Into the Dangerous World
Books by Julie Chibbaro
Redemption
Deadly
Into the Dangerous World
VIKING
An Imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
375 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10014
First published in the United States of America by Viking, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, 2015
Text copyright © 2015 by Julie Chibbaro
Illustrations copyright © 2015 by Jean-Marc Superville Sovak
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA IS AVAILABLE
ISBN: 978-0-698-17046-9
This story happens in a fictional New York City, some of which existed, some of which never did.
The art was done in India ink, graphite, watercolor, spray paint, Sharpie, Design Markers, and collage on Strathmore paper. The display type is Vinyl OT, the text was set in Manticore, and some portions are hand-lettered.
Version_1
For Samsa
Contents
Also by Julie Chibbaro
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Acknowledgments
About the Author and Illustrator
“I too am not a bit tamed.”
—WALT WHITMAN
“Graffiti is an art, and if art is a crime, please God, forgive me.”
—LEE QUIÑONES, ARTIST
“If this is art, then to hell with art.”
—ALFRED OLIVERI, HEAD OF THE NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT AUTHORITY’S VANDAL SQUAD
1
THE NIGHT DADO burned down our house, he came upstairs and into my room. In his arms, he cradled a thick roll of brown butcher paper that he must have bought near the chemical plant where he worked. He smelled of sulfur, like a lit match. I hunched over my sketches on the wood floor, drawing the serrated edge of a knife, sharp and ready for a heart. I always drew on the floor, my paper spread out around me. There was no other space on our whole four acres that could contain me.
When Dado came in, he set down the paper and kicked it. We didn’t say anything, watching it roll out. He towered over me, and I couldn’t tell which Dado he was. He wore his combat boots and seemed jittery. Across the room, the paper stopped with a bump under the window. I didn’t know what he wanted me to do with it—a wrong move could set him off.
“I’m going to save you, girl,” he said.
I looked up just as he turned away and walked back out.
With my charcoal, I got my hand gliding across that paper like I had centuries of time and miles of surface to cover. Lately, Dado had been spending nights downstairs alone in his armchair reading Blake’s God visions and studying those wild drawings of dancing people. He kept close watch on our dome house on the edge of the Kill, on a property once filled with people who danced just like in the Blake drawings. People who left one by one until it was just me and him, Ma, and Marilyn.
I heard a shout.
No, I didn’t hear anything, that’s what happened. The fire blazed quietly.
Dado built that dome house with his own callused, blackened hands and with boards he hauled from the landfill. He hammered it together with nails he pulled from old planks and straightened. Together, we formed the triangle struts with two-by-fours, bolted them in rows around the perimeter until we had a second story, until the apexes made a five-pointed star. We fitted the last five triangles together as a pentagon. Over it all, we nailed the plywood and framed glass, closing it in from the rain.
I didn’t hear the crackling downstairs, the fire eating the dried wooden walls, the beams, the floors we had laid. Ma and Marilyn were making too much noise arguing in the sewing room, that’s what happened. Through my wall, I could hear only my big sister’s angry voice: “He’s crazy, you know that. We should go, Ma, like the others—let’s just go.” If she had shut up for one minute, I would have heard.
I didn’t know how long Dado was downstairs, burning.
Then Ma and Marilyn burst into my room, choking, coughing—smoke billowing in with them. The flames behind Ma petrified me.
“Open the window, Ror, get out, get out!” she shouted.
I couldn’t think or move. Loudest thing going through my head was My drawings! Years, boxes of notebooks, sketchpads, zines, album covers. Ma threw my chair and smashed the window and shoved Marilyn through the hole. Flames licked the walls of my room. I could feel them melting my wool sweater, the back of my pants, my canvas sneakers. I smelled burning hair. My hair.
“Dado! Where’s Dado?” I cried.
Ma came back for me.
I felt a searing up my neck, the burning; my throat seized. Ma slapped at me and grabbed me by the arm and yanked me up until I stood. She thrust me across the room; I plowed through the broken window, the glass catching my ear as I leaped toward the oak tree and slid down. Ma burst out and fell into the snow behind me, where Marilyn lay bleeding. I shivered, the sirens sounding far away, my skin howling.
I knew he was still inside.
Flames covered the whole dome. Fire trucks came finally, with pumped-up firemen who took one glance at us, then got straight to work. They slammed forced water from the tank into the outside walls, but it wasn’t enough to stop the fire. There were no hydrants. We lived in the boonies, homesteading on discarded land. If only I could move my limbs, if only I could let go of the wails.
