This challenge set off a whole new sereies of
storeis within my 7B
series. Blame it on Setch..:)
Buck's `Before' Box
By: Angela B
Notes: This is the first in a set of stories that will attempt to
fill in some of the missing pieces of the boy's past. I fully and
happily blame Setch for giving me the attack of the muses and the
road onto which I could travel back into their previous lives.
Note: This is an answer to the M7 Challenge: Create a story that
pairs one of the boys with a stuffed bear or some other kind of
cuddly. (paraphrased)
Thanks to NT for betaing this for me. Some days she really has a
tough job. J
Every one of the brothers had a box that Bobby and Janis Walker had
lovingly made for them . When they first arrived to live with them, Bobby
carved, engraved and varnished each box, and then passed it onto Janis, who lined it in felt. The tops of the boxes were engraved
with the child's name, followed by the words `before box'. Inside,
each held at least one memento from the boys' lives before joining
the Walker family.
Each brother took care of his own box and got to choose whether or
not he wanted to share the contents with the others. For the most
part, the boxes had been secreted away. For some, the philosophy
was "out of sight out of mind." The past was something a few of the
boys wanted to shut out, but some shared their other lives willingly.
+++++++++++++++++
Buck was sitting in the office, going over the list of needed
supplies they would have to purchase on their next trip to the
bigger town. The movement he caught out of the corner of his eye
made him smile as he kept working. The little figure approached
quietly, meandering around the room before coming to stand next to
his big brother.
Buck laid his pen down and looked over at the boy. "Hey, JD. Whadda
ya up to?" he asked.
"Nuthin'," JD said, dragging the word out.
"Where's Vin and Ezra?" the older one asked.
"Vin got to go home with Frankie, and Josiah will pick him up on the
way home. Ezra is upstairs doing his homework," JD explained.
"Ah," Buck said.
JD looked at his brother hesitantly before quietly asking, "Can we
look at your before box?" The youngest couldn't explain it, but he
loved to go through his brother's box and look at all the things in
there.
Buck looked at the work on his desk before him and then back at his
brother. "Sure. Why not?" he replied, breaking into a smile.
"May I go get it?" the younger one asked politely, keeping his
figure perfectly still. It was important to him for Buck to think he
could be trusted with such a gift. He knew that touching another'sbox without permission was absolutely forbidden; it was right up
there with breaking one of the commandments, and JD stood by the
rule solidly.
"You know where it is," Buck said in way of an answer.
JD left the room and returned a few minutes later carrying the
wooden box as if it was made of crystal and would crumble to pieces
if he breathed too hard. The black-haired boy sat the box down on
the desk carefully, then slid onto one of Buck's knees and waited
for his brother to open the box.
Buck lifted the lid off the pine box, relishing for a moment the
unique smell. He could feel the excitement coming from his brother
as JD fought to keep his hands to himself. Why JD loved his old
stuff boggled Buck's mind. Perhaps, because, beside him and Buck,
Nathan was the only other one willing to share his box all the time.
Josiah did every-once-in-a-great-while, when he was in an
exceptionally sharing mood, but only some of the contents. Vin sometimes would tell stories about the things he had done with his
mother, but the box's contents remained unveiled. As for Chris and
Ezra, well, Buck figured the rest of them had a better chance of
getting a personal tour through Fort Knox than they were of ever
seeing the contents of those two boxes. The past carried too much
emotional turmoil for the two to share. Their boxes, Buck guessed,
kept their memories safe so they couldn't overrun their minds, kind
of like a locked box for weapons. JD took his box out all the timeand shared with whoever happened to be in the room at the time. Buck
smiled as he watched his little brother's fingers wiggle and then
clinch in a fist.
Buck stared at the box before him as a myriad of memories flashed
through his mind, the same memories that came forth every time he
took the box out of its hiding place. His earliest clear memory of
his mom was when he was five. It was right before his sixth birthday
and his mom had come into his room to tell him that they had to
move from their small suburban two-bedroom house. He could remember
bits and pieces of that house. The regular living room, where he and
his mom watched TV together. The breakfast bar that separated the
tiny dining room from the kitchen, which was always stocked with
good food. His little bedroom with its small bed covered by a
comforter with some kind of animals on it, he couldn't remember what
kind now. The small bookshelves she had found cheap, and the two had
put together. He could remember getting up in the mornings and going
to her room and climbing under the covers with her and snuggling.
