Boy Lost in Wild Read online




  Boy Lost in Wild

  stories by

  Brenda Hasiuk

  Boy Lost in Wild

  copyright © Brenda Hasiuk 2014

  Turnstone Press

  Artspace Building

  206-100 Arthur Street

  Winnipeg, MB

  R3B 1H3 Canada

  www.TurnstonePress.com

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic or mechanical—without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any request to photocopy any part of this book shall be directed in writing to Access Copyright, Toronto.

  Turnstone Press gratefully acknowledges the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund, and the Province of Manitoba through the Book Publishing Tax Credit and the Book Publisher Marketing Assistance Program.

  The stories in this collection are a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, events or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Hasiuk, Brenda, 1968-, author

  Boy lost in wild : stories / by Brenda Hasiuk.

  ISBN 978-0-88801-499-3 (mobi.)

  I. Title.

  PS8615.A776B68 2014 C813’.6 C2014-905788-1

  For my parents, Ernie and Pat,

  and my kids, Katya and Sebastian,

  and all those who grow up roaming Winnipeg’s back lanes.

  Contents

  Boy Lost in Wild

  Back Lane Lullaby

  Life on Ice

  Blood

  Roma Raj

  Sandwich Artists

  Little Emperor

  It’s Me, Tatia

  Boy Lost in Wild

  Four Facts and a Very Short Legend

  1. Black bears can reach bursts of speed of 50 km/hr and can outrun a person going up- or downhill.

  2. Most young black bears are forced into less preferred habitat by older, dominant bears, leaving them more likely to wander into human campsites, yards, and garbage dumps.

  3. The name Manitoba is believed to come from the words “manitowapow” (Cree) or “manito bau” (Ojibway), which mean “straight of the spirit” and refer to an island in Lake Manitoba Narrows where a “manitou” or “great spirit” beats his drums.

  4. Many Aboriginal families in Manitoba split their time between their home communities or First Nations “reserves” and larger cities like Winnipeg and Saskatoon.

  Swampy Cree Legend

  Long ago the land we know as Canada was empty. People lived in another land, up above. A voice asked a man and a woman if they would like to go to another land down below. They agreed and went to see Spider to get there. They did not heed his warnings, however, that only one person may look down from the spider’s line and, when both looked, they fell into the great eagle-nest. They were rescued by a wolverine and a bear. The bear taught the pair the ways of life on this new land. This is why the bear is respected and considered a wise person. When the White-Men came, they were interested in the Indians’ coats and skins, but the two groups of people did not understand each other.

  * * *

  It runs across the street, moving with a kind of lope. Out from behind the house that has a faded Santa waving from the roof all year long, it just appears, teetering a little from right to left, like its back haunches are too wide for its body.

  Campbell watches it cross the street and disappear into the lane behind the string of long, low buildings where he works. Its coat is black and silky, almost purple in the ten o’clock dusk. Some people might think it’s a dog, a Lab maybe, but there is no mistaking the lope. That lope is as familiar to Campbell as his own hands.

  Seeing it here, though, in the city, is ridiculous. All he can do is stand staring at the street, now empty except for a few parked cars.

  On the sidewalk, two little girls are stomping pop cans flat with their bare feet. One of them seems to be crying because it hurts.

  Before he can stop himself, Campbell shouts, “Did you see that?”

  The girl who isn’t crying picks up a bag from the ground and holds it against her chest like a teddy bear. “These are our cans,” she says.

  Campbell shakes his head and walks toward them, swinging his arms at his sides. Though the sun is almost down now, it’s still hot, and the tiny breeze under his armpits feels good.

  “I don’t want your fucking cans,” he says.

  The one still cradling the bag pulls up the crying one, bawling even worse now, and pulls her away.

  Campbell starts running toward them, then stops dead and waves his hands in the air like a scary monster. He shouts: “I don’t want your fucking cans!”

  He knows it’s mean. His legs tremble as if he’s just finished a long race. As the crying one gets dragged away, she gives him the finger, and Campbell doesn’t even laugh. He stands unmoving for maybe a minute, feeling shaky, and then turns his back on the girls and starts walking home, through the vacant lot with the big, graffiti-covered sign that says “Great Development Opportunity,” through the sour-smelling back lanes, rental yards filled with busted toys from the dollar store, old-people yards filled with big vegetable gardens and yappy little dogs, past the one with the cucumber plants bigger than him and the plywood bench that looks like a coffin.

  This time, though, this hot August night, he doesn’t really see anything around him and almost walks straight into a truck backing into the lane. When he gets home, and his mom passes him in the doorway and asks if he’s seen his younger brother, it’s like he does not hear her, and does not care.

  So. The young black bear runs across the street, and disappears into the dusk. Over and over in his mind for more than two weeks. Sometimes he remembers the little girls, stomping their cans, and sometimes he doesn’t. Sometimes he even remembers the cool breeze under his armpits. Other things float in from nowhere, like the orange of the sun disappearing so fast, and the half-moon still so faint that you almost miss it. But the bear is always there, plain as day, loping along, and then gone. Even now, in the ballroom of the Fairmont Hotel, the purplish black shape is moving somewhere in the corner of his eye.