Ma shouted at the fire, “Peter, Peter!” Orange light reflecting in Marilyn’s eyes gave her a wild look. I backed away from them, a snowball to my torn ear, that dark March night swallowing me. My sister clutched my
mother, their teeth chattering. I felt like I had nothing to hold on to, like I couldn’t reach them.
An ambulance came. Somebody in uniform threw a coat around me as the medics hurried toward me. I heard, “Back up, everybody, it’s gonna go!”
Fire whooshed up as the dome collapsed in with a crash.
Dado said he was going to save me, but I didn’t know what he meant. Staring at the thundering orange blaze, I thought I could have saved him somehow. Anger rushed up like the flames over the dome—I didn’t care. I thought I didn’t care. I thought that’s how I felt. For him to destroy himself and all we had created, I didn’t care.
I don’t know Dado, I thought in a panic. I don’t know what his face looks like. If I wanted to remember him, I’d have to draw fast.
2
THE COLD HALL clanged with rolling beds. A nurse took my pulse—I didn’t want to be here, I’d never been to a hospital, not once, not even when I cut into my thigh with the chain saw, taking down the maple sapling. I bawled and shrieked while Dado tied the tourniquet—“Think of the guys who walk across coals, who lie on beds of nails. Beat the pain, girl, beat the pain,” he’d said. Ma sewed the cut and spread on mashed garlic against infection. Blood seeped through the black stitches. I smelled like garlic for days, but it healed. I didn’t need to be in this hospital.
The gauze around my tender head seemed too tight, the pain causing little blue sparks to dance in the center of my mind. My ear throbbed. Across the way, Ma sat with Marilyn, who had three fingers splinted together. Despite the fire, and jumping out the window, and a busted left hand, my sister’s chestnut hair was still in a neat ponytail at the base of her neck. Ma’s eyes were bleak, her black hair wild. A pig came and talked to her. “They want to release you. There ain’t nothin’ left down there. Chief says I can’t let you go back. The whole area is condemned. You got somebody I could call?” he asked. His shoulders looked slack and dumb—Dado always said you could never trust a pig.
Ma said, “We don’t want to go back. There’s no going back for us.”
He sighed, like he didn’t know what else to do. “Yeah, so, can’t you think of a name of one person I can call for youse?”
Ma glared at him—I could read her thoughts—was he grilling her for info about the commune? “No.”
The cop glanced over at me, shivering on my gurney. I thought of Dado’s pot plants in the back field. The man’s voice softened. “There’s nobody we can call to help you?”
“I said, there’s no one,” she repeated, her voice hard.
There was no one left.
Marilyn pulled Ma over, and I heard her whisper, “What about Laura’s family?” Her Norm friend from school.
Ma shook her head. She said, “No. No one.” Her mottled face looked like a mask, like a stranger was in the emergency room with us.
I tried to think of somebody. “Gloria?” But all those people had been gone for years.
Ma whispered furiously, “Do you really think I would dig them up for anything?” I saw the thought—They were right about him—before she buried it.
The cop scratched his thigh, muttering something like, “Damn loco hippies,” while a young nurse came over to write out some papers.
“I gotta take off, kid,” he told me. “I’m gonna need the coat back.”
I looked down, and with a hit of nausea, I saw the blue, the silver shield. Without meeting his eyes, I unwrapped myself and handed it over.
“Take care of yourself,” he said.
I didn’t answer. We sat with our papers until a woman in tight polyester came over, talking like she didn’t even see us. “My name is Tammy, and I’ll be your social worker. I can arrange a night in a shelter until you can get yourselves straightened out. We can place you in a mission—”
“No,” Ma interrupted. “No church. We’re not going anywhere near any churches.”
Tammy regarded us warily, her middle-aged face set in stone. “There’s no room in the Staten Island shelter. Budget cuts.” When Ma folded her bone-thin arms against herself, Tammy backed down. “Okay, no church. Maybe we can find something in Brooklyn.”
We followed her into an office, where she made phone calls.
They sent us to a family shelter—a converted community center with linoleum floors and flickering fluorescents. A guy brought us to the rows of cots set up on a basketball court, a hive of families rustling and snoring under sick blue lights. Felt like the tent in the early days, all of us crammed together. I slipped beneath the itchy wool blanket, but I couldn’t fall asleep, listening to the ragged breathers, the baby criers, the snorers, my entire self a purple bruise of fury, my head stinging.
I couldn’t forgive Dado.
Why’d you do it?
