Noise, fiction by Allen Hope

At a quar­ter past six Slade real­ized he’d not make it to Marilyn’s Pub ‘n Sub in time for his meet-up with Jack­son Saun­ders. He knew Saun­ders was a stick­ler for punc­tu­al­i­ty, but he still hoped to find him parked in the lot behind Marilyn’s near the twin olive-green dump­sters when he arrived. It was their usu­al meet­ing place. The day had been a com­bi­na­tion of blow­ing mist and driz­zle, and though it had stopped an hour ear­li­er the road was still shiny with mois­ture. Slade raised a hand to his mouth search­ing for a nail to chew. He found noth­ing beyond the quick. He tried the oth­er hand and got the same result. He’d run out of meth on Wednes­day. It was now Fri­day and he feared if he didn’t find a new sup­ply soon he’d gnaw the ends of his fin­gers off.

He final­ly made it to Marilyn’s but there was no sign of Saun­ders. He parked any­way. Turn­ing the radio on and scan­ning the AM band he found only one sta­tion with­in range, some rich fuck com­plain­ing about social­ism. The FM band didn’t fare much better.

He wait­ed near­ly half an hour fran­ti­cal­ly watch­ing the high­way, des­per­ate for Saun­ders to pull in and offer up a quar­ter ounce that he was hop­ing would calm the noise in his head. He was about to call it quits when he saw the bur­gundy Chrysler that belonged to Saun­ders’ girl­friend turn into the lot and park beside him. She waved him over. Once the door was closed and they were alone she start­ed to say some­thing but stopped. She was a frail girl with a reedy voice. Her skin was almost too white and her black hair greasy and smelling of ace­tone. Slade could tell from the red­ness around her eyes she had been cry­ing. Think­ing she had come to deliv­er the meth, he reached for his wallet.

No!” she said. “Put that away! They might be fol­low­ing me!”

What the hell, Kay! Who might be fol­low­ing you?” Slade said, wip­ing at the smudgy wind­shield so he could get a clear view of the high­way. He watched a log­ging truck pass and then nothing.

Jack said he was sup­posed to meet you here and need­ed a ride,” she said. “When I went by his house the sher­iff had him hand­cuffed stuff­ing him in a cruis­er.” She could bare­ly sit still, twist­ing in her seat and mak­ing lit­tle jerky motions with her arms.

Oh, shit.” Slade felt his stom­ach churn­ing and his heart thump­ing against his rib cage.

I don’t know what to do, Slade. Fuck. I didn’t want to come here but I didn’t want to go home, either.” Kay kept reach­ing for the mir­ror and read­just­ing it like she expect­ed a SWAT team to swoop out of the woods and haul her off. “The DEA was there, too, in their blacked-out Nav­i­ga­tors or what­ev­er it is they drive.”

This is seri­ous, Kay. I heard they were oper­at­ing in Elliot Coun­ty try­ing to shut down the labs and the pill push­ers over there. That whole county’s like a dri­ve-thru binge barn any­way so it didn’t sur­prise me. But I nev­er thought they’d work their way over here.”

Well, I can promise you they’re here, Slade. Because that sure wasn’t a bunch of tourists I saw who stopped to watch some hill­bil­ly get busted.”

They sat a while longer dis­cussing their options. Kay decid­ed to go to a friend’s house for a few days. All Slade knew was that he had to find some meth and find it quick. And since it was too risky around Way­land he fig­ured his only oth­er option was to track down his cousin in Rock Camp and see if he could hook him up.

Slade had stayed in touch with his cousin Louis by talk­ing to him occa­sion­al­ly over the phone. Louis was five years old­er than Slade and had con­nec­tions in every hol­low and back­woods hide­out with­in forty miles of Rock Camp. He was born smack in the mid­dle of town one blus­tery sum­mer after­noon when his moth­er swung by the post office to drop off a pack­age and dropped Louis along with it. Louis was proud of the fact that he had lived his entire life hav­ing nev­er ven­tured more than one coun­ty over from the one he was born in. He often bragged that if he didn’t die in Rock Camp or one of the sur­round­ing town­ships, it would be because some­body had kid­napped him and car­ried him far away, shoot­ing him, stran­gling him, or sim­ply bury­ing him in a hole when nobody stepped for­ward with the ran­som they demanded.

It wasn’t until mid­night that Louis final­ly answered Slade’s phone call. He’d been down in one of the hol­lows drink­ing with some friends but left ear­ly when Jim­my Cot­ton con­vinced the oth­ers to ride into Iron­ton with him and find a drunk to roll.

Lis­ten,” Slade said when he had Louis on the oth­er end. “I was think­ing of head­ing up that way tomor­row and…”

What?” Louis cut in. “You ain’t been to Rock Camp since you left. You in some kind of trouble?”

No. I just thought while I was there you might know some­body could tie me into some crank.”

It’s been kind of hot up here with the law and all, Cuz. Most peo­ple I know are lay­ing low, afraid to do much. But I sup­pose I can take care of you. I’ve got some oth­er busi­ness to attend to so why don’t you come by, say about six o’clock. I’ll have what you need. Sound all right?”

I’ll be there,” Slade said.

Slade pol­ished off a plate of coun­try ham, eggs, grits and toast at Papa Joe’s Café the next morn­ing think­ing that his new­found appetite was the only good thing to come from run­ning out of drugs. He’d usu­al­ly grab a sand­wich or a quick bowl of soup some­where, the needs of his stom­ach an after­thought more than any­thing else. He filled his Duran­go with gas at the BP sta­tion next door, stashed four twen­ty ounce Red Bulls in the cool­er he’d brought, and hit the road for the two hour dri­ve to Ohio.

Arriv­ing on the out­skirts of Rock Camp a lit­tle after two o’clock and with plen­ty of time to kill before he was sup­posed to meet Louis, Slade thought he might vis­it the ridge he remem­bered as a kid. He had lived a quar­ter mile below the ridge line in a place that was more shack than house. It was all his par­ents could afford liv­ing as they did from pay­check to pay­check. But they were gone now, dead before their time.

The black­ber­ries were at their juici­est in late August and the horse weed vibrant and high, near­ly chok­ing the path that ascend­ed from the old home­stead. The climb was rough but Slade kept at it, man­ag­ing the last few yards by using his boots to push aside the weeds. He made his way to an out­crop of rock and posi­tioned him­self well back from the edge. His great­est fear of late was act­ing on impulse, a sud­den thought that might flash across his mind and cause him to react with­out any con­cern for the outcome.

I’m not one to go killing myself,” he said. “So don’t even think about it.”

This had become his refrain when­ev­er the noise in his head kicked in and over­rode near­ly every good thought that came his way. It start­ed after he got him­self hooked on crank while dri­ving a coal truck. First came pills. But when he dis­cov­ered crys­tal meth was cheap­er and eas­i­er to get, he switched over. The high was good at first, the feel­ing that he was invin­ci­ble, that he could do any­thing he want­ed and do it bet­ter than any­one else. But the noise turned every­thing upside down. It didn’t mat­ter to Slade, though. The only two things he cared about now were get­ting high and get­ting laid.

Slade bal­anced him­self with one leg wedged into a knee-high crag of gran­ite. He pulled a cig­a­rette from his shirt pock­et and lit it, flick­ing the spent match toward the ravine. The val­ley at the base of the ridge looked to Slade like it always had when he viewed it from this angle. He imag­ined it as a rib­bon of green that had fall­en from the sky. There was hard­ly a straight sec­tion to it, just a series of bends and curves bor­dered by Sug­ar Creek on one side and a sheer wall of rock on the side where he now stood. What was once a coun­ty road with no off­shoots was now pep­pered with dri­ve­ways. Though they were most­ly ruts worn into the clay soil they still pro­vid­ed access to the mobile homes set at odd angles along the creek.

The only struc­ture Slade rec­og­nized was the sin­gle-pump gas sta­tion and coun­try store at the valley’s north­ern end. He was sur­prised by its longevi­ty, how it had weath­ered the years and man­aged to stay in busi­ness. He remem­bered how the store once served as a gath­er­ing place for what he called the riff-raff of a wel­fare state. His father had been too proud to accept a hand­out in any form, even in the worst times, and he had taught Slade that if a man was hav­ing trou­ble mak­ing it in this world it was because he wasn’t try­ing hard enough. Bad luck and mis­for­tune were not excuses.

In the years fol­low­ing, and most­ly on week­ends after dark­ness col­lapsed like a min­ing dis­as­ter over the val­ley, the store became a hang­out for local teenagers. Slade despised this new breed of teenag­er almost as much as the riff-raff. They could not be trust­ed. Like ani­mals the worst of them would shoot a man for no good rea­son. Slade thought he was lucky to have escaped this place. He swore he would nev­er return, not for any rea­son on earth. But his life had changed since then, changed in ways he’d nev­er imagined.

A blast of wind from below fanned the goat’s beard at Slade's feet. As he looked over the bluff expect­ing anoth­er gust he saw a for­eign made car, a Hon­da maybe, and then a Ford pick­up with a dog bound­ing in the bed as if it was try­ing to swal­low every bit of wind that looped around the side pan­els, bisect­ing the val­ley. The traffic’s move­ment relaxed Slade and he felt the noise in his head fad­ing away. What Slade called noise most often came in the form of voic­es cajol­ing him, insult­ing him, or mak­ing demands that he strug­gled to resist though he was not always suc­cess­ful. But this time it was most­ly a high pitched whine, and as it wound to noth­ing more than an annoy­ing hum Slade began to feel at peace.

Then, “I’ll be God­damned!” Star­tled, Slade dropped his cigarette.

Think­ing it was the noise start­ing in again he tried to cov­er his ears to get some relief. But his arms refused to abide.

Is that you, Slade? Jere­my God­damned Slade?”

Real­iz­ing the voice was not in his head but some­where behind him, Slade turned to see a man dressed in cam­ou­flage push­ing his way through a stand of sapling pines. He car­ried a shot­gun slung over his shoul­der. And though a gray-flecked beard cov­ered most of the man’s mouth, Slade noticed a pick­et of yel­lowed teeth that he took to be evi­dence of a smile.

God­damn it is you! What’s it been, ten years, fif­teen tops?”

Don’t know,” Slade croaked, step­ping off the rocks. “Maybe.”

The man stopped sev­er­al yards short of Slade. He spat a brown stream into the dirt and squinched his eyes, wait­ing for acknowl­edg­ment that here stood an old friend. When none came, the man low­ered the shot­gun to his side.

You don’t remem­ber me, do you?” he said. “Damned if that ain’t the shits. Lis­ten here, we went to school togeth­er, me and you!”

Some­thing about the man looked vague­ly famil­iar but Slade couldn’t see enough through the beard to put a name to him.

Stan­ton Gal­loway, dammit! You helped me steal Bob­by Turner’s Pon­ti­ac the night I had a date with that gal over in Wil­low Wood and no way to get there.”

Slade recalled that night. How Gal­loway had phoned, plead­ed with him for a ride because he’d heard how a date with this girl was a sure bet to get laid.

Okay. Yeah. Yeah, I got it. You promised if I took you to see her and you got some I could watch.”

Too damn bad your car wouldn’t start,” Gal­loway said. “You missed one hell of a show.”

They’d con­coct­ed a plan that had Slade babysit­ting Turn­er, mak­ing sure he stayed liquored up while Gal­loway pinched his car and kept his date in Wil­low Wood. The plan was sol­id. Turn­er was an easy drunk. Drink­ing was a hob­by of his, and if he didn’t have to pay for the whiskey then so much the bet­ter. But when Turn­er came to the next morn­ing and saw his car gone he grabbed a greasy tow­el off the floor and tried to smoth­er Slade, still passed out and snor­ing in an old bro­ken reclin­er. Fault­ing Slade made no sense but then noth­ing Turn­er did made sense.

You near got me killed!” Slade said.

Hell, we can laugh about it now. How was I to know I’d get a flat and him not have a spare in that big-ass trunk? The good old days! Eh, Slade?”

Before leav­ing, Gal­loway said he had a girl he want­ed Slade to meet and plen­ty of good shit to smoke if he cared for that sort of thing.

An hour lat­er Slade was sit­ting in his Duran­go at Galloway’s with the win­dows closed and the A/C and engine run­ning to ward off the after­noon heat. He had parked in a bare spot of yard just off the grav­el dri­ve where Galloway’s moth­er had died. Crazy with grief, she drank a pint of bleach after her hus­band was struck dead by a cot­ton­mouth while giv­ing praise to Jesus. Gal­loway found her sprawled beneath a bar­ren apple tree, a clump of red clay in one fist and her chin pink with the foam that had gur­gled out of her as she lay pray­ing for the end to come. The past began to come back to Slade. He remem­bered think­ing the same fate await­ed Gal­loway. And though it had yet to hap­pen, the over­all des­per­ate look of Galloway’s place meant it was still a possibility.

Slade reached for the A/C knob and low­ered the tem­per­a­ture a cou­ple degrees. He leaned back and again heard the noise stir­ring in his head but was too exhaust­ed from hik­ing the ridge to fight it off.

You are a dumb shit!” said a voice that sound­ed to Slade like a taunt from some fat grade-school­er. “Big high-and-mighty Slade!” it con­tin­ued. “Nev­er com­ing back to Rock Camp? Look around! Tell us where you are now!”

A knot of voic­es broke loose demand­ing an answer.

Fuck you!” Slade said.

The ruckus shift­ed to laugh­ter and Slade thought of the time in fourth grade when, doing chin-ups on the mon­key bars, a sixth-grade girl and sev­er­al of her friends cor­nered him once he hit the ground.

I want to see your dick,” the sixth-grad­er said. “We all want to see it.” Two of the girls gig­gled, their eyes fixed on Slade’s crotch. The Con­roy broth­ers had stripped him naked a week ear­li­er. They buried his clothes and forced him to jump into Sug­ar Creek if he want­ed them back. Word got around. Kids called him Snake, Mr. Bil­ly Club. And now here were a bunch of old­er girls demand­ing to see it for them­selves. Slade’s cheeks had sud­den­ly felt flush, his skin burned. Reluc­tant­ly, he undid his belt and zip­per. But when he put his hand down his under­wear and grabbed his dick he pissed him­self. By then Gal­loway and a few oth­er kids had joined the girls and they all stood laugh­ing at him. Slade want­ed to kill them, every sin­gle one of them. Instead, he skipped school for a week. He hid in corn­fields and barns grown over in wood­bine and pic­tured him­self dyna­mit­ing the school and every­one in it. From there he’d work his way through Rock Camp going house to house, shoot­ing and stab­bing until the entire town was lit­tered with bod­ies. “That’ll show the sick bas­tards,” he’d sobbed. “Teach them to laugh at me.”

A muf­fled roar roused Slade and he checked his side-view mir­ror to see Gal­loway slic­ing up the dri­ve on a Kawasa­ki four-wheel­er. A girl rode behind him, her chest tight against Galloway’s back and her arms locked around his waist. They cir­cled once and came again at Slade through a clus­ter of stumps in the side yard. As it came out of the stump field the Kawasa­ki caught a dip. When it hit the ups­lope the front wheels lift­ed off the ground and the sud­den change of direc­tion pitched Gal­loway for­ward with the girl pig­gy­backed on top of him. For a sec­ond Slade thought all three of them—Galloway, the girl, and the Kawasa­ki they were fight­ing to stay astride—were going to roll like a bar­rel into the front quar­ter-pan­el of his Duran­go. But at the last sec­ond Gal­loway slammed him­self against the seat and twist­ed the han­dle­bars hard left. Grav­el pinged off Slade’s SUV and gray dust corkscrewed over the hood.

Hell yeah,” the girl whooped. She threw her arms around Galloway’s neck and pulled his head back so she could bite his ear. The Kawasa­ki slid to a stop beneath a street­light Gal­loway had snatched, its pole ham­mered side­ways by a rock­slide along State Route 217 north of town. He had wired a motion detec­tor to it and bolt­ed it to the side of his house for secu­ri­ty, the first line of defense should any of his cus­tomers come look­ing to rip him off. Gal­loway hopped from the Kawasa­ki and tossed a grit­ty hand in Slade’s direc­tion, motion­ing him over.

This here’s June and that’s Slade,” Gal­loway said as Slade fol­lowed them through the door. “June lives one holler the oth­er side of that ridge you climbed today.”

June, huh,” Slade said.

That’s right,” June coun­tered. “The names April and May were already spoke for by the time Mom­ma had me.”

Yeah, but they done run off,” Gal­loway said. “Fucked ever thing there was to fuck in Rock Camp and decid­ed to branch out, expand their territory.”

