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  Facts of Life

  Gary Soto

  * * *

  Stories

  * * *

  harcourt, inc.

  ORUNDO AUSTIN NEW YORK SAN DIEGO LONDON

  * * *

  Copyright © 2008 by Gary Soto

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or

  transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

  including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and

  retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the

  work should be submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact

  or mailed to the following address: Permissions Department,

  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company,

  6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

  www.HarcourtBooks.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Soto, Gary.

  Facts of life: stories/Gary Soto,

  v. cm.

  Summary: Children and teens from all

  walks of life deal with the dramas of growing up.

  Contents: The babysitter—Capturing the moment—Citizen of the

  world—D in English—The ideal city—Identity theft—Seeing the future—

  Where did I go wrong?—Wise Uncle Joe—You decide. 1. Conduct of

  life—Juvenile fiction. 2. Mexican Americans—Juvenile fiction.

  3. Children's stories, American. [ 1. Conduct of life—Fiction.

  2. Mexican Americans—Fiction. 3. Short stories.] I. Title.

  PZ7.S7242Fac 2008

  [Fic]—dc22 2007035765

  ISBN 978-0-15-206181-4

  Text set in Minion Pro

  Designed by Linda Lockowitz

  First edition

  C E G H F D

  Printed in the United States of America

  This is a work of fiction. All the names, characters, places,

  organizations, and events portrayed in this book are products of the

  author's imagination. Any resemblance to any organization, event,

  or actual person, living or dead, is unintentional.

  * * *

  For Rita Rudolf

  and Frank Valderrama,

  teachers keeping pace with

  the young people

  * * *

  Contents

  Where Did I Go Wrong? • 1

  Capturing the Moment • 23

  Identity Theft • 41

  You Decide • 52

  The Babysitter • 64

  Citizen of the World • 85

  Wise Uncle Joe • 103

  Seeing the Future • 124

  The Ideal City • 134

  D in English • 157

  Selected Spanish Words and Phrases • 175

  Where Did I Go Wrong?

  TO ERASE THE MEMORY of an embarrassing strikeout in a slow-pitch game, Mickey Cortez entered Lupe's Super, Super Mercado and splurged on a soda and a bag of chili-flavored CornNuts. His baseball cap, which he customarily wore with the bill turned back, faced forward. He needed all the disguise he could find. His spirits had fallen to the level of his dragging shoelaces.

  His mind played back the pain of his failure. He grimaced as he recalled hurling down his bat. Then he had irrationally blamed the swirl of dust that kicked up just as he swung through the third pitch and ended the game, 5-4.

  "Stupid dust!" he had yelled. He scrubbed his eyes to make his point. But his teammates, who had been clinging hopefully to the chain-link fence, just groaned and began to gather their equipment.

  Now, to make himself feel better, Mickey bought food and drink. The owner of the store was a friend of his father's, so the boy was allowed to ignore the scrawled sign above the magazine rack that read: BUY THE MAGAZINE—DON'T JUST READ IT.

  He was eyeballing the latest issue of Lowrider magazine when a man whispered, "Oye, kid, you need work?" Mickey jumped, startled not by the man breathing down on him—and the fact that he was tattooed to his throat—but by the word he despised most of all. Work. As in pick up a shovel? he thought. As in weed the flower bed? As in get an old towel from the garage and wash the car?

  "What?" Mickey asked weakly. "Did you say ... work?"

  The man's eyes were small in his large face, but that was the only thing small about him: He was barrel-chested, with muscle-packed shoulders and huge arms and legs. He stood just a few inches taller than Mickey, but much mightier.

  "Yeah, kid, I'm looking for someone to help me move things. I'm paying good—thirty dollars—if you can spare a couple hours."

  The man had to retrieve items from his grandfathers house. Old Gramps, the man quipped, had eaten too much menudo in his time and had suffered a heart attack. He touched his heart, and then the gold dollar sign that dangled from a large gold chain around his neck.