  Campbell knows the people at the table think he’s not eating lunch because he’s nervous. Most of them, who are probably a lot older than his mom, shook his hand when they sat down, and asked him questions like what grade he was in. He found that if he answered with a smile and one word, they smiled back and went on talking to each other. But Debbie, the young one who has brought him here to this room full of people in suits and feels most responsible for his success or failure, can’t stop. “Don’t worry, Cam,” she keeps saying. “They’ll heat it up for you later. It’s natural to have the butterflies. Don’t worry.”

  He nods and smiles. He knows she thinks she is helping, but the only thing that seems to soothe him right now is the loud, thick noise of five hundred people talking and cutting and eating at the same time. It reminds him of the story about the kid from up north, where he comes from, who wandered off into the boggy forest while hunting with his dad. The newspaper said searchers thought the kid probably couldn’t hear their calls because the mosquitoes, millions of them, kept up a loud, relentless buzz. Maybe they’ll call his name, Campbell thinks, and he will not hear. They’ll have to go on to someone else, and then it will be over.

  Suddenly feeling the need to move, he puts his hands on the white tablecloth. The sleeves of his borrowed suit are too long, and all he can see is his fingertips. He puts them back in his lap and stares at his pla
te of chicken. The mushroom sauce has cooled into a disgusting jelly. Back home, wild mushrooms grow like grass, and Campbell has never gotten used to the store-bought kind. They smell good, but have no taste.

  “Really, Cam,” Debbie says, “we’ve practised and you know it practically by heart.” She keeps brushing her hair behind her ear, over and over, like a cat licking itself. “I’ll make sure they don’t clear away your chocolate mousse either. You don’t want to miss that, believe me.”

  She’s eaten everything on her plate except the chicken.

  Campbell nods some more. He has liked her since the first time she showed up, in a yellow dress with no sleeves, and said to him, “Your supervisor says you have a big mouth, and that’s exactly what we’re looking for.” She always seemed to throw him off his game, though. Now, he can feel his lips stretching across his teeth, like his smile is going to rip his face open. Part of him wants to reach over, punch her in the mouth, make her shut up, stop calling him Cam.

  His whole body shakes a little, like he’s just come in from the cold. He knows she has seen this, and this makes him want to punch her even more. Sitting right there, he can still feel the cool breeze under his armpits, even though, in this giant, air-conditioned room, his palms are sweating. Why didn’t he follow it, he wonders, for perhaps the zillionth time. It couldn’t have disappeared. A bear runs into the lane behind The Freak House, and goes where?

  In his head, it’s always “The Freak,” which is what his older brothers call the place where he works. Really, it’s a youth drop-in centre known as The Freight House because that’s what it was when the railway was still important. His older brothers said only little faggots hung out at The Freak, so Campbell stopped telling them where he went, until he got a job there. After that, his brothers still called him a little faggot when they borrowed money, but with a smile, as if they didn’t really mean it.

  “Cam,” Debbie whispers across the table. “Do you see the agenda?”

  Campbell notices the room is quieter now, and the lights are dimming. Under his water glass, a little soggy, is a piece of paper with fancy printing. He left it there on purpose, because when he first sat down and saw his name, he thought he might throw up on the white tablecloth.

  “First the Minister of Family Services, then the Mayor, then you,” Debbie says, holding up her agenda and pointing. She does this in the special way she has of making him feel stupid without meaning to. When he sees her hands are shaking, though, he fights the urge to reach over and touch them in the dimness, to feel how smooth and hard her pink nails must be.

  “We’re saving the best for last,” she says.

  The room is now completely dark, except for a bright light at the front. On a small stage covered in yellow flowers in pots, a guy in a suit introduces another guy in a suit. Campbell sits very still and tries to follow. But their words are only sounds in his head: a hand up instead of a handout; empowering the disenfranchised to make good choices; investing in the tools for success. They have no more meaning than sparrows chirping in the sun.

  It’s another sign, he thinks, and feels a wave of nausea rip through his insides. Since that night, after the bear, after the cops brought his little brother home all snotty and crying because the Handy-Mart didn’t have cherry cough candies and so he’d wandered all the way to the Co-op down Inkster and then panicked, Campbell keeps thinking of his cousin George, who would babysit him and his brothers sometimes when his parents went partying.

  George is the one who taught Campbell how to tell where he was by looking up and finding the North Star, and how to catch a gopher by laying a small noose over its hole. Now he’s in the city, too, and stands in front of the Handy’s and plays with himself. Campbell’s older brothers beat him up sometimes, in the parking lot or in a back lane, but mostly they try to ignore him. This doesn’t always work, and George comes up and shakes Campbell’s hand like some businessman on television, and then barks at him like a dog. Just thinking about George has always given him a terrible feeling in his stomach that only really goes away when he’s had a few and everybody is relaxed and fooling around. “Crazy George, all right,” he says. “The only one of us who doesn’t like to take his drugs.” And then everybody raises their bottles and says “to Cousin George.”