You oughtn’t talk about them like that,” June said.

It’s true, ain’t it? Hell, I put it to both of them gals wait­ing on you to come of age.” Gal­loway laughed. He smacked June’s ass then watched her wig­gle over to the couch and set­tle into the cushions.

Slade had known girls like June, girls with lit­tle more to do in such a rat­ty town than latch onto some man for sex and what­ev­er else he might pro­vide. He despised these girls almost as much as he had the new breed of teenagers. But he fan­cied June. She was still mag­a­zine cute with a tight body that bor­dered on skin­ny. And he liked the way her sassy hair was the col­or of corn­stalks in late Novem­ber, and how it hung just below her ears, cap­ping her cheek­bones and mak­ing her face glow like an invi­ta­tion to a night of fevered wildness.

The laugh­ter in Slade’s head had qui­et­ed and he fig­ured who­ev­er the voic­es belonged to were as dumb­struck as he was by the girl’s presence.

Unless you’re a god­damned stat­ue sit the hell down,” Gal­loway barked before leav­ing through the back door.

Slade chose a brown leather chair in a cor­ner near the hall­way. The arm­rests were grimed over and foam padding had squeezed through the cracked head­rest and greened with mildew. It was either that or plant him­self next to June. As much as he pre­ferred June, though, Slade didn’t want to risk piss­ing Gal­loway off. No need for trou­ble if he could avoid it.

The inside of Galloway’s house was worse than Slade had imag­ined look­ing at it from the out­side. The walls were a mix of col­ors a mani­ac might paint just before blow­ing his brains out in a spray of gore. The ceil­ing was dark gray, while the walls were var­i­ous shades of brown, orange, and a sort of yel­low­ing white. The win­dows had been most­ly cov­ered over with plas­tic sheet­ing, though a few of the cor­ners still peeled away pro­vid­ing Gal­loway a clear view of his yard. Judg­ing from the array of guns scat­tered about the room Slade fig­ured Gal­loway lived in a con­stant state of para­noia. He count­ed four, a deer rifle propped in the cor­ner, a Colt Python 357Magnum on the TV stand, and a 9 mil­lime­ter Beretta and anoth­er hand­gun he couldn’t iden­ti­fy rest­ing on top of a blue plas­tic milk crate wedged between a kerosene heater and a sag­ging bookcase.

Gal­loway came back with a sil­ver, crin­kled-up lunch pail that he plunked on the bookcase.

Get your ass up and get us some beer,” he said to June. “I’ve got to put the four-wheel­er in the shed.”

Slade watched June pry her­self off the couch and crunch her way over the peanut husks and hunt­ing mag­a­zines toward the kitchen. A minute lat­er she was back with two Stroh’s. She set Galloway’s on the floor next to the couch then crunched over to Slade. She drew Slade’s beer to her chest and rolled it across her T‑shirted breasts wip­ing sweat from the bottle.

That ought to make it taste bet­ter,” she grinned.

Slade grinned back at her. He accept­ed the beer while look­ing at the out­line of her nip­ples through her Cud­dle Bud­dy T‑shirt, then admired the way her hips flared tight against her Wran­gler cut-offs. Notic­ing how the dim light shim­mered against her tanned legs he tried to imag­ine her rid­ing naked beside him in the Durango.

I know some­thing else that would make it taste even bet­ter.” At first Slade thought the words had come from one of the voic­es in his head. When he real­ized they were his own words he tried to back­track but he was too slow.

Why don’t you come by my place lat­er?” June said. “We can go some­where pri­vate, out 141 maybe. Looks like enough room in that truck of yours for us to be all kinds of nasty.”

What about Galloway?”

Gal­loway is Gal­loway. He ain’t my boyfriend if that’s what you’re think­ing. He keeps me high and I keep him from get­ting too horny.” June cir­cled behind the leather chair so she could keep an eye on the front door. She ran her hands inside Slade’s shirt, felt the warmth ris­ing from his chest and the hair coarse between her fingers.

You won’t be sor­ry,” she said lean­ing in, her teeth nib­bling gen­tly at Slade’s ear. “I promise you that.”

Slade wasn’t sure he could trust June. For all he knew Gal­loway planned to mar­ry her. It could be she was the kind of girl who saw men as rungs on a lad­der and him one rung above Gal­loway. Maybe she fig­ured Gal­loway to be head­ed for jail and she need­ed to estab­lish a new foothold, one with more sta­bil­i­ty than what Gal­loway had to offer.

Why me?” Slade asked, try­ing to coax June’s hands from under his shirt.

Dar­ling,” June whis­pered. “You might have van­ished from Rock Camp all those years ago but your rep­u­ta­tion lives on.”

She pulled her hands from inside Slade’s shirt and shook her ass all the way to the couch. She eased into the cush­ions then blew a kiss across the filthy room. Slade tipped his beer back, felt the alco­hol chill­ing his throat. A minute lat­er Gal­loway beat his way through the front door.

God­damn heat,” he said search­ing the room for his beer. “I hate the fuck­ing snow but I’ll be damned if this heat hasn’t about killed me.” Gal­loway spot­ted the beer, part­ed his dirty lips and pol­ished it off in one long gulp. He tossed the bot­tle on a wad of news­pa­pers and pawed his way over June, set­tling in next to her.

Slade watched the hon­ey-col­ored bot­tle roll from the news­pa­pers and spin a lit­tle dance on the hard­wood. He thought of the old Gal­loway, the one in high school who would have flung the bot­tle as if it was molten glass instead of sim­ply toss­ing it aside. The old Gal­loway was quick to anger and just as quick to kick somebody’s ass for sport because rage seemed to be the pri­ma­ry ele­ment embed­ded in his DNA. Slade was think­ing of the guns and try­ing to deter­mine how much of the old Gal­loway still resided in the hag­gard fig­ure seat­ed across from him when June said, “Let’s get fucked up. Maybe that’ll cool you off.”

That’ll just get me hot­ter than I am now and then you’ll have to cool me off. But what the hell, maybe Slade here wants to watch. I owe him one.” Gal­loway laughed and shot a look at Slade.

June dis­ap­peared down the hall­way. She came back car­ry­ing a cig­ar box bear­ing the name MONTECRISTO FLOR FINA. She flipped the lid open and removed a glass pipe filled with a crys­tal-like pow­der. Angling the flame from a Zip­po lighter under the black­ened bowl, she inhaled and held it in while pass­ing the pipe to Galloway.

Slade watched Gal­loway steady the lighter and clamp his mouth around the pipe stem, the end of his thumb cal­loused from the heat of smok­ing this shit a dozen times a day. Gal­loway sucked until the smoke was gone. He swal­lowed a cough and jig­gled the pipe toward Slade.

Hur­ry up, dumb shit! Take it!” The fat grade-school­er again. Slade decid­ed the kid must’ve been elect­ed spokesman of the day. He thought it was fun­ny. Not only was he an addict but appar­ent­ly the kid was an addict as well.

Slade extend­ed a shaky hand and took the pipe from Gal­loway, care­ful not to drop it. The first hit left him feel­ing like some­body had uncorked a bot­tle of cham­pagne in his head, the bub­bles an elec­tric cur­rent charg­ing through his brain cells. He fired a sec­ond quick hit and passed the pipe to June. The three of them took turns until the pipe was emp­ty, then refilled it twice more. Each bowl pro­duced a high sev­er­al mag­ni­tudes greater than the one before it. When they were done June put the pipe away and slid the cig­ar box under the edge of the couch.

Holy hell,” Slade said after a few min­utes, his face almost as white as the pow­der he’d just smoked. He glanced at June and saw that she was rub­bing her legs as if stroking the silky fur of a house cat. Gal­loway had sunk into the couch, his head rolled to one side and his eyes as blank as a retard’s.

June noticed Slade look­ing at Galloway.

I’d think he died if I didn’t know bet­ter,” she said. “But you nev­er know. He might die yet with all the Oxy he ate today and now the meth.”

June con­tin­ued caress­ing her legs while she talked. Slade thought he could hear her purring too, try­ing to entice him to her end of the couch.

He wasn’t sure what to do next but he was sure he couldn’t just sit there and do noth­ing. He knew Louis would be wait­ing for him at six but there was plen­ty of time for that. He could wash his truck, or sweep the peanut husks and mag­a­zines off Galloway’s worm-rid­dled floor. He thought he might even repaint the walls while he was at it if only he could find a brush and a buck­et of paint.

June palmed a vein of sweat from her cheek and stud­ied Slade, amused at the way he sat fid­get­ing in his chair. It was like watch­ing some­one whose clothes were shrink­ing by the sec­ond, the way Slade kept pulling at the sleeves of his shirt and clasp­ing and unclasp­ing his belt buck­le. She fig­ured he prob­a­bly wasn’t accus­tomed to meth as pure and pow­er­ful as what he’d just smoked. She muz­zled a laugh when he reached for his leather boots and retied the laces sev­er­al times each before he was sat­is­fied with his efforts.

How you feel­ing?” June asked, the frayed edges of her cut-offs inch­ing upward, her fin­gers draw­ing lit­tle cir­cles on the sweet spots of her thighs.

Some­thing from out­side caused the front door to rat­tle against its frame. The plas­tic on an adja­cent win­dow flut­tered then went limp. It seemed the only thing that hadn’t moved was Gal­loway, slumped like a corpse since June had stashed the pipe.

I don’t know,” Slade answered. “I either feel like a mil­lion dol­lars or like my head’s going to explode any minute.”

Hand me that lunch box,” June said point­ing to the bookcase.

Slade vault­ed from the chair as if a cop­per­head had fall­en in his lap. He retrieved the box, pass­ing it to June and then watch­ing while she unlatched the lid. She lift­ed a brown med­i­cine bot­tle from inside, twist­ed the cap open and passed two red and blue cap­sules to him.

Here,” she said. “Take these. It’ll knock the edge off.”

Slade car­ried the cap­sules into the kitchen and washed them down with a Stroh’s. When he came back he saw that June’s hands had moved from her legs to her breasts. She squeezed at a nip­ple with one hand while her oth­er hand caressed the tan skin beneath her shirt. Her eyes were closed and Slade stood mes­mer­ized like what he was see­ing wasn’t real.

Don’t you think it’s time to teach that sick bas­tard a les­son?” The fat grade-school­er asked, a ref­er­ence Slade real­ized was meant for Gal­loway. It was Gal­loway who had led the oth­er kids in laugh­ter that day on the play­ground, then got every­one chant­i­ng bed wet­ter pants piss­er until a teacher came over and ordered every­one to class. Slade felt the humil­i­a­tion punch him in the gut. This was a prob­lem he should have tak­en care of long before now but the tim­ing was just nev­er right. He glimpsed the Mag­num on the TV stand but dis­missed that option as too dras­tic. There must be a bet­ter way, he thought, some­thing that wouldn’t land him in prison.

He looked at Gal­loway, not­ed his shal­low breath, his milky eyes and the way he lay bur­rowed in the couch like one of his cus­tomers had just cold-cocked him with a sin­gle blow to the head. When he turned back to June her T‑shirt was draped around her neck, her breasts ful­ly exposed. Slade knew then the les­son he want­ed to teach Gal­loway. He crossed the room, stop­ping next to June just as she slipped a hand down the front of her cut-offs. He watched the cir­cu­lar motions her hand made beneath the fab­ric and heard low moans ris­ing from some­where deep inside her. When he looked at her face he saw that she was look­ing back at him, her move­ments invit­ing him clos­er, her eyes as clear and green as the rib­bon of land bor­der­ing Sugar

Creek.

 

Allen Hope’s fic­tion and poet­ry have appeared or is forth­com­ing in Apro­pos Lit­er­ary Jour­nal, Eclec­ti­ca Mag­a­zine, Ghost Town, Sleet Mag­a­zine, Snow Mon­key, and else­where. He is a grad­u­ate of Sono­ma State Uni­ver­si­ty and pre­vi­ous­ly worked as a pro­duc­er and scriptwriter for Project Censored's radio doc­u­men­tary series, For The Record, which aired on Nation­al Pub­lic Radio. A for­mer win­ner of the Genevieve Mott Memo­r­i­al Lit­er­ary Schol­ar­ship, he cur­rent­ly lives in Gal­lipo­lis, Ohio with his wife and two daughters.


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Poems by Joshua Michael Stewart

GO TO SLEEP YOU LITTLE BABY

In her arms is a blue-eyed boy with a dirty face. Under her flow­ered dress, she has anoth­er on the way. They’ve been liv­ing out of an ’85 Buick Riv­iera, park­ing all along the Ohio Riv­er. She stares out of the pock­marked wind­shield at a clap­board church. Yel­low fox­tail grass and rag­weed swal­low head­stones in the church­yard. The sprigs’ sway lulls the boy. The graves resem­ble unmade beds. She stud­ies his long eye­lash­es as she hums an old Appalachi­an lul­la­by her grand­ma used to sing. Child Ser­vices had tried to take her son once before. Night­fall, she points the Buick toward the cold voice of the river.

OHIO, 1989, AGE: 14

 

From the thorny canthus

of his right eye 

to his dag­ger-shaped jaw

 

runs a yel­low scar

already old and faded.

He drags on a cigarette,

 

drowns ants in spit,

jok­ing­ly calls his buddy 

a crack­head motherfucker,

 

a lemon wedge smiling 

from his teeth. And in his eyes: 

the green light of Wal­lace Stevens,

 

or bet­ter yet, a blade of grass 

reach­ing out for a meager 

amount of rain.

 

 

****

 

Ven­om in his voice, 

a rat­trap for a tongue. 

A dust dev­il lives in his throat.

 

He’s kin to the flatted-fifth, 

son of a minor key. 

The har­mon­ic structure 

 

of his soul pos­sess­es the tension 

of a dom­i­nant-sev­enth chord 

plead­ing resolve, resolve, resolve.

 

 

****

 

Water bal­loons, he thinks,

slid­ing his hands up her shirt, 

deep in the tool shed. The recipe 

 

 

calls for a tan­gle of limbs 

and tongues—her lips waxy 

with straw­ber­ry gloss, neck 

 

tast­ing of Aqua Net and salt. 

He feels him­self push 

against the inside of his jeans, 

 

sure his prick will snap 

like a stick. She unbuttons 

him, clamps her legs around 

 

his waist, digs in her glitter-nails. 

He tells her that he loves her.

He’s glad she doesn’t say it back.

 

 

****

 

He delights in the smell of talc

as the bar­ber brushes 

the back of his neck. 

 

It com­ple­ments the lit­tle girl 

across the street walk­ing with her 

moth­er in their Sun­day best. 

 

How the straight razor

used to dance in his mother’s hands, 

shuf­fling along the strop, gleam 

 

in the lemon­ade light of summer. 

His dad­dy slouched in a kitchen chair 

set on the porch overlooking 

 

the chick­ens scratch­ing the yard bare.

She’d tilt Daddy’s head back, 

lath­er his scruff with a horse­hair brush 

 

and scrape the blade across his face, 

hold­ing the razor like a butterfly 

by its wings. That was long before 

 

the trac­tor crushed Daddy’s ribs, 

col­lapsed a lung, years before 

she start­ed reek­ing of whiskey, 

 

a life­time before she stag­gered over 

and snatched the straight razor 

from the boy’s hands, and wheeled

 

the blade in a stu­por, slic­ing his cheek, 

all before he moved in with an aunt 

he didn’t even know, down the block

 

from here where the sun paints a square 

on the black and white tile floor,

and scis­sors snip-snip in his ears.

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Dog Days, fiction by Kevin Winchester

Even before the cash changes hands Ard is think­ing of how quick­ly the eight ball will be gone. The count looks light but it always does any more. He unwraps the twist tie, touch­es his lit­tle fin­ger to the rock, then to his gum and his brain mea­sures: one thou­sand one, one thou­sand two, one thou­sand three, one thou­sand four. He clicks his front teeth with each num­ber and on four the only feel­ing that rever­ber­ates into his gum is the sound wave to his inner ear. Good. Ard drops four hun­dreds on the table and picks up both bags.

Out­side the August sun is white and sti­fling. The glare from the pearl hood of the Cad­dy shocks him and Ard slips on his shades before he eas­es out into the street. He wish­es it were Feb­ru­ary and raining.

Three blocks down he turns right on Ash­land, goes a half a block and pulls into the lot, checks his watch. 3:55. He waits. Checks the dial again. 3:58. Across the lot and up the mar­ble steps, through the heavy oak doors. He moves to the last door on the right, checks his watch again to assure him­self its four, goes inside.

Bless me Father for I have sinned. It’s been a week since my last confession.”

I fail to see the humor. And it’s get­ting a bit old.”