His momma always did laundry on Mondays and the sheets smelled so
good afterwards. His momma was the best in the world
His mom had been a showgirl in one of the casinos in Atlantic City.
Showgirls contracts were not written in stone by any stretch of the
imagination. In fact, a girl could lose her job over the smallest
infraction, from gaining too much weight and not losing it fast
enough, to consorting with the wrong customers. In this case, Linda
Wilmington had lost her job because, like every year, all the girlshad to compete with new tryouts to retain their spot in the show.
There were as many wannabe showgirls as there were slot machines and
Linda had lost out to a younger, bubblier, bigger built, bottle
blonde. She had promised everything would be all right. They were
just going to have to adjust. She found a job working nights out of
Lady Camille's House of Hospitality, but she had kept her word: they
had been okay. At least until that awful night.
Buck sat back in the office chair. JD stayed rigidly upright. "Why
don't you take them out for me?" the older one asked .
JD glanced back at his brother for reassurance before picking up two
matchbox cars. Handling the old beat up cars carefully, he sat them
down on the desk. Both cars spoke of hard use and more than a little
abuse. It was not difficult to guess that the cars had been raced a
lot of miles and had seen their share of crashes. On the tires that
still existed, the shiny metallic silver on the rims had been rubbed
off; now only the black undercoat showed. Flecks of paint had flaked
off and tiny dents covered both of them. These were well-loved cars.
"You got these for your sixth birthday," JD recounted the story he
had heard over and over. "Your mom worked extra hard so she could
buy you a store-bought cake and these came on top of it," theyoungster retold the history of the cars.
"Yep," Buck said with a fond smile. He and his mom had given up
their house and moved into an apartment right before his sixth
birthday. His mother had laughingly called it a
birthday/housewarming party. He could recall vividly the lime green,
plush carpet in the living room where he would play with those cars
quietly while waiting for his mom to wake up from her nap after
working all night. He had driven those two cars over that carpet for
miles, enough to drive around the world, he had thought as a kid.
Like Ezra and Vin, Buck had learned to take care of himself at an
early age. His mother, after losing her job at the casino, had
worked two jobs a lot of the time in hopes of earning enough money
to attend a trade school and make a better life for her son.
Sometimes, to make ends meet, she would work through a replacement
agency as a temporary secretary. He could remember worrying about
how tired she looked and she picked him up, telling him, "You keep
me going." Buck's smile faded as he remembered she never got to
fulfill that dream.
Next, JD lifted out a jacket pin. Its simplicity was nothing to laud
over. The fake gold had vanished over the years. The stickpin, with
its small little jewel set in prongs at the top, had been worn by
his mother on special occasions and held fond memories for Buck. He
could remember rare `special dates'. On those nights, his mother
had curled her hair, put on her best dress; (a short, black, slinky
one that shimmered in the lights) , put on her black, high heel, sling-back stilettos and, over the dress, she had worn a black waist-length coat with the stick pin stuck in the lapel, shining like a
crown jewel. Buck recalled how beautiful his mother had been. Even
today, he could see her in the kitchen baking, smiling that
contagious smile of hers, or in the living room , tickling him, and hear her booming laugh. He knew a small part of him would always
miss her.
The next item always confused JD. In the beginning, he had always
asked Buck why he had it and Buck always answered, "Just do. A
remembrance." After the sixth time or so, JD had stopped asking.
Lifting out the pacifier, he tried not to wrinkle his nose at the
smell of old plastic; after all, this was Buck's box and he was
entitled to keep whatever he wanted to in it.
Buck looked at the old pacifier and became a little sad. He and his
mother had picked it out, along with some other baby items at the
thrift store just a week before her death. When his mother had found
out she was pregnant again, she'd had her doubts about keeping it.
Then Buck found out and his joy at having a baby in the house
dissolved any doubts. Three months along, she had just about quit
working at Miss Camile's and was depending solely on her check-out
job at the local market. One night, only a week before she was to
completely stop working at the `House of Hospitality', a customer
she had known from previous encounters came in and offered her a
good sum of money if she would just have a little fun with him. At
ten years of age, only a year older than what JD was now, Buck
Wilmington lost his mother and baby sibling to a man who lost
control and had become excessively violent. His mother had died
before help from the other staff could arrive.
