Little Deadly Things

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Authors: Harry Steinman
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and the family room and especially from Dad’s chair.
    Jim was thirteen but displayed few marks of maturation. Classmates teased him for his soft looks. His Adam’s apple, cheekbones, and jaw line were still undefined, and framed by a mop of sandy brown hair, as unresponsive in its way as Ringer’s.
    Mom called Jim. “Clean up before your father gets home. Let’s have a nice dinner tonight.”
    Mom’s voice sounded strained and Jim guessed Dad had called ahead, in a mood. Galvin Ecco, his father, was an attorney. Lawyers in the movies were smart and always in control. Lately, Dad was not in control. He stared and snapped, and then there would be a reckoning. Sometimes just a slap, sometimes more.
    When Dad talked about law, he was at ease. “A thing is, or it is not,” was his favorite saying. Mom said he was too rigid and that was bad for business. Jim didn’t know who was right but that more and more, Dad lost his cases, his clients, and his temper.
    “Jimmy. Clean up now before your father gets home.”
    Too late. Dad arrived. He walked as stiff as a man with a rash and wore a dark navy suit with faint white pinstripes and frayed cuffs. His hair was shaped into a precise crew cut that would please a drill sergeant. Its color reminded Jim of a thunder cloud.
    Jim watched as Dad looked left and right, peering over his glasses. “I can’t control the courts,” he often said, “but the damned house better be clean.”
    Dad’s first words to Jim were, “Is your room neat?”
    “Neat as a pin.”
    “I’ll be the judge of that. I expect your room to be immaculate. You know what immaculate means?”
    Jim said nothing. Housekeeping was a herculean task for the thirteen-year-old dreamer, and his father exacted a military standard.
    Pinstriped dad and dungareed lad marched to the child’s room. Jim’s bed was in the far corner. Wall-mounted bookshelves crowded a desk and straight-backed chair. A nightstand supported a reading light and Jim’s current printed fare, a pile of old graphic novels, tales of amazing feats and dark retribution. Ringer lay on the Berber carpet. Mom had said that dog hair would be less noticeable on the tan and grey weave, but the carpet’s geometric pattern seemed to showcase every bit of dirt or scrap of paper, every piece of furniture even a degree off-square.
    Two years ago Jim enjoyed a larger room in a larger house. Then the family moved into smaller quarters. When Jim asked why they were moving for the second time in as many years, Mom smiled and said, “We’re saving for the future.” She took too long to answer.
    When Dad walked in the room, Ringer’s shoulder muscles bunched, her weight shifted to her hindquarters and her ears pulled forward. Now she looked more like a shepherd, protective, curling half into a prey bow, rather than her happy-go-lucky play bow.
    Jim fidgeted while Dad inspected. The books were arranged on the shelves, from tallest to smallest: Dad’s Rule. School supplies in a pencil cup, pens down and pencils up. Dad’s Rule again. Clothing was put away. No litter on the carpet.
    Then Dad looked under the bed and found a tangled clump of dog hair. Jim didn’t think anyone else in the world would care but Dad acted as if it were a malignant mass poised to metastasize, to cover Jim’s room, the whole damned house, with canine detritus.
    Some other day Dad would understand that under the bed doesn’t count. He would sigh, shake his head, and dismiss the furry tangle. Or Mom might intercede, “Galvin, the boy has homework. Let me finish so he can get to his studies.” Dad might let it go. Or maybe not, and Jim might hear them argue—or more. They were like dancers in a tango of insults and hands. He could picture Mom. Her words were her weapons. She leaned into Dad’s blows, to store each impact and then return his fury with her own taunts and barbs.
    Dad held the offensive find between the tips of his thumb and forefinger. He glared stony-faced at

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