Ah, my big brother’s in a mood. Con­fes­sion­al stress? I might have a lit­tle some­thing for that.”

Shut up Ard. I don’t know about this anymore.”

Ard paus­es. “About what, Jamie?”

This. I am a priest, you know, we’re not teenagers. I have respon­si­bil­i­ties, vows. I’ve got an oblig­a­tion; to you, even.”

Don’t start. Not every­body wants to be saved, Padre. Besides, there’s some in your reli­gion that have worse habits.” Ard pulls one of the bags from his shirt pocket.

Maybe I shouldn’t have tak­en the assign­ment here. I thought mov­ing back would be good for us, for you. You and Rosa were the only fam­i­ly I had.”

I don’t need you decid­ing what’s good for me, Jamie. Now do you want the blow or not?”

That night after Rosa Lee’s funer­al, I drove you to the bar because I was wor­ried about you; what you might do. All you want­ed was to cop a gram, and then I let you talk me into doing it again.”

And I got the flake right now. Come on, big broth­er; hear it call­ing you? Besides, you’re the one got me start­ed way back when. I was just return­ing the favor. So, you want it or not? It ain’t like I can’t put it to good use if you don’t.”

The pause lasts too long, gives Ard time to think. These secrets thread between the two broth­ers like an old tapes­try, worn but some­how still intact. Grow­ing up with the town drunk col­ors the per­spec­tive on things; weaves a patch­work ver­sion of his­to­ry and events into both of them so deep they don’t notice any­more. If Jamie cleans up Ard is afraid the last of those strands will unravel.

When we were kids, teenagers, noth­ing made any sense to me. The Church gave me answers, made things clear. Late­ly, I’m not so sure.”

Well, you know what they say—God’s just an imag­i­nary friend for grown-ups.” Ard leans to the edge of the bench. “So make a choice, you in or out? Daylight’s wasting.”

The pause is short­er this time and Ard grins when the cur­tain shuf­fles and two hun­dred and fifty dol­lars appear beneath the cloth. Ard counts it, then gen­tly slides one of the bags back under the cur­tain before fold­ing the bills into his shirt pocket.

Glad to see the parish­ioners have been gen­er­ous again this week. Always a plea­sure, Padre. See you next week, same time, same weight.”

Back at the apart­ment Ard is impa­tient. He unlocks his door and goes straight to his desk, gets the mir­ror and the blade, shaves a cor­ner from the rock, chops it, cuts out two lines, rolls a hun­dred and they’re gone. He waits for the drain to hit the back of his throat and when it does he smiles and cuts out two more lines that dis­ap­pear neater than the first. He chops about a gram from the rock and care­ful­ly dumps it into the vial that he puts in his right pants pock­et before tuck­ing the rest of the bag in his left. Ard taps the razor on the mir­ror and lines up the residue. For an instant he thinks about Jamie and then frowns at his reflec­tion before inhal­ing the last line. Ard sits back, rubs both eyes with the heels of his hands and then stares at the framed pho­to­graph on his desk. “Every­body has a sto­ry,” he says to the image. His words sound hol­low even to him and he thinks of heat and humid­i­ty and Hell before he ris­es to leave. He wish­es it were Feb­ru­ary and raining.

Ard curs­es the heat and flips the Caddy’s AC on high but he knows it needs fre­on. He dri­ves through town, keeps an eye on his speed, then opens it up a bit after he cross­es the rail­road tracks, has it hum­ming by the time he pass­es Char­lie and Lin­da Wrenn’s place. Ard pulls over just before he gets to JoJo’s and scoops two more hits from the vial. JoJo and him were neigh­bors, before. He was an all right guy but he nev­er bought blow. Nev­er seemed to mind doing some­body else’s though. When he pulls in the yard he sees JoJo at the edge of the woods behind the farm­house, swing­ing a pick ax at the dirt.

What you doing, Jo?”

Got­ta bury George Bush. Fuck­ing ground’s hard as a brick­bat. Christ, we need some rain.”

GB’s dead?” Ard sniffs and thumbs at his nose, hopes JoJo won’t catch it.

Pret­ty sure. He ain’t moved in a day or so. Looks pret­ty stiff. Hand me that shov­el.” JoJo toss­es a small pile of dirt out of the hole and grabs the pick ax again.

It’s too hot for this shit, let’s go get a beer.” Ard feels the sweat pool­ing in the small of his back, looks toward the pen. “GB’ll wait.”

Go ‘head on, I got to fin­ish here. You think it’s deep enough?” JoJo swings at the dirt again and the pick ax bounces back at him and near­ly hits his bald scalp.

Ard looks at the hole while he strug­gles to keep his mind from rac­ing back—back to her cas­ket being low­ered, dis­ap­pear­ing below the sur­face, back even to the moment the fire start­ed; but it’s no use, he’s there again and he can smell a brief hint of patchouli and jas­mine that sends his fin­gers to the vial in his pock­et, doesn’t real­ize how hard he is press­ing it into the soft flesh of his thigh but think­ing of the white pow­der all the same, hears it call­ing him, whis­per­ing, until a pain shoots up through his femur, along his spine and then spikes into his right eye. The pain is famil­iar and it brings him back. “No.”

Shit.” JoJo swings again, this time sink­ing the blade into the clay and wedg­ing a chunk out of the earth and into the thick air. He stead­ies him­self for anoth­er swing. “You could help me, you know. Lit­tle hard work do you good.” JoJo grunts just as the blade strikes the yel­low earth.

Naw. Looks like you got it.”

JoJo grunts again with­out look­ing up. He starts anoth­er swing then stops to wave the back of his hand at Ard. “I’ll catch you at Red’s after while. Damn dog would wait until the ground was baked con­crete ‘fore he decides to die. Asshole.”

Ard starts toward the Cad­dy, won­ders whether JoJo was talk­ing about him or George Bush. When he reach­es the car he decides he doesn’t care. The dog was a big Ger­man Shep­herd, dumb as corn­flakes and always want­i­ng to fight. He got into Rosa Lee’s flowerbeds once after she’d spent two days putting in new bed­ding plants and shrubs. Ard didn’t care for flow­ers so much but he’d sat on the back porch rub­bing Rosa’s shoul­ders after the work was done, look­ing at her look­ing at the plants, and the light in her eyes sift­ed over him like silky beach sand and he knew it felt too good, knew even then the feel­ing would some­how slip from his grasp. The next day, when he came home and found GB dig­ging in the beds and all the flow­ers destroyed, he went straight for his shot­gun. He raised the gun to his shoul­der and yelled, he want­ed the dog to see what was com­ing, but GB turned and growled before he charged him. Ard was so sur­prised he couldn’t get off a shot and had to use the butt of the gun to knock the dog away twice before it final­ly ran for home. Ard’s glad the damn brute is dead.

He does two more hits before he starts the Cad­dy, clos­es his eyes and waits for the rush. He sees the gash of earth JoJo was stand­ing over, how the packed red soil yields to hard yel­low bull tal­low a few inch­es down and feels him­self falling into the hole, feels the weight of the soul­less dirt press­ing on his chest until he opens his eyes and backs out of the dri­ve. The low moan of the big V8 wash­es over him, cleans the last of the vision from his head. As he pulls off he sees JoJo bent and drag­ging George Bush toward the hole, the dog’s legs stick­ing straight up toward the heav­ens, the two of them a strug­gling sil­hou­ette against the fad­ing sun.

 ***

The grav­el park­ing lot at Red’s is already three quar­ters full. The build­ing itself is made of cin­derblocks, low slung and non­de­script, but recent­ly Red hired some­body to paint a beach mur­al on one wall. Years ago, when Ard and JoJo first start­ed com­ing, the place was no more than a beer joint that dou­bled as club­house for Red’s dri­ving range. After the by-pass was fin­ished and the new mon­ey dis­cov­ered that land and tax­es were cheap­er out in the coun­ty and all the sub­di­vi­sions sprang up, the place got trendy. Ard guessed the new­bies fig­ured it was safer dri­ving a mile or two home from Red’s than nav­i­gat­ing the Lexus through Char­lotte traf­fic after sev­er­al rounds of apple mar­ti­nis. Red had no idea how to mix a mar­ti­ni but the PBR’s were ice cold and only a buck.

After two more quick bumps, Ard stash­es the bag­gie in the glove box, the vial in his pock­et and makes his way through the lot and across the new sand-filled patio area, winds around the wrought iron tables with umbrel­las and side­steps the mod­er­ate­ly rich. Two guys in khakis and golf shirts stop Ard just as he makes the door.

Nice ride.” First Guy tips his beer toward Ard. “Ford, right? About a 59, 60?”

Sec­ond Guy nods. “You restore it yourself?”

Ard stands with his hand on the screen door, looks at his Cad­dy, then back at the guys. He can feel his heart click­ing and real­izes he’s grind­ing his back teeth, the mus­cles along his jaw knot­ted tight. Needs a cold beer to wash the taste of ben­zene from his throat. Thinks he ought to smash his fist into First Guy’s bleached teeth for fun but says: “59 Cad­dy. Won it off two fag­gots in a crap game out back. Fuck­ing after­mar­ket AC don’t work. When you guys see ‘em tell ‘em they owe me some fre­on,” and he walks into the cool stale air of the bar.

He knows he should eat but every nerve is up on edge now and his mind is mov­ing one notch quick­er than every­thing around him, out of sync but man­age­able. Prefer­able. No need to dull it with food. Red slides him a Miller, Ard takes one swal­low and goes to the john, locks the door. He’s shocked when he sees the vial, emp­ty to the point that he can’t scoop anoth­er hit from the bot­tom and he’s forced to dump what’s left on the back of the stained uri­nal. The line’s too thin and gone in an instant. The smell from the toi­let makes him feel like he’ll throw up. He chokes back the ris­ing bile and goes to fin­ish his beer.

Rosa Lee’s dad­dy and mom­ma was in here the oth­er night.” Red pulls the stool across the bar from Ard, set­tles in. Most of the crowd is out­side and the wait­ress­es are han­dling them.

They say any­thing?” Ard rolls the Miller back and forth in his hands.

Small talk. Had a cou­ple of beers, watched some of the game. I ain’t seen them in here for a while. Won­dered if they migh­ta been wait­in’ on you, you know, maybe you all was okay.” Red winks at him with his good eye.

I’m fuck­ing fine. Can’t say about Ross and Eileen. Any­thing come up about the fire report?”

Naw. I fig­ured that’d be done by now. You ain’t heard nothing?”

It ain’t back yet. ‘Sposed to be end of this week, I think. Thurs­day, maybe Fri­day.” Ard drains the last of his beer and toss­es a twen­ty on the bar. “Lis­ten, hold my spot, I left some­thing in the car.”

Out­side the two guys are stand­ing beside the Cad­dy, nurs­ing import­ed beers. Ard shakes his head and remem­bers when the only choic­es Red offered were Pab­st, Bud and Miller. I ought to sell the car, he thinks, draws too much atten­tion. He needs the guys to dis­ap­pear, needs the Caddy’s pri­va­cy to cut out the rest of his blow, but he knows the type. He’ll have to humor them at least for a while or they’ll nev­er leave.

How long is this thing?” First Guy asks.

Twen­ty-six feet, nose to tail.” Ard grins.

And you real­ly won it in a crap game?” Sec­ond Guy chimes in while First Guy walks the length of the car.

Naw, I was just messin’ with you. Ain’t no gam­bling gone on here since Red closed the dri­ving range. Used to keep a mon­key in a cage out back, though. Mon­key loved to smoke weed. We used to bet how many tokes before he went for his first banana. Damnedest thing you ever seen.” Ard bris­tles as he watch­es First Guy run his hand along the tail fin of the Caddy.

So where’d you get it?” First Guy asks as he kneels to inspect the bumper.

Old man Jenk­ins, used to live over by Alton. You wouldn’t know him; he was dead before all y’all start­ed mov­ing out here. Sat out behind his barn. I went over there squir­rel hunt­ing one day and saw it, bunch of weeds and bri­ars grown up around it, going to rust. Said it was his boy’s, but I knew his boy had got his insides blown out some­where up the Mekong Delta. Said the boy parked it right there where I found it, back in June of ‘67. Asked his dad­dy to keep it for him till he come back.”

Both men move to the front of the car, lis­ten­ing to Ard but nev­er tak­ing their eyes off the Cad­dy. Ard gauges the two men, won­ders how long before they tire, how long before they spot the next best thing and leave him alone. He knows it won’t be long until the dull ache set­tles across his sinus­es and every­thing slows to a crawl. But right now he still has a nice edge.

So I told Jenk­ins, I said, hell, its 1999, I don’t much believe your boy’s com­ing back.”

You didn’t. What’d he say?” First and Sec­ond Guy are work­ing in tan­dem now, one ask­ing right on the heels of the oth­er and Ard’s not sure which one spoke first.

Told me he didn’t expect he was, but that didn’t mean he was gonna sell his boy’s car. Told me he didn’t much think he want­ed me hunt­ing squir­rel on his prop­er­ty no more, either.”

So how’d you end up with it?” First Guy takes a long pull from his bot­tle and makes a bit­ter face.

Ard laughs. “Beer tastes that bad I believe I’d switch brands. Old man calls me in the spring of 2000, says come get the car if you want it.” Ard holds out his left arm and points to a small scar on his fore­arm. “Damn black snake had laid claim to it, bas­tard bit me when I went to haul it out.”

Damn,” Both Guys in unison.

Any­more old junkers over there?” First Guy laughs, “I might be will­ing to take on a black snake.”

Ard walks to the back of the car and wipes the edge of the tail fin down with his T‑shirt, leans to inspect it, wipes it again. “Nope. They found Griff Jenk­ins two days after I picked up the Cad­dy. Pis­tol still in one hand, pic­ture of his boy in the oth­er. Brains on the bed­room wall and blood all the way to his shoes.”

Laugh­ter rolls from the patio and all three men turn and look toward the knot of peo­ple there. Study­ing menus, order­ing. Throw­ing recent slices of their lives across the table for enter­tain­ment, and Ard knows that even before the sound of their words die out they’re already think­ing of the next amus­ing sto­ry they’ll tell. He can feel it, as if some unseen strand reach­es from the crowd at the tables, stretch­es past him and anchors itself to the two guys in front of him, already draw­ing them back, pulling them through the uneasy silence that now sur­rounds them, sur­rounds Ard.

Ard cuts his gaze short and looks instead at the two guys. He knows them, hell, cou­ple of choic­es here or there, he could almost be them. Col­lege boys, prob­a­bly from New York, Jer­sey, maybe Penn­syl­va­nia or Ohio. Came down here to Duke or Car­oli­na on their par­ents’ mon­ey, grad­u­at­ed, moved back North for awhile then fol­lowed the mon­ey trail and sun­shine back to good old Car­oli­na. Good mon­ey jobs either at one of the banks down­town or one of the new hi-tech com­pa­nies spring­ing up every­where, maybe real estate. Not a hard day in their life.

But it always came back to the choic­es. His grades had been decent in school, at least until they moved him and Jamie into the Thomp­son Home. It wasn’t long after that he decid­ed a sack of weed was a lot more inter­est­ing than a his­to­ry book. And that Sat­ur­day night, the par­ty. He should’ve left with Jamie, tried his luck sneak­ing past the nuns, but there was plen­ty of blow around and he didn’t see any point in call­ing it an ear­ly night. The next morn­ing, while Ard was still in the hold­ing cell for the DWI, Jamie decid­ed he need­ed all that reli­gion the nuns kept shov­ing at them. It wasn’t long before Jamie went away, study­ing to be a priest.

The only thing close to right after that had been Rosa Lee. He hadn’t made it easy for her, but she had man­aged to talk her father into hir­ing him in the Pro­duc­tion Con­trol Depart­ment at the plant. All he did there was get by; nev­er got a pro­mo­tion and nev­er want­ed one. It was hard enough cut­ting the week­end par­ties short in time for Mon­day morn­ing. Rosa tried, but Ard nev­er thought he had in him what she real­ly needed.

He shakes his head, tries to focus. The report from the fire inspec­tor flash­es through his mind, dis­tracts him. It would say what it had to say, one way or the oth­er. What he needs now is to lose the col­lege boys and get back to the bag­gie in the glove box, back to an answer he’s com­fort­able with.

Fuck it, man. I’m Arden. Ard for short. You guys wan­na go for a ride? I know where there’s a cock fight out by the State line.” He sees the fear flash in their eyes.

Thanks, but we prob­a­bly ought to stick around. We need to hold our table, our wives are meet­ing us here.” Both Guys turn toward the patio.

