he hit a rare patch of smooth asphalt, clear of potholes and gravel. The frontage road was for shit, but at four-thirty in the morning, riding his skateboard under the hazy orange glow of the road lights, Frank had the whole place to himself, and the wind was freedom.
Over beyond on the highway, the big semis careened past with a whine that sounded like missile fire, and who could blame them for not stopping in this shithole suburb of Ashtabula? Like, how could you even have a suburb of nothing? Even his McDonaldâs wasnât twenty-four hours.
Mist from the lake dulled the golden arches. Frank ollied up on the curb, then, just for practice, he jumped and ground out against the cement pylon that supported the sign, flipping the board and coming down hard. The board got away from him. He caught it and tried again, making the landing this time. It was going to be a great day. When he rounded the corner to the service entrance, he stopped short, slamming his foot into the ground.
Something was parked way back in the lot, over by the Dumpster. It was centered in the circle of light from the security lamp, but shrouded in mist. Frank skated in closer. It had the unmistakable shape of a Winnebago, boxy and inelegant, but the body of the vehicle was covered with pop-riveted patches of tin and aluminum, like scales, while its roof had been shingled with some sort of dark, rectangular paneling. A conning tower rose from the roof. It looked like a robotic armadillo, a road-warrior tank, a huge armored beetleâit was the most radical thing Frank Perdue had ever seen.
He veered around to the front. The conning tower clocked around to follow him.
âHey!â he called out, getting ready to fly.
A door on the side of the vehicle creaked opened, and a figure emerged. He was skinny, wearing army-surplus pants and a ragged sweater with a knitted vest on top. His dirty blond hair was matted into finger-thick dreadlocks that hung down the middle of his back. His ears were pierced with a cluster of silver earrings. Frank relaxed. The guy wasnât old. Not a kid. Maybe in his twenties.
âHey,â the guy said. âPeace.â
Frank shrugged. Hippie retard.
âYou work here?â
Frankie shrugged again.
The guy looked around, stomping his feet to keep them warm and blowing into his cupped hands. His gloves were missing all the fingertips. His breath turned the air into clouds. âIâm Y,â he offered.
But Frankie heard âIâm why?â and he couldnât answer that.
âY,â the guy repeated. âYâs my name.â
Frankie shoved his hands in his pockets. Whyâs his name what?
âYou know,â the guy persisted. âY. Like the letter. Like the chromosome. Whatâs your name?â
âFrank Perdue.â He heard the words of his name come out of his mouth.
âFrank Perdue! You mean like the chicken dude?â
Here we go, Frank thought, gritting his teeth. It usually ended in a fight.
But the creep wasnât laughing. âWay cool. You his kid or something?â
âNo way,â Frank said. âMy parents are dead. No relation to the chickens.â
Y nodded. âToo bad. That guyâs a rich motherfucker.â His eyes narrowed, and he seemed about to say something more, but then he stopped. âSorry about your parents. So you work here or what?â
âIâm the janitor.â
âAwesome. Weâve been waiting for you.â
He pounded on the side of the vehicle. The door opened again, and another guy stepped out. He must have just gotten up, because he was digging his fingers around in his eye sockets behind his glasses. The thick lenses bobbed up and down. A woman followed, wrapped in a long printed skirt and bundled like the others in layers of sweaters. She had wavy brown hair and a silver ring through her nose. âHey,â she said, smiling.
âWell?â the guy with the glasses asked.