Linda Wilmington left Buck only with a selected number of girls she
trusted. That night his mother had placed him with someone whom she
thought she could depend on. Buck had never told her that the friend
wasn't that good at babysitting. He figured his mom had enough to
worry about without worrying about him, too. So, he never told his
mom how the friend, Monica, would leave him alone sometimes in her
apartment while she went out. There were other times when she would
drag him along and make him wait, either outside some rundown motel
room or inside the room while she walked the streets looking for her
next meal ticket. How the police found him alone in his babysitter's
ratty motel room she had rented for the night alone, he would never
know. Were they looking for Monica, herself, when they barged in, or
did they manage to track her roosting place down to locate him? He
just knew the police found him in that dump and he had been scared
out of his wits.
JD stared at the last item in the box. The one that always made Buck
break out into one of his big grins. He guessed that was why he
always chose to see it last, because the pacifier always made him
the saddest. Putting his small hands into the box, he lifted out the
monkey and held him with reverence.
"George," JD breathed out quietly.
The monkey was definitely old and was fifteen inches tall, more or
less. Its stuffed body had fur thinning in places. The upper torso
fur was colored yellow to distinguish it as a shirt and the lower
trunk of the body was in black fur to make it appear as if it wore
pants. The feet were big white plastic shoes sewed into place. The
face was tannish-yellow; the forehead creased with wrinkles over the
deep set, blue eyes; the nose puckered; the big lips, that had once
been painted bright red, now faded somewhat, opened wide and curved
into a smile that pouched outwards. One hand was opened and had its
fingers sealed close together while the other hand fisted around a
peeled banana, the whole thing molded as one piece. The monkey was
worn, ragged and appeared to have been loved as much as the racecars.
Buck smiled fondly at the poor old excuse for a comfort toy. It had
seen better days. His mind drifted back to the day he got the
monkey. It was one of super-duper-never-forget-until-you-die days.
His mother had come in his room, waking him with more vigor than she
usually had in the mornings. Buck had asked her what she was so
happy about and she announced they were going to the Board Walk and
spend the whole day together. Buck had been eight years old and as
excited as JD would get when he was wound up on sugar. Indeed, they
had spent the whole day there, riding the rides; (his mom had loved
the Ferris wheel the best), eating junk food and his mother had
allowing him to try many of the different carnival games. There had
been a specific one in which one threw a ball and had to knock down
some milk bottles. He had tried and tried before he finally gave upin frustration; then his mother had smiled very nicely at the man
behind the booth and asked if she could have a try. Miraculously,
she won and Buck had been so buzzed out on excitement he never
noticed the small kiss his mother had bestowed on the carnie. For
knocking down the bottles she had won the monkey.
That was his mom. She was always trying to do the best she could for
him. That was why she worked two jobs most of the time: to give him
as normal a life as possible. She had sworn to herself that no
matter what, they would never end up in some dive, invested with
roaches, mice or other infectious carriers. It was a complete irony
of life that it was that kind of place Buck was in the night his
mother had been killed. He had put Henry and his cars in his
overnight bag. Buck had never allowed the monkey out of sight when
not in school or around his friends. It was his best comfort when
his mother wasn't around and that was all he had from his life with
his mother. It had taken him forever to convince the police that the
hotel room wasn't his real home, that he lived in a clean apartment,
with food and decent beds and, most importantly, his belongings. It
wasn't until after Monica returned from her `services' and backed
Buck's story that he was finally believed. After all that, he still
didn't receive anything other than, by some will of a Good
Samaritan, he had wound up with his mother's pin. The rest of their
stuff poofed into thin air, probably Goodwill, Buck had surmised
later in his life. If not for this family and Chris, Buck couldn't
imagine what would have happened to him.
Sitting in the chair, watching JD slowly and methodically place the
few precious memories back in his box, Buck smiled. He didn't have a
lot of his `before' memories, but he had a slew of `after' ones to
make up for it. Buck looked upwards and smiled. Silently sending his
mom a message: "I love you, mom".