3
THE PLACE STANK of anonymous farts, pit funk, dollar perfume. I watched messed-up girls cut their forearms and shins in the bathroom with light bulb shards. Behind Dumpsters, hopeless boys got stoned on glue. Short-tempered parents reined their kids in like dogs. Marilyn took off during the day to go to school somewhere, and I kept to myself. I stole the sign-in book to draw on, the newspaper from the guard’s desk to read.
If Dado saw us now—living on the man’s dime, patched up and homeless—he would’ve cited the Manifesto, Number 3: We vow not to depend on anyone to hand us anything. It would have killed him, Ma asking for handouts like she was.
But it was his fault we were here.
She got herself into the office with the stiffo social worker lady, making demands. “We can’t stay. We need help. We lost our house to a fire, and we need a place to live. We need money. I’ll fill out whatever forms you want . . .”
I could hear her from the hall where I watched Tom chase Jerry on TV.
Television was Number 6 of the Manifesto: We will not succumb to addictions, weakness, or self-pity—that’s what the man wants. We will not let him control us through TV, heroin, alcohol, or cigarettes.
They had a room with donated clothes. I dug out a pair of Gloria Vanderbilt jeans, death-black Doc Martens, a tight-waisted Columbia coat. A black watch cap to cover my wrecked head. It was my turn with the social worker: a sand-colored woman with pebbly skin, greasy curls, and huge plastic glasses who sat behind a desk piled with papers. She had the perfect name: Miss Gray. She gave me a form to fill out and wrote as she spoke, not looking at me. “Your mother told me what happened.”
“Yeah? What happened?” I said.
She looked at her file, checking. “Your house burned down. Your father died.”
What did she want me to say? I took a pen off her desk and flipped the form over and started to draw—the King Kennedys, four acres of utopian paradise Dado founded when I was two. The pond, the dome, where the chickens used to live, and the goats, before we ate them all.
“And the fire started—how?” she asked.
“How the fuck should I know?”
Her chair creaked. She slipped a handful of paper under my pen. “Show me,” she said. I kept drawing—Hawk and Waterfall. Gloria. The pot field. My tools. Pressing against my thigh was the knife I’d snuck past the guard, the one treasure I’d saved from the fire. I could stab it through the paper and hold it up to her, show her.
She said, “You’re angry, Aurora.”
No shit.
“You’re only hurting yourself, being so angry at him.” So she knew. She knew he burned the dome down.
His last words, “I’m going to save you, girl.” I felt her eyes leave me. I couldn’t forgive, I didn’t care how much I hurt myself. A heart can’t forgive so easily. Think about it, lady. Draw your father in an armchair decorated with matches and soaked with gasoline, and animate it.
Watch him light the fire and burn down your house and everything that’s important to you, everything you ever cared about in your entire life, and let me know if you forgive him, even
if you love him more than anything in the whole fucking world.
Miss Gray said, “Time’s up, Aurora. More tomorrow.”
I stuck the paper under my coat. When she turned away, I shoved the pen in my boot and left.
4
MA AND DADO on those acres of land—that’s where all this started. A couple of years after I was born. Four acres is big; you can get lost on four acres.
We came from the city. Dado brought us in the orange VW van, me and Halo and Ma, after he got beat up at an antiwar rally on Wall Street. We came with Jan and Dick, Gloria’s parents. Jan was a teacher who had dropped out; Dick changed his name and faith after Watergate. Now he was Ramakrishna, named after the Hindu saint; we called him Krishna for short. Carol showed up in her green station wagon—an herbalist, a childless, patchouli-scented soul mother—with her partner Randy, a damp man who could never meet your eyes. Randy taught us how to hot-wire electricity from the pole.
All the years we were there, felt like we were always waiting for someone to kick us off, but nobody ever did. Homesteading, Dado called it. Squatters, what the Norms called us. I hated that word—like squirt, squeamish, like “You ain’t squat.”
Ray and Linda, both Black Panthers, brought their twin boys Djefa and Kean, who were Halo’s age. I was the only one who knew the hidden difference between the twins—the teardrop birthmark under Djefa’s right arm, the mole behind Kean’s left ear. After them came Waterfall, a strawberry-blonde girl whose skin turned pink in the sun. And, finally, Hawk, who would never be seen without his fringe jacket, even during a heat wave.
Dado was in charge. He called us “the King Kennedys,” after the deaths of Martin Luther Junior and John and Robert—deaths he took harder than his own parents’, Ma said. Ray wrangled the animals. Hawk designed the round yurt tent. Carol took her wagon on dump runs. Krishna dug clay and threw pots. Randy managed the bees. The chickens were our job, all the kids. The fifteen of us lived in the yurt, heating it by burning scavenged wood.