Cavedweller Read Online Free Page A

Cavedweller
Book: Cavedweller Read Online Free
Author: Dorothy Allison
Pages:
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pupils huge and glassy. He stood in the sunlight and gave her that grin of his.
    “What’s up, sweet thing?”
    “I’m moving out.”
    “Moving?”
    “We can’t live with you no more.”
    “Damn, Delia.” He squirmed inside his loose denim jacket. “Don’t I take care of you? Don’t I treat you and Cissy right?”
    Delia looked at him until he blushed, but his smile never faded.
    “There’s that house in Venice Beach,” he said finally. “That one Booger and me bought. It’s pretty messy, but it’s empty. Booger didn’t like the neighborhood. We could clean it up. You could go there.”
    Delia hesitated and looked away. The girl was watching them from the annex. “All right,” Delia said, “all right.”
    “Do you need anything?” Randall asked, one hand pulling money out of a pocket.
    She shook her head.
    “Ah, Delia.” Her name was thick in his mouth. “Honey,” he said, slurring even that.
    For a moment Delia hated him. She wasn’t just another girl he’d picked up on the street. She was the mother of his child, the woman who had thrown everything away for him. He had no right speaking her name with that sleepy smile. She stood there and let him see the contempt on her face.
    Randall held out the bills. Delia slapped him hard, then bent forward to kiss his cheek. The smell of his skin startled her.
    “I’m sorry,” he said.
    The whole time she was packing, Cissy sobbing in her bedroom, Delia kept wiping her face and remembering how Randall smelled that day, the tang of him. What surprised her was how little pain his death caused her. He had been dead to her so long that it was hard to mourn all over again, hard to keep in mind that all the time when they had so rarely seen him he had been going on with his dying. Somehow, in the middle of everyone else’s living, Randall had given up on his own life and started dying. That he had nearly taken Delia and Cissy with him was what stayed with Delia, the memory of shattered glass burning her skin, and the smell of the man she loved turning bitter. He had never expected her to get sober or leave him. He had never expected anything to change.
    Delia taped a box shut and kicked it hard. She had loved Randall from the first time she saw that angel smile bright under the spotlights. It had seemed a miracle when he pulled her up into his tour bus, the blood from her abraded palms black on his cream shirt.
    “Girl,” he had said. “Lord, darling, look at you.”
    Delia’s memories of that moment were as golden and smoky as two inches of whiskey in a thick tumbler. Jim Beam in a bar glass, a mound of crushed ice in a hand towel, the pervasive aroma of marijuana and patchouli oil. From the instant Randall helped her into the bus, Delia felt numbed and fragile. The whiskey he gave her warmed her belly, while the icy glass soothed her bruised temple. But it was Randall’s soft embrace that made the difference, the open, easy way he wrapped her around. She shouldn’t have trusted him, shouldn’t have been willing to let him touch her with the mark of Clint’s rage darkening steadily along the line of her face and neck. Maybe it was the whiskey. Maybe it was the bus wheels spinning clean and sure, taking her away from the nightmare behind her. Maybe it was that she had been wanting to run away for so long. But maybe it was just Randall and the way he had about him.
    Delia wanted to scream at the figure in her memory, at Randall’s body so long gone, so much of him wasted even when he was alive. He had been so beautiful when he took her in his arms, so strong and tender when she was so hurt. He had felt like the one man on earth she could hang on to and be safe with. How could she not have loved him? She loved him more than her life.
    After the accident in Topanga Canyon, trying repeatedly to get sober, Delia stopped going over to Randall’s place at all. Even when she slipped back into drinking, she wouldn’t let herself be cajoled into climbing
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