Nice meet­ing you,” Sec­ond Guy speaks over his shoul­der, already head­ing for his table. First Guy has his wal­let out, fish­es for his busi­ness card.

If you ever decide to sell the car, let me know,” he says. “I’ll pay you top dol­lar. Here’s all my numbers.”

Ard looks at the card and says “Sure” but First Guy has already caught up to his bud­dy. He watch­es them dis­ap­pear through the door of the bar, looks at the card again, then at the Cad­dy. It’s a choice he’s not ready to make, not yet. If the insur­ance mon­ey doesn’t come through, maybe, but right now the Caddy’s some­thing he can count on, some­thing per­ma­nent. The two of them have a nice under­stand­ing and Ard can’t imag­ine it any oth­er way. He lets the card drop to the ground and his hand rests on the door han­dle for a few sec­onds before he opens it and climbs in.

Ard slides across the seat to the pas­sen­ger side and drops the glove box lid, digs inside for the bag, glanc­ing out both win­dows and check­ing the side view for peo­ple. No time to cut prop­er so he pulls out his license and smash­es it hard against the glove box lid, crush­ing the rocks to pow­der, run­ning the card back and forth until he’s sure its fine. He cuts out two more lines and scoops the last of the pow­der into the vial. He flips the emp­ty bag­gie inside out, sticks it between his upper lip and gum and does the two lines.

Thought you’d gone,” Red tells him when he gets back to the bar.

Some of your new clien­tele want­ed to gawk at the Cad­dy. Had to scare em off.”

Yeah, ain’t like it used to be. Cou­ple of them wan­na buy this place.”

Aw hell, Red, you can’t sell out. You want me to end up drink­ing alone?”

I don’t know, Ard. I can’t stand this heat no more. Me and Charlene’s talk­ing about mov­ing to the moun­tains. Besides, place ain’t been the same since I closed the dri­ving range and Mon­key ran off. Lit­tle bastard’s prob­a­bly in Mex­i­co by now.” Red shakes his head and grins when he says it.

Why don’t you open the range back up?”

Shit, my heart ain’t in it. And you know Char­lene wouldn’t stand for it after she knocked out my eye with that three wood. Would’ve been a hel­lu­va dri­ve, too. Besides, after that I pulled every­thing left, and you can’t win a bet for shit if you ain’t hit­tin’ ‘em straight.”

What’re they gonna do with the place?” Ard reach­es and feels the vial in his pock­et, wish­es he hadn’t asked the ques­tion and thinks about going back in the john. Red shrugs and looks at two cus­tomers that have just walked up to the oth­er end of the bar, then turns back to Ard.

You know, me and Char­lene, well, she’s put up with a lot of my shit over the years. A man needs some­thing, Ard. Used to be, around here, you had a piece of land, some his­to­ry, you knew folks and they knew you. I don’t much think I like it around here no more. Char­lene either. She keeps talk­ing about the moun­tains, Jonas Ridge. I fig­ure I owe her a lit­tle peace. At the end of the day, she ain’t so bad to sit up in the hills and get old with.”

I still say she hit you with that golf ball on pur­pose. She always was the bet­ter shot.”

Yeah, prob­a­bly. Hav­ing one eye ain’t been so bad, though. I don’t think I could take it if I was see­ing things full on.” Red tilts his head toward the oth­er end of the bar. “Let me get these ass­holes anoth­er design­er beer.”

Ard locks the bath­room door behind him, stands in front of the mir­ror and gets two quick hits, then leans on the sink and stud­ies his face. He looks old­er, old, for forty. The blue of his eyes looks more fad­ed, weak­er than he remem­bers. Checks his watch, decides he’ll lay out of work again tomor­row. It’s been a week and a half, what’s one more day? He’s prob­a­bly been fired by now any­way, he hasn’t both­ered to check mes­sages or call in. Two more hits. Wash­es his face. Two more. Leans in close to the mir­ror and whis­pers “If he sells this place, you got nowhere else to go, noth­ing left in the world but that damn Cadil­lac. Christ, you’ll have to become a fuck­ing priest.”

The bar is near­ly full when he returns and Ard is con­fused. How long was he in the bath­room? The music has changed, it’s loud­er, he doesn’t rec­og­nize the song. Two girls are danc­ing togeth­er between the pool tables and from this dis­tance the smoke hangs over them like a halo. It seems every­one in the place is talk­ing to some­body and Ard strains to deci­pher some­thing, any­thing, that’s being said. He makes his way to the bar, but it takes a few min­utes before Red sees him. Red’s buried shoul­der deep in a beer cool­er when he yells to him.

JoJo called and said he ain’t gonna make it, Kathy’s a lit­tle upset about George Bush and he bet­ter stay home. What’s wrong with GB?”

Noth­ing now.” Ard shouts back but Red is already pass­ing out more beers.

Ard scans the crowd, think­ing maybe he’ll spot the two guys that liked the Cad­dy. The mos­qui­toes have chased most every­one in from the patio and now the bar is packed. Cou­ples, tables of five, six peo­ple, clus­ters of the upward­ly mobile around the bar, turn­ing up drinks, laugh­ing. He doesn’t rec­og­nize a sin­gle face. A guy bumps into him on the way to the bath­room, mum­bles “sor­ry” as Ard elbows him away. Ard sees the car guys at a table in the cor­ner and starts over. They’re with their wives, young, good look­ing, too thin. Ard approach­es and rais­es his beer in salute. Both guys look up, one shouts “Cad­dy Man!” and leans back into their con­ver­sa­tion. Ard waits, then turns back toward the bar, but a red­head already fills his seat, flanked by two guys hov­er­ing over each shoulder.

The vial is open in his left hand with the spoon in his right. Ard has no idea how long he’s been sit­ting in the Cad­dy, how many times he’s raised the spoon to his nose, how many peo­ple he’s watched file into the bar. The din from inside has been replaced by the cicadas and bull­frogs scream­ing from where the dri­ving range used to be. The noise is deaf­en­ing and relent­less and Ard final­ly reach­es to roll the win­dow up and pan­ics when he near­ly drops the vial. What’s left will nev­er last until Thurs­day, won’t last much past morn­ing, and a new strain of pan­ic grips him.

It’s near­ly two a.m. when he pulls into Quinn’s dri­ve and rings the bell. He rings, rings again, and sees a glow of light through the win­dow. The door creaks open and Ard is greet­ed first by Quinn’s 9mm, then grad­u­al­ly Quinn’s arm, shoul­der, and final­ly half of his face takes shape from behind the door.

You don’t come by with­out an appoint­ment, shit-fer-brains. What the fuck’s wrong with you?”

Yeah, Quinn, sor­ry man. Lis­ten I need anoth­er eight ball, two if you got it.” Ard reach­es for his pock­et, checks to make sure the cash from Jamie is still there. There’s only six, maybe sev­en hun­dred left from the bank accounts, and the insur­ance com­pa­ny won’t issue a check until after the fire report. Depend­ing on which way that goes could make for a rough land­ing. Ard can’t think about that now.

Get the fuck off my porch. I told you Thurs­day.” Quinn starts clos­ing the door. Ard reach­es out and stops it.

You know any­body else that’s hold­ing? I got to get through tomorrow.”

Quinn steps into full view. He’s wear­ing noth­ing but his box­ers. “Ard, lis­ten, we’ve known each oth­er a long time, hell, since high school. You got­ta slow down, man. Do the drug; don’t let the drug do you. You gonna get your ass killed pulling shit like this.”

I got lots going on, Quinn. I need a lit­tle more to get through tomor­row, a gram or two even, that’ll hold me until Thurs­day. After that, I should be get­ting my insur­ance check. I can pick up some real weight, maybe a brick. Won’t be both­er­ing you as often. I’m pret­ty sure work’s canned my ass; it’s a lot to deal with, you know? I just need to get by till the check makes it.”

Sure you do. And if the check’s so cer­tain, why they wait­in’ on the report? Besides, you got the last of it this after­noon. My next order won’t come in until Thurs­day morn­ing. And I don’t know if you ought to think about upping your count. You get­tin’ a lit­tle car­ried away late­ly. Now I got to get back to bed before Annie gets up. Go home, go to bed, leave that shit alone for a day. I’ll see you on Thursday.”

Ard stands beside the Cad­dy and stares into the dark sky. He’s sur­prised that he sud­den­ly remem­bers a class from high school and Mr. Hoskins talk­ing about black holes. About how once some­thing is drawn into one it’s nev­er released, how it becomes anti-mat­ter, as if it nev­er even exist­ed. Ard search­es the sky and thinks about the absur­di­ty of it all. If noth­ing exists in a black hole, then how can any­one know the holes actu­al­ly exist? You can’t mea­sure emp­ty. Ard stretch­es both arms upward and gives the Milky Way the finger.

 ***

A threat. You come to my house and deliv­er a threat? Okay, sure, I’ll dri­ve. Maybe before we get to the bishop’s office we’ll make anoth­er stop, see how the sheriff’s doing.” Jamie doesn’t turn to face Ard; rakes a comb through his thin­ning hair.

Come on, Jamie. Just let me have a gram or two. I’ll make it up to you after I see Quinn tomor­row. Besides, you gonna tell the sher­iff old Ard here’s been sell­ing you cocaine? Remem­ber, I’m out, I ain’t hold­ing, what’re they gonna do?”

Ard can see the priest’s reflec­tion in the mir­ror but Jamie doesn’t return his gaze, occu­pied instead with adjust­ing his col­lar. Ard looks clos­er at his brother’s image. Same blue eyes, but stronger. Jamie’s chin is his chin, Jamie’s nose, his nose. Ard thinks of his best friend from child­hood, the boy he grew up with, hunt­ed and fished with, drank his first beer with. Thinks of how he loved him, how he hat­ed him, and he sud­den­ly real­izes of all the ass­holes walk­ing the earth, Jamie’s the only one with the same blood in his veins as his. So what was it Jamie had that he couldn’t find?

Today would’ve been your and Rosa’s what, fif­teenth anniver­sary?” Jamie says as he turns to face Ard.

Fuck you, Jamie. Why you got­ta bring that up?” Ard walks out of the bath­room hall­way and sits at the table. Jamie fol­lows him.

How long since you’ve been to work?”

I don’t know. Week, maybe more.” Ard rubs his eyes with the heels of both hands.

Have they fired you?”

Yeah, prob­a­bly. I ain’t both­ered to call.”

Arden, you can’t just not work, you’ve got to get your shit together.”

The fire report’s due this week. I’ll have the insur­ance mon­ey in a cou­ple of days. Now come on, Jamie. I feel like shit warmed over.” Ard drops his head on the table. The lam­i­nat­ed wood lies cool and for­eign against his forehead.

So take the mon­ey and start over. Get your­self straight­ened out. Our church has a program…”

Ard jerks his head up from the table. “So is this advice com­ing from my coke­head broth­er or the local coke­head priest? You don’t know shit, Jamie, you nev­er did. Jesus Christ, we weren’t even fuck­ing Catholic. Our old man a drunk. And hell, if the State hadn’t of sent us to the home after Mom­ma died, you’d nev­er of seen the inside of a church. You were the dumb ass that bought into all that shit they fed us. Look at you, you’re no dif­fer­ent than Pop, no dif­fer­ent than me. Use your own damn rehab clinic.”

No. You’re wrong, Ard. I thought about what you said yes­ter­day, what we talked about, what I’m doing. Becom­ing. Thought about it a lot. Maybe we aren’t any dif­fer­ent, maybe you’re right. But I’ve found my place, what’s right for me. Not this. So can you. Love…

Save the bull­shit, Padre, I know the rou­tine. I heard all the same fairy tales you did, but I ain’t stu­pid. Look around, take a good look. God is great, God is good—you remem­ber when we had to say that bless­ing? My ass. Your God is one twist­ed, vin­dic­tive SOB the way I see it. Damn Jamie, you’re a fuck­ing priest and you’re doing an eight ball of coke a week.”

No. Not any more.” Jamie turns and stares out the kitchen win­dow for sev­er­al min­utes and Ard can feel the air dis­ap­pear­ing between them, finds each breath more dif­fi­cult. When Ard hears the sound of Jamie slid­ing open the kitchen draw­er he can feel the oxy­gen rush in to fill the space. Jamie faces him and toss­es the eight ball of coke. It lands on the table and slides across the lam­i­nate, near­ly falls off into Ard’s lap.

I’m done. Nev­er even opened it. There it is, now you make a choice. We’re broth­ers, Ard, we’ll walk away together.”

Ard looks at the bag, can already feel the surge and his heart quick­ens. He paus­es for only a sec­ond before slip­ping the bag into his pocket.

Cash is a lit­tle tight. Okay if I square up with you after the insur­ance check comes in?”

Don’t both­er.”

Real­ly, man. I’ll cov­er you, swear it.”

No.” Jamie shakes his head and looks at his shoes, sighs and walks past Arden toward the door. Ard feels him pause just behind him but he can’t turn and face his broth­er, even as Jamie speaks to him. The words “I love you” fil­ter over him but Jamie’s voice sounds a thou­sand miles away and echoes faint­ly until Ard hears the soft click of the front door.

 ***

 Out­side the sky has already gone white from the stale heat and humid­i­ty and it’sonly ten in the morn­ing. The steer­ing wheel is hot to the touch and Arden uses the heel of his hand to guide the Cad­dy into the street, not sure where he is going. He rides past his apart­ment, turns around and comes back, this time pulling into his park­ing space. He stares at his bal­cony win­dow, thinks the Cad­dy is the only place that feels like home as he light­ly touch­es the bag in his shirt pock­et, then backs out.

The park­ing lot at Red’s is emp­ty and Ard makes a wide turn, cuts the wheel hard left and throws a spray of dust and grav­el toward the patio before com­ing to a stop. As he’s walk­ing down the over­grown path behind the build­ing, Ard decides there’s no sight more depress­ing than a bar in day­light. When he reach­es the clear­ing he stops beside the wood­en pic­nic table and stares first at Monkey’s emp­ty cage, then the table. He thinks of the night he talked Rosa into doing it right there on the table and how Mon­key screamed and rat­tled his cage the whole time. The scent of patchouli drifts up to him and he reach­es to let his fin­ger­tips trace along the edge of the boards where Rosa, smil­ing, had pulled him toward her that night. Ard sud­den­ly spins and kicks the cage with his right foot and near­ly falls as it rocks back on two legs. He kicks it again and this time it tum­bles into the weeds, the door pops its rusty hinges and swings free, slam­ming into his shin. Ard pulls up his jeans and watch­es the blood trick­le down his leg until it reach­es the top of his sock.

The inside of the Cad­dy is almost unbear­able now and Ard can feel his shirt stick­ing to the back of the seat as he picks the cock­le-burrs and beg­gar lice from his pants. His leg aches and the AC’s blow­ing hot air, the last of the fre­on gone. He looks around the emp­ty park­ing lot, at the bar, at his reflec­tion in the rearview, but only for a sec­ond. He takes the bag­gie from his shirt pock­et and holds it up to the sun. He moves the bag­gie in front of his eye, fur­ther, then clos­er to his face until the bag blocks the ball of sun from his view. He reach­es to open the glove box but slips the bag back in his pock­et instead and drops the Cad­dy into drive.

Ard slows down as he pass­es JoJo and Kathy’s place but he knows nobody’s home. Before he real­izes it, he’s cov­ered the two miles and is parked in what used to be his dri­ve. He wish­es the big oak were still there but the flames jumped from the house to the branch­es and then it was gone too. The weeds and bri­ars have tak­en over the twen­ty-three acres to the point that even the real estate devel­op­ers that have start­ed call­ing don’t real­ize there was a house there only six months ear­li­er. Ard walks past where their porch once stood, through the remains of Rosa’s flower gar­den. The sun’s noth­ing more than a glare in the sky and every­thing in front of Ard appears to shim­mer and he can see the waves of heat ris­ing from the earth.

The dry weeds crunch with each step Ard takes and for a moment the sound reminds him of walk­ing on snow. He can hear the insects buzzing and occa­sion­al­ly sees a grasshop­per take flight as he approach­es. The dog days. The time of year when you can smell the heat, and, when he was a kid, this was the time you’d see some stray dog come wan­der­ing up, its head low and swing­ing from side to side as it ambled for­ward, slob­ber and drool drag­ging from its jaws. Step after stiff-legged step, it would just keep com­ing at you like it want­ed you, need­ed you to take the twen­ty-two from the rack and put a hol­low point through its brain.