  Lately, Campbell hasn’t felt like drinking, and the sick feeling is always there. When his older brothers want to party, he knows they know something is wrong because they don’t call him little faggot. “What’s up, Campy man,” they say, “what’s with you,” but he only shrugs and goes to sit on the front porch, where the breeze feels good against his face. And when his mom looks at him, she doesn’t say: “Please, please, please, I don’t have time for this shit.” She just chews on her lip and then goes away.

  “Cam,” Debbie whispers, and Campbell jumps. She is crouching right beside him in the dark, and when she laughs, her breath is hot against his ear. He looks at her empty seat, and wonders how she could move with so little sound.

  “I didn’t mean to startle you,” she says, and it’s as if her breathing is louder than her voice. Even with his eyes closed, Campbell would know her by her strange, perfumy smell. “I forgot to tell you, when you go up, this man talking now will shake your hand before you speak. So just be ready, okay?”

  Campbell doesn’t nod right away. For two weeks she came to The Freak to help him write the speech, always wearing something different and smelling the same. Over and over, she asked him about himself, about his family and his goals, and he told her things he wasn’t sure were true, but could be. She typed right into a laptop computer balanced on her knees and looked at him the way his mom sometimes did, back when he was small, before she would run her fingers through his hair.

  “You’re going to blow them away,” she’d say, or other things he knew were crap but liked anyway. One time, she surprised him and said something really funny. “Don’t be nervous,” she said, sitting behind The Freak’s pool table and looking like one of those ladies that read the news on TV. “You know, you won’t even be able to see all those people, because the room will be dark and you’ll be on a stage. Like, if you have a booger hanging from your nose, they won’t even notice.”

  Now, feeling her breath quick and soft, part of him wants to wrap his hands tight around her neck and see what she will do. And part of him wants to pretend he doesn’t hear, so she will stay crouched beside him in the dark.

  He nods, and she squeezes his arm and sneaks away.

  Campbell closes his eyes and concentrates on the man’s voice at the microphone. But the words still drift over him, and he hears another man in his head.

  “Just a little guy,” his dad says. “Poor little shit.”

  Campbell remembers the first bear he ever saw, lying beside a pile of garbage behind their house. Campbell’s mom was holding him and he was crying, not because the bear was dead but because the rifle shot had scared him from sleep.

  “Just one taste,” his mom said, but she was crying too. “That’s all it takes, Campy. We can’t have them coming around all the time, eh.”

  The dead bear, he thinks, that was all the way back when she still cried. He remembers it was very early, barely light, and there was the smell of his mom’s bedtime hair and aspens in the morning.

  Suddenly there is clapping, and Campbell instinctively joins in. He can hardly feel his hands, but then he hears his name. The dark shape across the table that is Debbie is giving him a wave.

  As Campbell eases back his chair, a napkin drops from his lap, but he lets it fall without a thought. Cautiously, one foot in front of the other, he moves through the darkness toward the stage. In his mind, he is watching the black bear run from behind the Santa house, across the street, then where? Where does the fucking thing go in a crowded city?

  When he finally gets up to the podium, he is alone. The spotlight is unbelievably bright and he must shield his eyes to look around. Whoever’s hand he was supposed to shake has disappeared.

&nbs
p; He reaches into his pocket and takes out the folded speech, smoothes it flat on the podium, and stares hard at the paper, trying to forget, just this once, for these few minutes, that he is going crazy.

  My name is Campbell Sinclair. I am sixteen years old and I am the second youngest of five brothers.

  His mouth feels dry. Though Debbie has printed out the speech in giant letters, the words swim in front of him like tadpoles. He hears her voice, slow down, slow down and look up, but all he wants now is to be gone. When the words come back into focus, he does not even take a breath. He just reads.

  I spent my childhood in a small Northern community, and came to the city when I was ten. My dad, when he started drinking he couldn’t stop, and this created problems for my mom and us kids.

  He knows he is going too fast, not pausing in the right spots. But it’s like someone has pulled a string in his back and he cannot stop.

  We had moved to the city to start again, and it was hard for me. I didn’t know anyone, and there are many temptations for a young boy in the inner city. I started going to The Freight House to play pool. I got better and better, and one day, the staff asked me, since I was there all the time, if I wanted to work there and hang out with the smaller kids. I thought, why not, and now I’ve been working there for two years. The hardest thing to learn was remembering not to swear in front of the younger ones.

  There is laughter, and Campbell is momentarily thrown off. His lips stick to his teeth, and his tongue feels huge. Then he remembers that these people can’t even see if he has a booger hanging off his nose. They couldn’t see if he was drooling, or had a giant oozing scab on his forehead. And Debbie has given him these words that are supposed to blow them away.

  He licks his lips and starts reading again, but more slowly now.