way. He dove in, but there was no light. He groped the circumference of water around him and came up empty. He would not see her again until he returned to the lighthouse.

But what none of the people gathered at the ocean that day could have guessed was how fiercely she had, in fact, struggled. They couldn’t have known how salvageable a bad life appears as one’s losing it or the mystic despair that rises behind the breasts in those overlong minutes before the lungs decide to burst. She’d walked in of her own will, just as the watchman said. But in the time it took him to tumble down from his vantage, no one was there to see her but the spirits she’d only half-believed real, those unseen devils and angels that scholars labor to disprove and theologians insist are there, dispatched by heaven or hell to engage in a celestial tug-of-war for men’s souls. Kylie herself had nodded through many a sermon declaring the existence of unseen forces, but her agreement was superficial, never taking root between benedictions and wholly informed by her arduous, clumsy infatuation with the married man preaching these sermons.

That was years ago. An uncrossable chasm had widened between her and those flowery beliefs since then. She wanted no more of the fear that accompanied those churchy convictions. Nothing was out there, battling for her soul. She’d been certain enough of that to walk under the waves and sit cross-legged in the shallows and her confidence strengthened as she sat there, eyes closed, mind crystalline. There were few things so simple as suicide, a quiet passage into the larger nothing. She’d watched enough of herself. It was time to tune out. “This is what happens when you never emerge from baptism,” she thought. “This is how it is when they push you under and just… let you go.”

The Struggle.

“Rams.”

“What?”

“Give me five dollars.”

“For what?”

“For the struggle.”

“Whose struggle?”

“The Original Asiatic Black Man’s. The fatherless children of political prisoners’. The Brothers and Sisters in the Movement. Don’t ask me which Movement. Take your pick.”

“Whatever, nigga. I ain’t loanin’ you shit. You never pay back.”

“I ain’t ask for no loan. I said, ‘Give me five dollars.'”

He jousted his elbow into her ribs. They laughed and things were light between them for a minute. Then he turned to face her.

“You know I’d give you anything you ask for, right? The head of the last nigga who did you wrong, the earrings of whatever girl tormented you in high school… with the lobes still attached…”

Ramsey’s macabre edge never let her forget he’d been raised by addicts. His loyalty was fiercer than warranted, and his threats, however dark, were never idle. She was relieved he had so few friends. Were there more, he’d likely be doing a bid for one of them right now.

“You know, right?” His eyes bored into her forehead, like he was testing out his telekinesis.

She shrugged and hopped off the wall.

“When’s the last time you seen your Pops? I been lookin’ for him.”

“If you find him, hook me up with his coordinates. His ass been off the grid.”

“Been that long, huh?”

“When he’s on that stuff, he’s damn near unrecognizable. I be seein’ this saucer-eyed bum wanderin’-mostly ‘round Edmondson-and it look like it might be him. But I never stop to make sure it is. To be honest, I don’t really wanna know.”

Akousa felt incredibly sad when he said that, sad and suddenly grateful that her own Dad was the super-suspicious freak that he was. He wouldn’t even smoke grass unless he’d grown it himself. He wouldn’t have touched crack with a pole. Still, a slight shift in circumstance and they both could’ve been sitting there, commiserating the loss of their Revolutionary Deadbeat Dads.

“I’m sorry, Rams.”

He shrugged and even under a forest of facial hair, she saw the boyish helplessness settling onto his face.

“He always finds me when he gets cleaned up.”

“So you’re pretty sure he’s relapsed, then? I just saw him last month. He looked clean.”

“You know how long a month is for a junkie?”

She reached out and pressed her palm to his cheek. His beard was a lot softer than she expected, and she recoiled.

“What do you want with him, anyway?”

She thought his voice sounded a little hard, but she couldn’t place why. It was her turn to shrug again. “Somethin’ I wanna ask him.”

He looked like he wanted her to go on, but he didn’t say anything. He just stared at her until she expected him to lean down and kiss her, until she discovered she was disappointed that he didn’t. “Anyway,” she said, backing away from him, “If you see him again soon, tell him I want to talk to him, cleaned up or not.”

Ramsey nodded and pushed a keychain button to disarm his car alarm.