Ard keeps walk­ing, cov­ers the ten acres they planned to turn into pas­ture, pass­es the fad­ed barn and its emp­ty stalls. The land ris­es slight­ly here and the uphill steps short­en his breath. At the crest of the knoll Ard stum­bles and falls to one knee, but catch­es him­self before land­ing on his face. The pond is at the bot­tom of the hill only twen­ty or thir­ty yards before him and as he ris­es to his feet, the green water looks thick and solid.

There’s no shade any­where and Ard sits on the low side, oppo­site the dam. He takes the bag from his shirt pock­et and begins to unwrap the twist tie when he hears a voice behind him and quick­ly drops the bag­gie, still open, back into his shirt pocket.

Those after­mar­ket AC’s nev­er work on Caddy’s, huh?” The boy, about nine­teen or twen­ty Ard guess­es, stands over him. Ard doesn’t rec­og­nize the boy. He can tell he’s wear­ing fatigue pants and no shirt, but the sun dis­torts his view of the boy’s face.

Hot­ter than a French whore in Saigon, ain’t it?”

Ard looks back at the pond, wraps his arms around his knees.

I come down here for a swim, lit­tle R & R. How about you?”

Ard looks back at the boy but the sun is direct­ly behind him now and he still can’t make out any of his fea­tures. He’s noth­ing more than a dark sil­hou­ette and his shad­ow stretch­es over Ard, but Ard doesn’t feel any cool­er. He shades his eyes but the boy still doesn’t come into focus.

Fire’s a hel­lu­va thing, ain’t it? Cook your meat, burn your house.”

Who the fuck are you?” Ard tries to get up but his legs have fall­en asleep and he has to roll onto his knees and then tries to push him­self up but can’t.

Napalm; now that’s a fire.”

Get off my property.”

Fire’ll burn itself out. This heat just keeps on, don’t it?” The boy shifts to one side and the glare of the sun blinds Ard and he quick­ly turns his face away.

Need some rain,” the boy says, drags the toe of his boot in the packed dirt. “I heard there was a house up yon­der. Burned down first day of March, what I heard.”

Ard tries to stand again but his left leg is still stiff and heavy, feels like it’s sep­a­rate from his body and he rais­es on his good leg while he rubs his hand over his oth­er thigh, try­ing to get the blood moving.

Guess they coul­da used some rain that day too, huh? Migh­ta been able to save the woman what was in the house to slow that blaze some. Well, shit like that’ll hap­pen, can’t say the rea­son why. Coul­da been her hus­band was try­ing to cook up a lit­tle hash oil. You look sur­prised there, broth­er. Ah, I know all about that. Take a lit­tle hooch, mix it in with a cou­ple of buds and boil it down. I seen it done in a field hel­met, though, nev­er on a stove or noth­ing. You got to tend it close either way, that stuff’ll flame up in a sec­ond. Course, it coul­da been some bad wiring, it was an old frame farm­house and you know how those are. Tin­der­box, and prob­a­bly ain’t no insu­la­tion on the wires, house that old. You don’t ever know.”

Bas­tard.”

Some­thing like that get in a body’s head and just eat away, best not to even dwell on it. I seen plen­ty I ain’t got no answer for. Seen this VC come run­ning across a field and a 50 cal­iber cut him plum in half, right at the waist. His legs just kept on run­ning like ain’t noth­ing hap­pened. Heard this thump one morn­ing right beside of me. Looked over and damned if my best buddy’s head wadn’t gone and him still hold­ing his rifle. Go figure.”

I said get off my prop­er­ty.” Ard’s teeth are clenched, the mus­cles along his shoul­ders taut.

Course I guess that VC and my bud­dy was both just try­ing to hold on to some­thing. Bout like the old man used to have that Cad­dy. The answers don’t mat­ter one way or the oth­er. Just like that old car, none of it real­ly stands for no count, huh?”

Ard lunges at the boy, swings wild but the boy glides out of the way. When the boy turns, Ard can final­ly make out part of his face. The fea­tures are blurred and for an instant he thinks its Jamie, even calls out to him twice, but the boy shows no sign of rec­og­niz­ing the name.

Instead, the boy looks across the water and stretch­es. “Damn hot, ain’t it? You know, if I was you, I’d go on and sell that Cad­dy. After mar­ket AC won’t ever be right, no how. Ain’t no point thinkin’ it will.” He stretch­es again and cocks his chin toward the pond. “Yep, think I’ll take that swim now,” he says, then runs past Ard and dives head­first into the water, bare­ly mak­ing a splash.

The rip­ples spread across the pond and Ard waits for the boy to sur­face. The last of the tiny waves reach the far bank and still no sign of the boy. Ard calls out to him, begins to pan­ic, yells again. Won­ders why the boy looked like Jamie, only for that sec­ond, and the thought tight­ens his throat. He looks around, half expect­ing to see some­one, any­one, that might help but he’s alone and his voice echoes against the trees at the far side of the property.

In an instant, Ard breaks for the pond and dives just as he reach­es the water’s edge. The water rush­es over him and he’s amazed at how cool it is, how he can feel it glid­ing over every inch of his skin. He strokes twice, three times, heads for the deep­est part of the pond, but he doesn’t see the boy any­where. He turns all the way around, looks every­where but sees noth­ing in the murky water. Ard dives deep­er still, finds the mud­dy bot­tom. Noth­ing. His lungs are aching now. He opens his mouth and yells but the only sound is his heart­beat. He turns around once more and then he no longer feels the water on his body, for­gets about his emp­ty lungs.

The water around him is clear­er now and he sees a shad­ow float­ing near him. When he moves clos­er and tries to grab the form it’s gone. He real­izes he is scream­ing and as he feels the water rush in his lungs he’s cer­tain he smells wood smoke. Ard looks up, calmer now, and sees Rosa Lee smil­ing and slow­ly mov­ing toward the sur­face. The bag­gie floats out of his pock­et and hov­ers in front of him, the cocaine briefly cloud­ing his view of Rosa before it dis­solves into noth­ing. When the water clears again he can only see the yel­low sun per­fect­ly formed above him, its rays soft and light, cas­cad­ing through the water. Ard ris­es toward it and as he breaks the sur­face the air wash­es over him, car­ry­ing the clean scent of jas­mine across the pond.

 

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Razor Dance, poem by Wendy Ellis

Bill stood in his socks a thou­sand times
before this dim­pled mirror–
at this pit­ted, stained sink
with its small rub­ber plug on a lit­tle, coiled chain.

Bill's straight razor rest­ed across the top
of a heavy ceram­ic shav­ing mug.
The mug held just enough
shav­ing soap for one more close shave.

A nail held a Pull­man strop, curved with age and use
above and beside the sink, and he'd knock it
with his elbow when he pulled his cheek high
to care­ful­ly scrape the whiskers away.

He'd stand there, soapy and deliberate–
and a whis­tled phrase from the 'Chick­en Reel'
would slip out between his pursed lips.

His right arm would hes­i­tate, then Bill would fling out
his hand and he'd do a shaky bit of clog­ging. Flat-footing
in the bath­room with that razor in his hand.
No taps, no wood­en soles–just his socks
on the bath­room floor. Jig­ging as the sun came up
and the cof­fee brewed downstairs.

The floor sighed under his feet,
the house knew Bill was reel­ing and whistling–
swear­ing delight­ed­ly as he reached for a styp­tic pencil
to staunch the nicks.

He'd drag-slide, loose kneed
across the room, pull on his boots,
whis­tle under his breath, come down the stairs.
Swing his wife around and leave for the woods,
cof­fee hot in a ther­mos under his arm.

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Poems by Karen Lockett Warinsky

Tough Girls

We were a lit­tle afraid of those girls–

tough girls in our town–

the life they came from.

 

Lank hair, wiry bod­ies with taut faces,

expres­sions hard­ened by scant meals,

their eyes plunged through ours

as they sized us up,

black liq­uid eye­lin­er worn like warpaint–

a warn­ing:

 

Don’t fuck with me,” it said.

 

By 14 they knew things we did not:

 

Corn­flakes could be eat­en for supper.

Clothes could be washed out in the sink with

a bar of soap.

Swip­ing a lip­stick or some gum

from Glidden’s Drug Store

was pret­ty easy; that you could cry

and hold your breath

at the same time.

 

They could get the coat and boots off their dad, and put him to bed.

They learned where their mom kept her mon­ey stash and cigarettes,

when not to let the neigh­bor boys in the house, and how to

turn an uncle’s old jack­et into a fash­ion statement.

 

As high school rolled on we noticed

them drop­ping away, petals from a wilt­ing flower.

No longer in class—no longer in the bleach­ers at games—

no longer haunt­ing Main Street with their cim­mer­ian eyes.

 

Some Nights

 

There were ways to sur­vive it–

small town life. It required shoe leather,

emp­ty base­ments with record play­ers and a couch,

Boones Farm, a six pack, some smokes;

John Prine, Lin­da, Bob and James to sing us what was real.

 

It required ther­moses full of sloe gin fizz,

shrimp bas­kets from Robert’s Dri­ve Inn,

Mon­ty Python at 10 p.m. on Sunday,

the car­ni­val every June, part-time jobs.

 

We had been to church; were bap­tized and

con­firmed. Did good up to a point. Then we

awak­ened to our dad’s dead end jobs and our

mother’s end­less desires for a new car, a new win­ter coat

and a fin­ished base­ment; their long­ings for

paved dri­ve­ways they could ride on into society

weight­ed down our hearts.

 

We weren’t sure what that meant for us,

but the time clock in the fac­to­ry taught us our worth.

And some nights we climbed up on the hood of the car,

watched the sun go down into the cornfield

and planned our escape.


 


 

Karen Lock­ett Warin­sky is break­ing out of her rou­tine as a mom and a high school Eng­lish teacher and wants to write more about small town life, liv­ing in Japan, the vagaries of love, and all the ironies of life that have come her way.  She was a semi-final­ist in the 2011 Mon­tréal Inter­na­tion­al Poet­ry Con­test, and is cur­rent­ly a mentee with  Arc Poet­ry Mag­a­zine.  Two of her poems will appear lat­er this year in Joy, Inter­rupt­ed: An Anthol­o­gy on Moth­er­hood and Loss, pub­lished by Fat Daddy’s Farm.  Ms. Warin­sky grew up in North­ern Illi­nois and holds a Bachelor’s in Jour­nal­ism from North­ern Illi­nois Uni­ver­si­ty, and a Mas­ters in Eng­lish from Fitch­burg State Uni­ver­si­ty in Massachusetts.

 

 

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Mama's Last Love Song, poem by Joe Samuel Starnes

The sun goes down and it gets cold.
Our chil­dren are behav­ing like dogs.
The snakes are sleep­ing deep in their holes,
fiery red and orange has fad­ed from the leaves
and our cups are brim­ming with bourbon.
A blue sky is slow­ly set­tling to dark.

I escape the house out into the field after dark.
I’ve for­got­ten my coat and shiv­er cold.
In my pock­et I’ve got a flask of bourbon.
In the dis­tance I hear your wild dogs
bark­ing and crunch­ing in the leaves.
I’m watch­ing out not to step in gopher holes.

Across the road I hear a shot­gun blast holes
into a road sign or beer cans lined up in the dark.
The wind back and forth flut­ters the leaves.
My hands and feet are numb with cold.
I’m glad to be ignored by your dumb dogs
who rely on warmth of fur instead of bourbon.

No win­ter coat can warm me like bourbon
and fill up the many lake-sized holes
in my heart not filled by the love of a good dog.
I walk to the big oak and stand in the dark.
My dog froze to death last year in the cold.
You buried her some­where under these leaves.

I wish I could go but I can nev­er leave
so I stand here sip­ping this warm bourbon,
my only pro­tec­tion from lone­li­ness and cold.
My mind is turn­ing into a sinkhole.
I paw my shoe at the earth brown and dark.
You love me much less than these dogs.

Our chil­dren take after you and the dogs,
root­ing and scroung­ing in the leaves.
I wish they would fall down into a deep dark
well and get stuck; I’d drink bourbon
gaz­ing, laugh­ing down into the hole,
not giv­ing a damn if they were wet and cold.

I’m out of bour­bon and get­ting cold.
The dogs are dash­ing through the leaves.
Tonight I’ll take down your gun and shoot holes in the dark.

 

Joe Samuel "Sam" Starnes was born in Alaba­ma, grew up in Geor­gia, and has lived in New Jer­sey and Philadel­phia since 2000. New­South Books pub­lished Fall Line, his sec­ond nov­el, in Novem­ber 2011 (view the online book trail­er).  His first nov­el, Call­ing, was pub­lished in 2005. He has had jour­nal­ism appear in The New York Times, The Wash­ing­ton Post and var­i­ous mag­a­zines, as well as essays, short sto­ries, and poems in lit­er­ary jour­nals. A grad­u­ate of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Geor­gia and Rut­gers Uni­ver­si­ty in Newark, he was award­ed a fel­low­ship to the 2006 Sewa­nee Writ­ers' Con­fer­ence. He is work­ing on an MFA in cre­ative non­fic­tion at Gouch­er College.

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The Great William Gay

has died, but will not be forgotten.

These are some well-known facts in William Gay’s offi­cial biog­ra­phy: that he lived in a cab­in in the woods, that he didn’t use email, that he worked in con­struc­tion his whole life until some­one final­ly noticed he was a great writer. But these facts tell only part of the story.

For read­ers and writ­ers, at least, the fuller sto­ry depends upon an eter­nal ques­tion: is a writer born, or is he made? William Gay was born a writer. As a late-life lit­er­ary suc­cess who didn’t attend cre­ative-writ­ing pro­grams or pay for pro­fes­sion­al work­shops, Gay sym­bol­ized the hopes of strug­gling writ­ers, espe­cial­ly rur­al ones. He was good, and he found a way to let the world know he was good—those are facts we cling to as evi­dence of what is pos­si­ble. Through­out his­to­ry, peo­ple have made long pil­grim­ages to wit­ness less­er miracles.

William Gay’s death last week of heart fail­ure sent tremors through the com­mu­ni­ty of writ­ers and read­ers in Ten­nessee and beyond, peo­ple who loved him as a friend and as a writer. We have asked some of those who knew Gay, in ways large and small, to send us their sto­ries. They come from New York City and from Wyoming, from Maine and from Vir­ginia, and, of course, they come from Ten­nessee. Togeth­er, we hope these recollections—from Dar­nell Arnoult,Adri­an BlevinsSon­ny Brew­erTom FranklinRobert Hicks,Der­rick HillSuzanne Kings­buryRandy MackinInman MajorsCorey MeslerClay RisenGeorge Sin­gle­tonBrad Wat­son, and Steve Yarbrough—present a por­trait of a man who will be great­ly missed.

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Cat Killing, fiction by James Alan Gill

Every time I tell this sto­ry, about me help­ing Char­lie McMas­ter kill a whole pas­sel of cats, peo­ple tend not to believe it.  Maybe it’s that they can’t imag­ine real peo­ple liv­ing this way, and for that I can’t blame them, because no per­son should have to live a life like Char­lie had to, but he did, and still does, and there’s no chang­ing that.

So when I fin­ish here in a bit, and you walk away say­ing I hope that ain’t true old man—thinking I’m sick in the head; think­ing about them poor lit­tle kit­ty cats—well then, the fault’s all mine in the telling.  Maybe that’s why I keep telling it, think­ing that if I can get the word­ing down just so, peo­ple will some­how under­stand.  The facts are all there.  So let me see if I can set them straight for you.

Now the cat prob­lem first start­ed with three—a bob­tail black-and-white and two calicos—but by the time Char­lie called on me, the feline head count had grown to thir­ty-sev­en not count­ing kit­tens, and a per­son couldn’t walk from the weedy dri­ve­way to the old house, a dis­tance of no more than twen­ty feet, with­out step­ping in rust col­ored cat­shit.            So when he came walk­ing down the hill late one Sat­ur­day morn­ing and asked for my help, I went right in and put on my cov­er­alls, because the thing about Char­lie McMas­ter is he’s the hard­est work­ing man I know, and he nev­er asks for help unless he tru­ly needs it.  His own fam­i­ly nev­er offered him as much.  Hell, I’ve known him to drop every­thing to dri­ve forty-five min­utes one way just to help his mama do things that are so sim­ple as to not need any help, and if they were com­pli­cat­ed, it could usu­al­ly wait till the week­end.  But still Char­lie comes run­ning.  That’s the kind of man he is.  And yet there’s some peo­ple around here that think he’s a trai­tor to his own for his mov­ing out of the coun­ty try­ing for some­thing a lit­tle bet­ter.  Of course, those peo­ple wouldn’t know shit for kiss-my-ass.