  Mickey, seeing that this hombre was connected to a larger economy than the two quarters in his own pocket, became interested. At home he slaved for nothing—or next to nothing, just a dollar or two. Now this man was offering Mickey thirty bucks.

  "How long will it take?"

  "Not long," the man answered. "You're a strong-looking dude."

  Mickey inflated his chest and held the air as long as he could before slowly releasing it. "Okay," he agreed.

  He finished his soda and crushed the can in his fist, which made the man whistle and say, "You're strong, I'm telling you." Mickey smiled proudly and again inflated his chest.

  Soon Mickey was in an old squeaky truck moving down Fruit Street. He noticed the radio was gone. "Your truck get jacked?"

  "What?"

  Mickey pointed at the cavern full of loose wires.

  "Yeah," the man muttered, head shaking in disgust. "These be bad times. People just taking what they want." He scratched a tattoo that read BORN TO LOSE on his bicep. "But you know what the worst theft is?"

  Mickey shook his head.

  "It's when someone steals your soul."

  Profound, Mickey thought. The dude sounds like my dad when he's kicking it in his recliner and complaining about the government.

  The man introduced himself as Raul.

  "I got a friend at school named Raul," Mickey said. "Him and me want to start a rock group."

  "Is that right?" Raul asked. "What instrument you play?"

  "Nothing right now, but we're going to learn."

  "I'm sure you're gonna make it. And if not in music, then in sports. Bet you play ball, huh?"

  Mickey beamed. "Yeah, actually, I play slow-pitch." His recent outing, he figured, had been a fluke. The stupid dust messed him up—dust and everyone looking at him from the dugout.

  Mickey spied a car approaching from the opposite direction. It was his father's car. A zipper of fear ran up his back. What would his father think of his son in a truck driven by a total stranger? He was only thirteen. Or would his father be proud that he had found work?

  "Is this place far?" Mickey felt nervous. "My mom likes me to be home by five." He caught sight of a tattoo in Lowrider script, CARLOS, on the guys wrist. Which is it? Mickey wondered. Raul or Carlos?

  "Nah, it's just right around here," Raul answered.

  The truck turned a corner. They were in a nice part of their small city, with flowers standing up in well-fertilized soil and sharing their pretty faces with passersby. Automatic sprinklers were spinning out water on super-green lawns.

  "It's one of these," Raul said. He peered out the windshield splotched with the horrible deaths of insects.

  Mickey was certain his widowed aunt lived on this street. Her husband had died while ordering a hamburger. This was just about all he remembere
d about his uncle, a baker who went to bed before the good television programs started and got up while it was still night.

  Raul searched for a house, braked, backed the truck up a few feet, and crept into the driveway, cutting the engine and letting the truck roll until it stopped. The house was near the corner, and it's lawn sparkled from a recent soaking. A flag with smiling bunnies and turtles on it hung by the door.

  "Your grandfather lives here?" To Mickey, the house didn't seem very Mexican, and Raul, dark as a penny, was puro homie.

  "That's right. You wait here cause I got to go around the back and get the key" Raul jumped out of the truck and disappeared through a gate at the side of the house.

  Mickey wrote his name on the dusty dashboard, then leaped from the truck. Before he slammed the door, he noticed six or seven cell phones under the passenger's seat, maybe more. Was Raul a thief?

  "Dang," he whispered. Was he, a tender seventh grader, being pulled into a crime that would send him to juvie until he was seventeen? By then, his voice would have deepened like a frog's.

  Mickey didn't dwell on this question because Raul had appeared on the porch. "Come on, champ," he called with a wave. Somehow, Mickey couldn't disappoint this guy—he was sort of cool with all his tattoos.

  Once inside the house, he was greeted by cool air, a tidy living room, and bright artificial flowers in a vase. Raul closed the door behind them and pointed to a huge television. Mickey whistled. It could have been an altar in a church because a cross and a picture of Jesus sat on top.

  "We're going to move this?" Mickey sidled up to the television and perceived that it was taller than he.