So while I was lac­ing up my boots, he start­ed telling me his plans on how to final­ly make the fam­i­ly farm pro­duc­tive, clean it up and find some­thing that would be low main­te­nance, maybe bring in a lit­tle mon­ey for his mama.  Men­tioned turn­ing it into a Christ­mas tree farm, or plant­i­ng it to hay, or just let­ting it all go back to trees, any of which would be bet­ter than its state for the past six­ty years.

_____

When Char­lie was lit­tle his grand­pa Homer raised pigs on the place, not by choice but because the hog lot and the live­stock came with the price of the house.  When the old man died, Char­lie took over the care of the pigs even though he was only eleven years old, and things ran smooth enough all things con­sid­ered, but then, when he was just start­ing high school, cholera broke out and every last one of those ani­mals had to be destroyed.  And if that weren’t bad enough, it spread to a neighbor’s farm, and they had to do the same with their pigs, and there’s been bad blood between them since.

Charlie’s uncles—Tuffy and Jess—had nev­er cared noth­ing for hog farm­ing, leav­ing the chores first to their dad­dy and then to their nephew, and so instead of try­ing to buy more stock or try rais­ing some­thing else or even to make amends with the neigh­bors, they just kept on with their so called sal­vage oper­a­tion and cov­ered the forty acres with junk, nev­er con­sid­er­ing who was going to clean it up.

You see, when the uncles both came home from the war, they nev­er said a word about what they’d done or seen: Jess hav­ing been cap­tured by the Nazis only to escape and run smack into the Ital­ians, spend­ing the last days of the war in a hos­pi­tal watch­ing out the win­dow as Mus­soli­ni was strung up by his ankles out­side; and Tuffy push­ing his way through con­stant fight­ing in France and Ger­many only to see even worse hor­rors when the con­cen­tra­tion camps were liberated—no, they nev­er said a thing, just arrived back home one day in 1946 as if they’d been in town for the week­end, and soon they start­ed fre­quent­ing auc­tions with their Army pay and their father’s same sense of a good deal, and they bought up any and every thing, includ­ing box­es of left­overs that no one else wanted.

Their old man made them keep things in order while he was alive—no junk lying about the yard or fields—and Mrs. Thomp­son kept that house slick as a but­ton, but in a few years, old Homer died, and in a few more so did his wife, and then the cholera killed all the pigs, and the junk kept col­lect­ing in the barn and along the dri­ve and over into the emp­ty hog lots, a wealth mea­sured in things but not in val­ue: old wood­en-han­dled tools, school desks, fifty two rust­ing car bod­ies, a leaky boat, a dragline with a blown engine bought from a bank­rupt con­struc­tion com­pa­ny, crates of license plates, shelves of play­er piano rolls, scratched records and lat­er eight track tapes, a ten by ten pal­let of books no one would ever read again, and that ain’t even half of it.

I don’t know.  Maybe at one time it all could have been worth some­thing.  But now it was noth­ing but a blight.

_____

With all this laid out in front of him, Char­lie was excit­ed about the prospect of final­ly mak­ing things right.  We walked down to the farm to look things over, Char­lie still full of pos­si­bil­i­ties, then went in to Mrs. McMaster’s kitchen table for a cup of cof­fee, and in pass­ing con­ver­sa­tion, Charlie’s mama told him she’d count­ed over thir­ty cats gath­ered when she took food out that morn­ing.  Now a farm always has cats on it, and I don’t think Char­lie would have mind­ed a few, but when she told him she’s spend­ing near a hun­dred dol­lars or more a month on cat food, olé Char­lie near­ly lost it.

He told her, stop feed­ing them.  Said, if you keep feed­ing them, they’ll keep com­ing back.

Well, she said, Leila won’t let me.

Leila was her youngest sis­ter who still lived with her, same as she always had her whole life, though now she had Old­timers dis­ease and was crazy as a shit­house rat.

His mama said, I’m afraid that if she woke up one morn­ing and the cats was gone, she’d get real upset.  You talk­ing about tear­ing down the house is hard enough.

Char­lie snick­ered, said, in a few weeks she won’t even remem­ber there was any house.  Or any cats for that matter.

Well his mama near­ly come out her chair.  Said, Charles Woodrow McMas­ter, I can’t believe you just said that.

But Char­lie had grown imper­vi­ous to his mother’s guilt over the years, and said, I can’t believe you’re feed­ing three dozen cats.

Now this makes Char­lie sound like a hard sono­fabitch to be talk­ing to his mama and his bat­shit old aunt like that, but if a per­son knew how he’d come up, they might think different.

_____

Char­lie spent his first sev­en­teen years in that house, liv­ing with his grand­par­ents, his moth­er, her two broth­ers, and Leila, because his father had been killed by boot­leg­gers when he was eleven months old.  And they’d lived as poor as peo­ple can live.  No run­ning water.  Char­lie nev­er had a bed till he was mar­ried.  Always slept on the floor between his two uncles’ beds in their room.  When he was a kid, he nev­er got meat at the table—uncles would eat it all up and tell him he could chew the gris­tle if he want­ed a taste.  But it was no secret about how stingy Charlie’s uncles were.

Hell, even as a grown man, the few times Char­lie would ask his uncles for some­thing he needed—a car part or a tool, which they usu­al­ly had lying around one of the out­build­ings or just sit­ting in the lot tak­ing on weeds—he always paid them for it, because them old boys had nev­er give any­one any­thing their whole lives.  Still, no one under­stood their self­ish greed com­plete­ly till they final­ly died fif­teen months apart, same as they’d been born, and Char­lie and his moth­er were giv­en con­trol over the broth­ers’ bank accounts.  You can’t imag­ine their shock when the bal­ance came in at just over a hun­dred thou­sand dol­lars.  Sounds like a lot, but all it shows is that they saved two thou­sand a year and nev­er spent a dime on any­thing but the junk they hoard­ed.  Charlie’s mama bought all the food and Leila paid the util­i­ties.  Think­ing about it makes me want to spit fire.

It was from all this that Char­lie real­ized his only chance was to work.  And work he did—as a hand all year round for a farmer a few miles south of here; had a hay crew in the sum­mer; and still he slopped hogs and kept up with his school work.  But the one thing that stood out was that Char­lie had a way with ani­mals, and in his first year of high school, he got a job clean­ing cages, help­ing out at the vet­eri­nar­i­an in town.  And the doc there encour­aged him and taught him the work, and so Char­lie thought that’s what he’d try to do.  He even applied to a school for it, and would have been a damn good one, if he’d had the chance.

But the chance nev­er came.  So he kept work­ing.  Got on at the pow­er plant over the riv­er inIn­di­ana, mar­ried a girl from there, and believed he’d nev­er both­er with the farm again.  But before long he was com­ing back reg­u­lar to help his mama around the house, because his uncles nev­er did a thing except what they want­ed any­way.  Seems no mat­ter how you try, you can nev­er real­ly get away from this place.

Shit, I know that all too well.  Dur­ing the war I left to work in the Lock­heed plant inBur­bankCal­i­for­nia, stayed on there for almost ten years, but when our son was born in 1951, just a year before Char­lie came into the world, and our old­est daugh­ter was get­ting ready to start school, my wife and I fig­ured we ought to be back clos­er to home.  So we packed up and moved into this place and that’s where we’ve stayed.  Maybe it was the right thing to do.  Maybe it didn’t make a dif­fer­ence one way or the oth­er.  But even now, I can’t help but think about being able to draw that Lock­heed pen­sion or how much the house inTolucaLakewe’d bought for eleven thou­sand dol­lars would sell at today.  But the past is past.  And besides, I chose to leave and I chose to come back, and that’s worth a whole hell of a lot.  Char­lie sure as shit nev­er had that pleasure.

_____

Now a per­son might won­der at how peo­ple find them­selves in such a life as Charlie’s, for sure­ly things hadn’t always been this way, and they’d be right, as his peo­ple hadn’t been junk traders or hog farm­ers on this hill for all that long.  No, Charlie’s mama and aunt and uncles had been born riv­er peo­ple over on Skil­let Fork, and his grand­dad, Homer Thomp­son, made his liv­ing run­ning trot­lines for buf­fa­lo carp and cat­fish which he could trade for sug­ar, flour, corn­meal, and cof­fee at the mar­ket in town.  Out­side that, they lived from their gar­den and what­ev­er game they could kill in the woods and of course what­ev­er Homer brought in from the river.

Once old Homer told me about the time he came upon a blue heron caught in one of his lines, prob­a­bly drawn to the thrash­ing of the live bluegill he’d put on as bait hop­ing to draw in a big flat­head.  But it didn’t mat­ter to that man what crea­ture was on the hooks, and he took that skin­ny stork home to his wife, had her cook it up, and God help you if you com­plained about that tough stringy mess he tried to pass off as meat.  He nev­er gave any thought about anoth­er way of liv­ing.  Things were the way they were, and that whole fam­i­ly would prob­a­bly still be on that riv­er now if Homer hadn’t stum­bled onto what he con­sid­ered the deal of the century.

The farm is set on a lit­tle rise called Pig Ridge about six miles south of Matin, named for the fact that the place had been the site of a hog lot since the late eigh­teen hun­dreds, and so it was in 1939, on one of his trips into town, that Homer found the place up for sale at a bar­gain price.

The new house was all but com­plet­ed, with one room left unfin­ished because the man who’d start­ed build­ing it the year before end­ed up hang­ing him­self from the rafters after he sent for his wife and three kids at her mother’s house up north.  Some say that she refused to come down here and live on a pig farm, and oth­ers say she was had anoth­er man, which very well could have been true as she remar­ried to a banker with­in the same month of her husband’s death, but what­ev­er the truth is, it’s known that she didn’t come to Matin Coun­ty for the funer­al, and she must not have need­ed the mon­ey because she put the farm up for sale where it stayed nigh on a year because no one would buy know­ing a man had been dri­ven to sui­cide whilst build­ing it.

But Homer Thomp­son didn’t care about dead men, only good deals, so when the new­ly wed­ded wid­ow grew tired of wait­ing and low­ered her price to ten dol­lars an acre, Homer jumped on it and bought the house and forty acres, includ­ing the hogs that were already liv­ing on the farm, for 400 dol­lars even, mon­ey he drew from a tobac­co tin stuffed beneath the floor­boards of the cab­in.  His fam­i­ly nev­er ques­tioned him on where the mon­ey had come from, and they didn’t real­ly care because just the thought of leav­ing life on the riv­er was bet­ter than any earth­ly riches.

Homer moved in with his wife and four kids, and with­in a few years his sons went to the army and fought in Europe and came home again, and then in a few more years, Charlie’s mama met Wibb McMas­ter and they ran off and got married.

But on the day Char­lie came into the world, Wibb was spend­ing time in jail await­ing tri­al for steal­ing cars.  Charlie’s mama stood by him even though she’d been dis­owned by her fam­i­ly and couldn’t go any­where in town with­out hear­ing the unqui­et whis­pers of peo­ple as she passed.  Wibb was final­ly acquit­ted when the man whose car had been stolen sud­den­ly remem­bered that he’d agreed to loan him the car.  The pros­e­cu­tor fig­ured the man had been threat­ened or that he was in on an insur­ance scam but couldn’t come up with the evi­dence, and Wibb was a free man.

Still, he nev­er spent much time at home, would take off for two or three days at a time, then come home to his teenaged wife, and she’d cook big meals and fuss over him and they’d have a hon­ey­moon of sorts, and then a week lat­er Wibb would be off again.  It was one of these excur­sions that final­ly did him in, and instead of Charlie’s way­ward dad­dy return­ing home, the coun­ty sher­iff came call­ing with the news that he’d been killed when a car ran off the road and up into the yard where he sat drink­ing home­made whiskey—a yard belong­ing to Black­ie Har­ris, who in lat­er years would become the old­est man to make the FBI’s most want­ed list for killing his girl­friend and the man she was with and burn­ing the house down around them to cov­er it up.  The string of crimes and killings that filled the years before that had some­how slipped through the cracks, much like Wibb’s tri­al when Char­lie was a baby.

There was a court tri­al over Wibb’s death, but in the end it was called an acci­dent, even though the dri­ver had to dri­ve three hun­dred yards off the road between a row of sil­ver poplars lin­ing the dri­ve­way to hit him.  Eight days after the tri­al end­ed, Homer Thomp­son came to the rent­ed room where his daugh­ter and grand­son were stay­ing, and he packed up all their things with­out a word and brought them back to Pig Ridge as if noth­ing had changed, and that’s how Char­lie came to live there.

He didn’t ask for none of it.  I guess none of us ask for the lives we’re born into, and none of us are born into per­fect lives—we all just make the best of it, some bet­ter than others—but it’s amaz­ing to me that a man such as Char­lie McMas­ter could come out of a bull­shit sit­u­a­tion such as that.  I can’t right­ly say that I’d have been able to do it.  I guess it all boils down to what­ev­er a per­son uses to for­get the lot they’ve drawn: booze or women or mean­ness or hoard­ing things away.  Char­lie chose hard work and kind­ness and self­less­ness, and it was all of his own doing because there wasn’t any god­damn role mod­els around for him to learn it from.

_____

So now Char­lie was the only man left in the fam­i­ly and saw it as his chance to make a reck­on­ing with this place.  No uncles or way­ward fathers to stand in his way.  First thing he did was took his uncles’ mon­ey and bought a brand new dou­ble-wide trail­er for his mama and Leila and set it fifty feet behind the old house where they’d lived for the last six­ty years.  Then he bought a used back­hoe and start­ed to plan on how to clean up that mess of a farm, which was his only lega­cy.  And that’s when he came down to see me.

On the morn­ing of the cat killing, I kept watch from the front win­dow of my house.  Char­lie had worked it out with his mama that when she took his aunt Leila into town on Sat­ur­day for gro­cery shop­ping, he’d kill as many cats as he could while they were gone, and they’d both act like noth­ing happened.

Around eight in the morn­ing, Mrs. McMas­ter left for town with Leila in tow, and when the car had gone below the hill out of sight, I picked up my guns and walked down the road where Char­lie stood in the dri­ve­way.  He was smil­ing, like he usu­al­ly was, plas­tic mug of cof­fee in his hand, cig­a­rette in his mouth.

You ready to kill some cats, he said.

I said, I’m ready to help you out.

We laid our guns in the bed of his truck.  He had a sin­gle shot twelve gauge he’d found in his uncles’ bed­room, and I pulled out the Bel­gian Brown­ing that I’d always used bird hunt­ing along with a small twen­ty-two bolt action with a scope.

I said to Char­lie, what’s your plan?

Well, he said, I fig­ured we’d set out some milk, get them all togeth­er, then start shooting.

And that’s what we did.  He went into the trail­er and brought out a gal­lon of milk and three plas­tic bowls, old but­ter con­tain­ers his mama’d washed, and set them on the bare dirt between the old house and the dou­blewide.  Then we stood back under the porch and waited.

Soon the cats start­ed to crawl out from every­where.  They were fer­al and vicious.  The younger cats ran to the milk, but the old­er cats, led by the bob­tail, stood back, lurk­ing out of sight.  We just sat wait­ing, and after a while, they moved in slow­ly, like they were stalk­ing some­thing.  As they neared one of the bowls, the oth­er cats skit­tered away, all but one, and now the two cal­i­coes flanked in from each side and that olé bob­tail came up the mid­dle.  It’s ter­ri­fy­ing real­ly, to watch domes­ti­cat­ed ani­mals that are usu­al­ly curled up in someone’s lap latch onto another’s neck with teeth and claws till it hob­bles off trail­ing blood.

Before long, each bowl of milk was sur­round­ed by cats, and Char­lie and I walked slow­ly from under the porch of the old house and each of us raised a shot­gun to our cheeks and stood for a minute.  It was odd, almost cer­e­mo­ni­al, like a fir­ing squad, and I was wait­ing for Char­lie to start count­ing or say fire, some kind of sig­nal to begin, when he pulled the trig­ger on his twelve and my ears went deaf with the ring­ing.  Two cats lay twitch­ing by the milk.  Anoth­er dart­ed away to the right, and with­out a thought, I put the bead on him and let fly.  The cat flipped ass over tea-ket­tle and land­ed in a heap.

Two shots and there wasn’t a cat to be seen.  I walked over to Charlie’s truck, laid down my shot­gun, and picked up the twen­ty-two.  Char­lie broke down his gun and slid the emp­ty shell from the chamber.

He said, I saw anoth­er one go around the house.  See if I can’t flush him out.

I slid up onto the tail­gate of the truck and said, I’ll be here.

He made a wide cir­cle around the back, and I watched the oppo­site side, like you’d do rab­bit hunt­ing, expect­ing to see the ani­mal edg­ing along fifty yards ahead of the dog.  But cats ain’t rabbits.