  "Yeah, that's why I need you, champ." Mickey sensed Raul was trying to stroke him with a compliment. Still, he wasn't about to confront him and ask, "Hey, dude, you a thief? How come you got a tattoo that says Carlos?"

  It was just too late.

  Raul unplugged the television, tossed the cross and picture of Jesus onto the couch, and started to wrestle the TV from the wall. Together they moved one end, then the other, and walked the monstrous television across the living room to the front door. During this straining effort Mickey laid his eyes on framed photographs on the wall. One was of an elderly white couple, and below them were photographs of pinkish children. A flood of sweat sprang to his face. The zippers of fear went crazy on his back.

  Face moist with sweat, Raul pulled at the front of his tank top and fanned himself. "Go get me a soda."

  "What?"

  "In the kitchen. Grab me and you a cold one." Raul pulled out a white handkerchief and ran it across his face and neck.

  It's stolen, Mickey reckoned. The handkerchief belongs to the old man in the picture. Raul was not the kind of guy who carried an ironed handkerchief white as snow. He must have cased the place—were the old folks on vacation?—and broken in, discovered a huge television on which to watch the Raiders in the fall, and recruited a naive soul in the shape of a thirteen-year-old strikeout king.

  Be cool, Mickey reminded himself. He did what Raul asked and fetched two sodas. "Your grandfather is he, like, going to get better?" A split second later, he wished he could pull in that sentence like a fishing line. Why did he ask it?

  Raul leveled a mean, snakelike stare at Mickey. The moment was so quiet that he could hear a leaky faucet drip in the kitchen.

  Raul softened and answered, "Yeah, mi abuelito is gonna get better. The guy is strong, you know. He served in Nam and came back to pick grapes for fifteen years. Can you believe that?" He burped and added that his grandfather was a swell fellow who would give the shirt off his back.

  "Times was hard then, huh?" Mickey thought of his own Mexican-born grandfather, who, according to family lore, walked five miles through a sandy desert to get to school. His grandfather, often lit with drink, reminded them every Christmas that hed only gone up to eighth grade. He wanted his grandchildren to study hard and get jobs in office buildings where the air conditioning was free.

  "You got that right, homie." Raul downed his soda, tossed the empty can on the couch, and ordered, "Back to work. Got that twenty dollars waiting for you."

  Miffed that Raul had lowered his pay, Mickey nearly braved correcting him. He would need the full thirty dollars to buy the aluminum bat he had eyed at Big 5.

  But even more, he wanted out! He debated whether to sprint out the front door, screaming his fool head off, "Thief! Thief! Help me! Somebody help me!" He pictured himself running in slow motion, the way he did in dreams in which he was hauling as fast as he could to first base. He feared that Raul would chase him down. What would his headstone read? THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD

  STRUCK OUT IN THE FIRST INNING OF LIFE!

  By the time they got the television down the steps and into the back of the truck, both were sweating. "Is that all?" Mickey asked. "You know, I could walk home from here." He pasted a smile on his mug. He spanked his palms together to portray a kid done with work.

  "No, I need you to come and unload it. Wait here." From the porch Raul turned and pointed a warning finger. "Don't go anywhere! That ten dollars is going to be yours."

  He's lowering my pay again! Mickey's jaw dropped in disbelief. Raul was a cheap thief.

  The smart part of Mickey's brain advised, Run, sucka! Get your nalgas outta there! He took off, his arms chugging away, but he could swear he was running in slow motion. He looked back: Raul was nowhere in sight.

  I'll be good, he promised himself. I will, really! He swore he would cut the lawn when his dad asked and take out the garbage without making a face. He would wash the car properly, not just run a hose over the windshield. He'd even go to church. Yes, church! He would go with his mother and grandmother and not complain when they stayed for coffee hour.

  Mickey was cutting across the street when he heard his name. "Mickey! Mi'jo!" Confused, he slowed to a stop, sweat filling the folds in his neck. Who was calling him?

  It was Aunt Ester. She was in her side yard holding a pair of hedge clippers. He scampered to her, grateful for his good luck. He leaned over, hands on his knees, and tried to catch his breath. He had always considered his sprinter friend, Miguel Sanchez, an overrated athlete since he only ran a hundred meters. But he could see now that he was wrong. He had dashed no more than fifty yards and he was exhausted.

  "Are you okay?" his aunt asked. "What are you doing around here?"

  "I was..." Mickey stalled for a second, but then told his aunt that he'd been playing baseball with a friend.

  "You look so red. You want something to drink?"

  "Yeah," he answered.

  His aunt waved to the backyard, where the hose was coiled. He would have groaned about her stinginess, but he was grateful for the safety of her yard.

  Who cares? Mickey reflected. At this point he would drink mud! He was safe; he was alive! He drank from an old hose wrapped in places with cloth, then washed his face and neck.

  "Would you like some lunch?" His aunt sidled up to him.

  "Nah, I'm okay," he answered. "I really got to go, Auntie."

  She pouted. "Oh, shoot. I thought maybe you could help me do something." She shaded her eyes and looked at the roof. "I was cleaning the yard, but I cant get up there. Can you sweep up there? The roof?"

  "Sweep the roof?" Mickey questioned. His aunt was a certified clean freak and was known to skate around her polished floors on towels to protect the shine. Now was she taking her craziness outside and to a new level?

  "Really, Auntie, I got to go." He took a step backward, the water in his stomach sloshing.

  "Mi'jo," she sang. "I'm fifty-four. I'm old. I have nobody."

  Mickey found himself leaning a ladder against the side of the house, troubled because the day was not going as planned. All he'd wanted was a good day of slow-pitch, a quick dunk at his friend's house, and an hour or two of Game Boy before dinner. But the day had it's own bag of tricks.

  "My mom's going to kill me if I fall off the roof and die," he muttered.

  At first he walked d
ucklike, but finally wobbled to his feet. He breathed in the air, and let the summer breeze play with his tangled hair. The world seemed so different at that height. He took a few cautious steps, then nearly fell off the roof when he spotted Raul walking up the street.

  "He's gonna get me," Mickey whispered as once again he assumed a ducklike stance. His heart beat as fast as a rabbit's. He was glad that he had drunk like a camel because there was no telling how long he would have to remain on the roof.

  "Don't forget to get around the chimney, mi'jo" his aunt instructed from below.

  "I won't," he retorted in falsetto. He was glad his aunt hadn't called him by name. Raul might have heard it and, a gangster with time on his hands, would have waited for Aunt Ester to disappear into the house before he climbed the roof and got him.

  Mickey moved to the other side of the roof, away from the street, and began to sweep, counting the strokes: twelve, thirteen, fourteen. He counted to fifty and then peeked over to the front part of the house. Raul was nowhere to be seen.

  He finished sweeping the roof, descended the ladder, and herded the leaves, sticks, and pinecones into a trash can. He lugged the can to the alley, carefully unlatching the gate and peering out for fear that Raul was lurking there.

  Mickey returned to the back porch and peered through the screen door into the kitchen.

  "Auntie, I'm finished," he called, but not too loudly.

  His aunt rewarded his labor by presenting him with a sandwich in a paper towel. He was glad for a meal, as the chili-flavored CornNuts had long ago been destroyed by his digestive juices. His stomach growled.

  But when he peeled back the bread, Mickey saw only tomato—no meat, turkey or baloney, no cheese, no swipe of mayonnaise or mustard, or even a single leaf of lettuce. However, he assessed a sprinkling of salt and pepper the color of his father's five o'clock shadow.

  "You're a growing boy," his aunt remarked.

  "Looks tasty," he chimed. Dang, she's cheap, he brooded as he bit into the sandwich. Still, it was better than nothing. He devoured the sandwich in three bites, wiped his face with the napkin, and said, "That was good, Auntie. Gotta go."