I turned to look at a large pile of scrap met­al along the edge of the dri­ve­way, scan­ning for any of the cats that might’ve holed up in there, when Charlie’s gun boomed, echo­ing off the tin-sided barn, and I turned to see a cloud of white fur drift­ing across the lot like a giant dan­de­lion had been blown off its stem.

I called out, I think you got him.

Char­lie appeared hold­ing the car­cass by the hind legs.  The cat’s head was turned inside out, noth­ing but blood and meat and teeth.  He threw it down amongst the oth­er dead still lying by the milk bowls and said, you know, I nev­er killed any­thing that I hadn’t intend­ed on eating.

The skin round his eyes was lined, like he car­ried the weight of death itself.

Well, I said, smil­ing at him, you can eat them if you want.

Then behind him I caught a flash of move­ment and saw a tab­by cat slide behind an old storm win­dow leaned against a rust­ed trail­er frame.  I raised the rifle, and the cat poked his head out just a bit, care­ful and wait­ing, and when the crosshairs fell on the cat’s neck just behind its jaw, I squeezed the trig­ger, and it dropped in its tracks.

Was it that bob­tail? Char­lie said, hopeful.

No, I said, just a tabby.

He spit into the mud and said, I hate that god­damn bob­tail.  Took up res­i­dence under the trail­er right after we put it in and tore the insu­la­tion off the pipes and they froze.  And you know who had to dri­ve over here and thaw them out when it was sev­en­teen fuck­ing below zero.

We wait­ed a while, and Char­lie lit a cig­a­rette and thanked me again for being such a patient neigh­bor, said that most peo­ple would’ve called the coun­ty or the EPA and forced a cleanup regard­less of cost.  To be hon­est, it’d nev­er crossed my mind to do that.  I could see the state of things when I moved in up the road.  I guess if I didn’t like it, I could’ve found anoth­er house.  Maybe like Charlie’s grand­dad, I was will­ing to put up with a few things in return for a good deal.

After half an hour, we still hadn’t seen anoth­er cat.  I went and picked up the dead and car­ried them into the field.  I fig­ured we’d just take them out away from the house and leave them to the coy­otes and buz­zards, but Char­lie start­ed up the back­hoe and went to dig­ging.  Now a lot of peo­ple who know Char­lie would of laughed at this, fig­ured it was part of his crazy nature: a mix between a child­ish fas­ci­na­tion for heavy equip­ment and a ten­den­cy toward overkill.  But that wasn’t it.  At least I don’t believe it was, because I saw the same thing a week lat­er when he tore the old house down.

_____

Char­lie had planned to spend every Sat­ur­day for the next year clean­ing up the farm.  At the time I didn’t see any rea­son for him to be in such a hur­ry, but it’s clear to me now that as long as that old house stood and that farm lay cov­ered in junk, the mem­o­ry of his old life stood with it, and I guess he thought that when it was gone, he’d be shut of the past as well.

That next Sat­ur­day, I wait­ed for his mama to leave with Leila same as before, then walked down where Char­lie was chomp­ing at the bit.  We start­ed going around to each win­dow on the old place, remov­ing all the glass, which I guess was a ges­ture of safe­ty and sen­si­tiv­i­ty to the fact that Char­lie was get­ting ready to destroy the only house the liv­ing mem­bers of his fam­i­ly had ever known.  After he dou­blechecked that the gas and elec­tric­i­ty were turned off, we went inside one final time.

Six rooms: the kitchen with its big porce­lain sink, the main room with the gas heat­ing stove, the three small bed­rooms built on, the bath­room which had been added in the mid-eight­ies when Charlie’s uncles final­ly gave into the idea of spend­ing the mon­ey to bring in run­ning water.  In the room that had been his mama’s, there was a giant hole in the plas­ter, stuffed with an old quilt to keep out the draft.  This is where she’d slept only a few months before.

He’d want­ed to tear the house down with every­thing still in it, but Mrs. McMas­ter had refused, told him to wait till she had a chance to go through things, so Char­lie drove over each evening to see the progress she’d made.  Knew if he didn’t, she’d drag it out till eternity.

On one of those nights, in the biggest bed­room, the one where he’d slept as a child on a floor pal­let between his two uncles in their tall iron framed beds, she showed him a trunk he’d nev­er seen open which con­tained his father’s belong­ings; she had idol­ized the man for near to fifty years, hop­ing that if she could some­how rewrite the his­to­ry of her life, the shame and guilt of her fam­i­ly and her church and her­self would some­how be erased.  But the truth of it was there all the same.

Char­lie told me on that day he was glad that his dad­dy had been killed.  Glad he’d not known him.  Said he could make up his own idea of what a father should be and live that with his own kids.  I told him that was a right smart way to think, because I’d known his father before I head­ed out west, had run across him in the tav­ern or the pool hall, and while I didn’t think bad of him, for God knows I ain’t nev­er been no saint, I know he’d have nev­er been there for Char­lie.  So I told him the best thing I could with­out lying straight through my teeth.  I said, your dad was a prince of a man when he wasn’t drink­ing.  And I left it at that.

But no mat­ter how much Char­lie had tried to for­get what his father had been, his mama had kept a shrine to this man inside a wood­en trunk, and now Char­lie had to face the phys­i­cal reminders of the dead man that was his father, instead of the one he’d made up in his head.  Inside the trunk was a pair of wool dress pants, a watch, Wibb McMaster’s birth cer­tifi­cate, and a half pack of Camel cig­a­rettes that’d been in his shirt pock­et the day he’d been killed.

I asked him what his mama had done with the stuff.

He said, she took it all in the trail­er, and I haven’t seen it since.

I said half jok­ing, she ought to smoke one of them old cigarettes.

And he said yeah, fire it up and say, my life was shit and here’s to it.

We sat for a sec­ond, then I said, I won­der what a fifty-year-old cig­a­rette would taste like.

You know, Char­lie said, his face as seri­ous as a heart attack, that gets me to thinking.

After work­ing all morn­ing try­ing to bring down the house, with chains run from the back­hoe and hooked through the load bear­ing walls, we only suc­ceed­ed in pulling off the front porch, which was a bit of a dis­ap­point­ment, since it looked like it would’ve fall­en over on its own come a slight breeze.  After that, Char­lie got fed up and extend­ed the hoe full length, start­ed swing­ing it like a giant club into the main chim­ney till it crashed through the roof.  Over and over he swung that arm, hydraulics hiss­ing, the slap of iron against wood and mason­ry, till the house lay in ruins.

I don’t know.  Maybe I’m wrong.  But while he was doing this, I want to believe every stroke of that machine, every fall­en brick and cracked rafter, drained away some of his life’s bitterness.

But now, as I think on it, I don’t remem­ber hope on his face.  Only dis­gust.  Guess it was then he knew that every plan he’d ever make was futile.  That’s what he told me lat­er.  Said, how am I ever gonna change this farm when I can’t even make a dent in the cat pop­u­la­tion.  Can’t even get rid of a trunk full of moth­e­at­en memories.

It’s when he real­ized this place would nev­er be any­thing more than what it was.  A pig farm turned junk­yard.  His boy­hood home.

_____

Char­lie kept his word and worked on the farm all the rest of that year: had an auc­tion, which bare­ly made enough to cov­er expens­es; burned the old wood­en barn at the back of the lot with all its con­tents still inside, hop­ing it’d save time, only to end up with a giant pile of cin­der blacked wood on top of melt­ed plas­tic and rust­ed met­al; hired his son-in-law to help him, only to see him near­ly killed when the trac­tor he was using to pull stumps turned over on him.  One calami­ty after another.

The final wound salt­ing came when he found a musty account ledger tucked away on a shelf in the machine shed.  His uncles had used it to keep a run­ning inven­to­ry of all the things they bought and sold.  It began May 5th 1947, and the last date they’d entered was July 19th 1979.  After that, they sold so lit­tle com­pared to what they bought, they just kept a tal­ly in their heads.

But it wasn’t the account itself that final­ly caused Char­lie to give up on the farm.  In fact for a while, he got a kick out of read­ing the entries writ­ten in their fad­ed old-man scrawl: bought 18 hydraulic jacks some work; bought 3 box­es 8 Track tapes dis­co hits vol­ume 4; sold four win­dow crank han­dles 1963 Ram­bler, $4.  No, it was when he found a yel­lowed let­ter, still in its enve­lope, slid between the pages.

His full name was typed on the front and the return was from the vet­eri­nary school he’d applied to his last year in high school.  After he didn’t hear any­thing from them by the time he’d grad­u­at­ed, he took the job over at the pow­er plant and decid­ed that decent pay and a way off Pig Ridge was all that mat­tered.  But as he slid the let­ter out, it was all he could do to keep his lunch down for fear of what he’d find.  And much the same as he imag­ined him­self doing as a young man, he prayed before unfold­ing that page, only instead of a peti­tion for accep­tance, I imag­ine it was more like, please tell me I nev­er had a chance.  But there it was, like a punch in the gut.  Con­grat­u­la­tions, Mr. McMaster.

_____

As the months passed, you could see he was mak­ing a dif­fer­ence on the farm, as long as you didn’t look at the whole.  Piles of junk hauled off.  Trash burned.  There were even less cats around.  I start­ed notic­ing that from the day of the cat killing.  I’d walk down the road to help Char­lie with some­thing or to check on his mama, and maybe they were still there, but at least the bas­tards stayed out of sight.  Peo­ple say that ani­mals can’t learn and don’t know fear, but I think the ones who sur­vived that day nev­er for­got it.  And I’d still see that olé bob­tail now and again, off in the dis­tance, slink­ing through those brown fields look­ing for mice.

At the end of fall, Char­lie told me he was going to have one last go at the cats, but with­out guns.  He set the milk out same as before, but this time the milk was cut with antifreeze.  He did this every­day for a week.  There’s no way of know­ing if it worked or not.  Hell, I don’t think either of us would’ve been sur­prised if the cats mul­ti­plied drink­ing that brew.  Like some plague only Moses could get rid of.

After that, Charlie’s work on the farm grew less and less.  Every now and again, he’d show up, spend half the day get­ting the back­hoe run­ning, load a truck full of scrap and take it to the sal­vage yard, maybe make enough to pay for the diesel and a pack of smokes.

Then on into the win­ter, his mom’s pipes froze again.  He gave me a call, and we crawled under the dou­blewide to fix the insu­la­tion and get the water flow­ing once more.  I stood at the crawl­space entrance, wait­ing to hand through the portable heater, when he stuck his head out with a wide smile on his face.  Said, I found that bobtail.

I took a step toward the back door and said, where’s your gun.

But he said, don’t need it.

I crawled in behind Char­lie with the heater and set it up to thaw the pipes, and then we inched on our bel­lies to the far side of the trail­er.  Beams of sun­light shined through the foun­da­tion vents, reflect­ing off the snow that’d fall­en the night before.  I kept look­ing for a hint of move­ment or the flash of glassy yel­low eyes, but there was noth­ing.  Final­ly, Char­lie stopped, and I moved up beside him.  The smile was still on his face, and he point­ed with his gloved index fin­ger to the bones of a cat, laid out per­fect­ly in the frozen mud, the tail bare­ly an inch long.

Least I final­ly got that son of a bitch, Char­lie said.  I was begin­ning to think I couldn’t do any­thing for this farm.

And I told him right there that most peo­ple would’ve giv­en up long before.  That at the first sign of trou­ble, they’d look for the eas­i­est way out.  They’d pre­tend the things they’d done nev­er real­ly hap­pened or they’d try to fill up the dark hole in their chest with things shut in an old trunk or with build­ings filled with worth­less mess or with mon­ey that would nev­er be used.  They’d hang them­selves from the rafters of a house unfinished.

I told him that and said, you’ve done more with the shit hand you’ve been dealt than any­one else could’ve.  And I told him that bob­tail nev­er stood a chance.

And so now I’ve told you, and you can think I’m full of nine kinds of bull­shit and for­get every word I said, but I promised him I’d help him make this right, which has noth­ing to do with the farm, because even if he did get it cleaned up and work­ing again, it wouldn’t mat­ter.  No, it seems the only thing that does mat­ter is mak­ing sure peo­ple know there’s a man like Char­lie McMas­ter in this world, and as long as I have breath, that’s what I’ll do.  Because he deserves to have his life mean some­thing.  He deserves at least that much.

 

James Alan Gill was born and raised in South­ern Illi­nois in a fam­i­ly of coal min­ers. He holds an MFA in fic­tion from South­ern Illi­nois Uni­ver­si­ty at Car­bon­dale, and his sto­ries have appeared in sev­er­al jour­nals and mag­a­zines, most recent­ly in Col­orado Review and Grain Mag­a­zine, and will be forth­com­ing in Crab Orchard Review's spe­cial issue Writ­ing From and About Illi­nois. He cur­rent­ly lives in Ore­gon with his wife and two sons, and spends as much time pos­si­ble sleep­ing in a tent and hik­ing trails far from roads, build­ings, and groups of peo­ple larg­er than ten.

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Poems by Karen Weyant

She Likes to Work Graveyard

She knows that the truck dri­ver at the counter
wants the pot rot, the thick pool of crusted
cof­fee that’s been sit­ting for hours.

She waits on the women off sec­ond shift
at M&C Parts, their Ladies Night
a quick bite of apple pie and a few sips

of Just water, please. She serves the col­lege boys
who wan­der in after the local bars’ last calls,
bal­ances three plates on her left arm,

pours drinks with her right. In the lull
after three, she finds crumbs clinging
to the crook of her arm, maple syrup

stick­ing to the thin strands of hair smeared
across her fore­head. She lis­tens to Joey sing
That’s Amore as he bakes for the day, swears

she finds miss­ing vers­es tucked in the backroom
every off-note key lodged in the wire racks
with the con­tain­ers of blue cheese,

the jars of mild pep­per rings and dill pickles.
When she leaves, she collects
the splin­ter moons, brown rings left

on dol­lar bill tips from chipped cof­fee cups,
the thin slice of the night’s remnants
she can see in the rearview mir­ror of her car.

Because We Wore Cam­ou­flage Before We Wore Miniskirts

We knew leaves and twigs first as a poly­ester-cot­ton blend coat
or a brother’s hunt­ing cap that fell to the brim of our noses.
We under­stood dawn on the first day of doe as ritual,

watched our broth­ers and uncles and fathers check their rifles,
their scopes, leave the house curs­ing the cold, but bless­ing the snow.
We made our own guns from broom­sticks, binoculars

from toi­let paper rolls. We pulled invis­i­ble triggers,
pre­tend­ed that the kick-back would bruise the soft skin
below our col­lar­bones, above the place where our breasts

would soon be. We cov­ered our face with green eyeshadow
and black mas­cara, pulled our hair back in tight braids.
We made makeshift tents from bedsheets,

used the top bunk as a tree stand. Our fin­gers nev­er shook,
our aim per­fect, our tar­gets nev­er sprang away.
We grew up, found lip­stick and gold bracelets,

wore our t‑shirts and jeans tight, for­got how we once
want­ed to blend in with the boys. Until that day we saw
the girl wear­ing cam­ou­flage as a short skirt,

dark patch­es rid­ing up her thighs, the green
catch­ing the high­lights in her eyes, and we remembered
those cold Novem­ber days when our mothers

found us hud­dled in our own bed­room hunt­ing camps,
our lips tight­en­ing around whispers,
I’m hid­ing, can’t you see that I’m hiding?

The Dirt Sisters

Because we were the only two girls
in a neigh­bor­hood filled with boys,
we aban­doned the lit­tle league fields
to play in the old strip mines above
Toby Creek. With every climb,

we strived for trac­tion. Slipping,
sneak­ers slid­ing, we fell, bro­ken pieces
of shale pierced the ground, split
open our skin. At the top, we yelled
Queen of the Moun­tain, sure

We want­ed to rule a king­dom of scraped land
and thin tufts of yel­lowed grass.
We staked our claim, scratched our names
in the dirt, became blood sis­ters with a sharp poke
and two grit­ty fin­gers pressed together.

You were the leader, nev­er minding
how dust lined soaked your ankles, how
a thin cloud of dust cir­cled your head
like a halo, how you swiped your pricked finger
against the thighs of your jeans,

the red a rust streak soaked to your thighs.
At home, My moth­er sighed, spit
on a dish tow­el, wiped my face.
There’s a beau­ti­ful young lady underneath
all this
, she said. I nev­er said out loud
that I wasn’t so sure.

Karen J. Weyant's work can be seen in 5AM, the Barn Owl Review, Cave Wall, The Fid­dle­back, Fly­way, Cop­per Nick­el and Riv­er Styx. Her first chap­book Steal­ing Dust was pub­lished in 2009 by Fin­ish­ing Line Press, and her sec­ond chap­book, Wear­ing Heels in the Rust Belt won Main Street Rag's 2011 Chap­book Con­test and will be pub­lished in 2012. In 2007, she was award­ed a poet­ry fel­low­ship from the New York Foun­da­tion for the Arts. She now lives and writes in War­ren, Penn­syl­va­nia, but teach­es at Jamestown Com­mu­ni­ty Col­lege in Jamestown, New York. 

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Country Music, fiction by Miriam Kotzin

The Cab­in is one of those bars that has at least three pick-up trucks parked on the side no mat­ter when, and inside it's dark and smells like beer as though a fine par­ty had gone on the night before, and the place hasn't been aired out so there's a head start on the next good time. Just after my divorce, when Bill left with the tele­vi­sion, I used to come here to watch Jeop­ardy. I'd bring my daugh­ter Rose Lee along, lit­tle as she was, and felt fine about it.  Now I come here with my friends Mary Beth and Jan­ice, I pay no mind to what's on the tube, and Rose Lee is just old enough to buy her­self a legal drink.

The TV over the bar is always on, but unless it's a big game, nobody seems to look up at it.  They might as well save the elec­tric­i­ty.  Week­end nights when there's like­ly to be danc­ing, the volume's turned down some, but even when some­body feeds the juke­box quar­ters the TV plays.  In spite of the ladies' entrance, which no one ever uses, this is pret­ty much what the town has to offer in way of a night out.

Pete brought Jeff over to where we were sit­ting around a table and intro­duced us.  Good look­ing.  Freck­les.  Con­struc­tion.  Union.   "I told Jeff that you ladies would make him feel right at home.  Now don't go mak­ing a liar out of me."

Mary Beth kicked me under the table.   So did Jan­ice.  Jesus. You'd think that no new men ever come to town.  That we didn't know any first- rate men at all.  All right, so if I'd been in a dif­fer­ent mood, maybe I would have done a lit­tle kick­ing myself, or maybe even been will­ing to play a lit­tle foot­sie.  But I’d just read anoth­er self-help book, and I’d giv­en up on bad rela­tion­ships, and I wasn't sure I was in the right mood for a good one.

Pete smiled.  Jeff beamed. The three of us girls smiled right on back.  My heart wasn't in it.  I almost expect­ed the draft from the flut­ter­ing eye­lash­es to blow the nap­kins off the table.

Or it might have been that last week was my old anniver­sary, remind­ing me how my ex-hus­band had come to town to do con­struc­tion work on the new bank build­ing where Rose Lee now works as a teller.  We'd had a romance and got our­selves a head start on a fam­i­ly; no mat­ter what else, I've nev­er been sor­ry to have Rose Lee. Bill left fif­teen years ago when she was sev­en, sent sup­port checks reg­u­lar until her twen­ty-first birth­day, and doesn't live so far that they can't see each other.

But he stays far enough away from me so that now Rose Lee is grown he's no both­er in my life at all.  He's been a mod­el ex-hus­band, and I don't regret his going.  Past is past, but some­times why I'd loved him so comes back to me like heat light­ning in the evening sky.

Pete and Jeff went to get drinks for our table.  Both of them were built stur­dy.  Pete's hair had gone gray ear­ly, and he had a bald spot that I used to like wak­ing up to.  In the last twen­ty years with the town small as it is, he had spent a while with each of the three us, and though he wasn't one to kiss and tell details, at least not any more than we would, we sup­posed he would have said a few kind words about us to Jeff.

"What are we sup­posed to do, draw straws?" asked Janice.

"I don't think we'll have to do that."  Mary Beth said tak­ing Jan­ice at her word.  "And when was the last time you saw a straw in a drink here?"

"I'll sit this one out," I said.

"Pauline."  When they get on my case like this they kind of drag out the last part of my name so that it has three syl­la­bles.  "What's wrong with you?"

"Noth­ing.  I want to keep it that way."

"Well, he seems nice enough."

"He hasn't said five words.  Jack the Rip­per would seem nice enough after just five words."

"Oh, give him a break."

"Give me one, will you."

When Pete and Jeff came back we changed the top­ic and made small talk about Clay­ton.  Jeff dropped crumbs of infor­ma­tion about him­self on the table as though he were feed­ing fish and wait­ing for them to rise to the sur­face to nibble.

Thir­ty-eight.

Divorced. Once.

One boy, eigh­teen, pho­to in wallet.

Can cook for himself.

Miss­es a woman's home cooking.

It was past mid­night until I real­ized that Jeff was the kind of man I'd been warn­ing Rose Lee about since she was old enough to say some­thing about what under­wear I put on when I had a date.

I was the first to leave.  As I got up from the table, so did Jeff.  He stood there, smil­ing at me, telling me with his eyes all the lies a woman wants to hear even when she knows better.

And that's how things began.

 

"What about your ex-hus­band?" he asked after our first night togeth­er.  He stroked my hair at the tem­ples, fol­low­ing the path where the soft brown would sprout sil­ver wings in a few years if I took after my momma.

"Gone."

"That's it?  Four let­ters.  G‑o-n‑e?"

"Oh, there's more to him than that."  I couldn't see drag­ging my his­to­ry out where it would clut­ter up the nice clean sur­face of our new rela­tion­ship.  He'd learn what he need­ed to as time went on.  I sus­pect­ed he was just pok­ing to see whether what I told him jibed with what he'd heard from Pete. Men can be sneaky when they're fig­ur­ing out what they want to do with a woman and for how long.

 

We got through mud-time just fine and all through the spring we watched the lit­tle leaves unfold and the blue wash back into the sky.   We did the usu­al things–weekend nights at the Cab­in or the movies, sup­pers and TV at home, and occa­sion­al week­end break­fasts at the Cir­cle Din­er where Jeff liked the hot­cakes and eggs with sausage.  We talked about fir­ing up his gas grill, but hadn't quite got around to it. What hap­pened was fine, and what didn't hap­pen didn't seem to mat­ter. I want­ed it to go on and on like that, easy, our time togeth­er a loose weave.  Our love-mak­ing was com­fort­able, always, and some­times for me, being with him that way was like walk­ing into a fan­cy hotel room and find­ing a fresh-made bed turned down to wel­come me into it and with a gold-wrapped choco­late on the pil­low, too.

My mom­ma had always warned me that life gives you what you look for, so I tried not to look for trou­ble.  I pre­ferred hav­ing trou­ble sneak up behind me, tap me on the shoul­der, tip his hat and say, "Par­don me, Ma'am…" So I thought every­thing was per­fect until Jan­ice and Mary Beth were shop­ping over in Bridgeton and told me they'd seen Jeff, walk­ing out of the Hill­top Tav­ern with Rose Lee's friend, Delia.  And since he'd tak­en the trou­ble to go twen­ty miles for lunch and nev­er men­tioned it to me, I fig­ured he had some­thing to hide.  From then on I watched to see how he act­ed with her, and I didn't much like what I saw.  He stayed sweet as pie with me as long as I could pre­tend not to be notic­ing that some­times he didn't call when he said he would and that he'd be out when I'd call him back after an ear­ly phone call.

 

For hours we'd been hav­ing a silent fight, you know the kind.  Nei­ther one of you admits some­thing is wrong, because you know that what's wrong is some­thing you don't want to acknowl­edge.  It's like an ani­mal has gone and died in the wall and the smell is there, and you think that if you pre­tend to ignore it, it will go away, but it doesn't, at least for a long time.  And what makes it bad is you know there's noth­ing you can do about it any­way.  And even after you can only remem­ber how it smelled, if you think about it at all, you know the lit­tle bones are walled up some­where in your house.

I should have known not to argue with a man who has just stepped in dog shit and tracked it over his kitchen floor before he'd smelled trouble.

I watched him toss his sneak­ers into the yard, prob­a­bly smash­ing the gera­ni­ums I'd plant­ed.   Wear­ing his pathet­ic white socks, he used wads of paper tow­els to wash the mess up from the floor.  He put the paper tow­els in the garbage.  Then he filled the sink with deter­gent water, and then he went out back with the garbage.  He came in car­ry­ing his sneak­ers by their laces.  He held them over the sink for a while before he care­ful­ly low­ered them into the suds.

Up 'til then I had been pret­ty qui­et.  After the bad time we'd been hav­ing, I thought it would be bet­ter to hang back from this whole event. I watched the sneak­ers dis­ap­pear into the sink where I'd fixed the sal­ad for din­ner and where I had expect­ed to get the water for morn­ing cof­fee.  I sup­pose I must've made some sound, because he wheeled around and snapped at me, "Did you say something?"

And then I said, "A buck­et might be better."

We had a dis­cus­sion on san­i­tary habits that had an awful lot to do with how I felt that he'd been pay­ing too much atten­tion to Delia and how he felt that I had no right to care about what he did with his time when he wasn't with me.  But instead we said:

"They'll be eas­i­er to scrub in the sink."

"We use the sink for food."

"Peo­ple put sneak­ers in the wash­er where they put sheets and tow­els.  You can clean a sink easier."

"It's just not real appe­tiz­ing, is it?”

"Clorox will dis­in­fect the sink just fine."

"Do you have Clorox under there?"  I knew he did.  The kitchen and bath­room often stank of Clorox which he used full strength.

"I'm just going to let them soak."

"What about the dishes?"

"They'll wait.  Don't you ever do wash in the sink?"

"Are you com­par­ing my under­wear to dog shit?"

Some­times I'm sur­prised how much ten­sion a lit­tle infi­deli­ty can cause.

A few days lat­er, I took a long lunch to try to make it up to him and then I wished I hadn't been in the room when Delia called.  I was sor­ry that I'd heard him talk to her, seen him bright­en up like a pol­ished teaket­tle so shiny I could see her face in it next to mine, with both our faces pushed out of shape for being there together.

When I answered the phone I could have told her that she had the wrong num­ber, but I was sure she'd just call back and he'd be mad at me.  Besides, she knew who I was, and I didn't want her telling every­one that I had tried to fool her.  I sup­pose she didn't expect me to be at his place when I ought to have been work­ing down at Clark's market.

So now Delia knew that he'd sweet-talk her right in front of me.  That would make a good sto­ry that any one of the three of us could tell.  It was a sto­ry I had sworn I would nev­er be in again.

I hoped Delia wouldn't say any­thing to Rose Lee.  I want­ed to be able to talk to her myself first. All through lunch that day after the phone call I'd sat star­ing at the pots of hot pink gera­ni­ums in the noon sun, hard­ly look­ing at Jeff at all.  I tried.  Over his shoul­der the flow­ers pulled my atten­tion away from his eyes, which I couldn't have seen any­way he was squint­ing so much.  He almost nev­er wears sun­glass­es, being vain about his hazel eyes and long lash­es.  Unless it's for one of those times when he can be dra­mat­ic and take off his avi­a­tors real slow, he wears them pushed up on his head where they take the light and bounce it around.  For the rest of the sum­mer, when­ev­er I saw gera­ni­ums I felt queasy.

These were the gera­ni­ums I'd brought to him and put in big white pots with ager­a­tum to bright­en up his yard a bit for times when I'd be here and espe­cial­ly for times when I wasn't.   Male dogs piss on trees to mark ter­ri­to­ry and women plant flow­ers.  For all the good it does.

 

I tried not to blame Rose Lee for this.  Of course it wasn't her fault that Delia had pushed her way into my romance.  I still like to say that she pushed her way in, but I know that's not what happened.

It's about two months now since Rose Lee told me about how Jeff had come over to the girls' booth at the Cab­in, car­ry­ing his glass of beer.  He smiled one of his won­der­ful smiles and plonked him­self down next to Rose Lee who pret­ty much on instinct slid over and made room for him.  For the rest of the evening he'd turned the charm on both of them.  Rose Lee, who should have heard enough about men, my men, to make her wary, came home with the sto­ry hap­py as though she was bring­ing me home­made jam.

She'd intro­duced him to Delia as my boyfriend, and after that, she took all that hap­pened as pure friend­li­ness. I might try to take some com­fort that she's still so inno­cent. I knew there was trou­ble when she said, "I'm sor­ry for what I've been say­ing about him, Mom.  I can see why you like him so much."

"Well, can you now."  I said.  "I'm real glad to hear that."   I tried not to be too sarcastic.

For all the times Rose Lee and Jeff have been thrown togeth­er he'd nev­er done much to charm her, so I knew right then that the high beams had been for Delia.

Jeff is only a cou­ple of years younger than me, noth­ing to raise an eye­brow even in this town, and Delia, who's got five years on Rose Lee, has nev­er put up age lim­its on her beaux.  When Rose Lee start­ed hang­ing with her, I was wor­ried, until I remind­ed myself that Rose Lee had nev­er got­ten into trou­ble while she was com­ing up, and with me as her moth­er at that.  I kept my mouth shut, hop­ing they'd drift apart, but work­ing togeth­er in the bank they stayed tight.

For the last cou­ple of weeks Rose Lee hasn't talked much about Delia, and she's done a tap dance rather than answer any ques­tions about her.  And as for me, I guess I have been ignor­ing one of my major rules, nev­er to ask a ques­tion I don't want the answer to.  With­out know­ing it Rose Lee was giv­ing me the answers to all my ques­tions, and I was kind of sor­ry I had been asking.

I kept hav­ing a dream of see­ing Jeff with Rose Lee and Delia.  Jeff had his arm draped over each one, their arms wrapped around his waist, reached down and into his back pants pock­ets. I could feel them bump­ing togeth­er as they walked down the street with me caught behind them with no way to pass.  The ground had opened up behind me so I couldn't turn my back on them and walk away.

I took to mak­ing a record of all the times things didn't match up–what Jeff said, what I heard, and what I didn't hear from Rose Lee.  It isn't like me to write things down, but when I felt crazy, I used a pack of index cards I brought home from Clark's school sup­plies, head­ed each with a date and wrote down what didn't line up.  I hid these from Rose Lee and kept them in with a pair of my shoes she wouldn't be caught dead in.  Some­times when she's gone and I'm alone, I spread them out on my bed to get a real good look all at once at what's happening.

 

One after­noon I spent some time with my index cards and then went to cook din­ner for Jeff.  I heard a man on the radio say what Alabama's death row was, you sit alone in a hot room until it's time for them to take you out and fry you.  Some­times I wor­ry my life might get like that. What hap­pened was this.  Jeff and I were sit­ting at sup­per in his kitchen and I was show­ing my unhap­pi­ness by eat­ing almost noth­ing.  He was prais­ing my chick­en con­coc­tion, and I knew I was get­ting on his nerves.  He kept urg­ing me to eat, and I kept smil­ing and pick­ing at my own good cook­ing.  Good cook­ing was a mat­ter of pride with me although I had no illu­sions that the way to a man's heart was through his stom­ach; for the men I knew that would be aim­ing too high.

He'd worked his way through the chick­en and corn and the tossed green sal­ad and had got to the home­made blue­ber­ry pie.  He was telling me what had hap­pened that day on the con­struc­tion site, and I was ask­ing the sort of ques­tions that showed I wasn't real­ly pay­ing atten­tion.  I kept ask­ing him to repeat ends of sen­tences and ask­ing him to tell me again who had said what.

I imag­ined Jeff tak­ing Delia to lunch at the Hill Top, Delia wear­ing her hot pink mini skirt with red patent leather spike heel san­dals, her nails paint­ed a pale green to set off the pink and red.  I could see Jeff open the car door for her so he could help her up on the curb, him bend­ing down, enjoy­ing the good view of her legs.   Their fin­gers brush togeth­er.  Then he watch­es her sashay after the host­ess. I could hear him urge her to have a shrimp cock­tail.  She dips the jum­bo shrimp into the cock­tail sauce, tilt­ing her head back slight­ly as she opens her mouth to eat them with those green-tipped fin­gers of hers. She leans for­ward, "Mmm…" she says, "Good."  Shrimp!  No won­der he's been so will­ing to take me up on all my offers of home cook­ing, with him buy­ing Delia jum­bo shrimp for lunch.

And all the while I was push­ing food from one place on my plate to the oth­er, which is easy enough with chick­en and sal­ad but is pret­ty hard to do with pie.   Jeff didn't usu­al­ly tell me any­thing much of what had hap­pened dur­ing the day so tonight's sto­ry must have tak­en real effort on his part.  I sup­posed he thought hear­ing about how a load of bricks got moved would take my mind off him and Delia.  Or maybe it was a gift to me.  I don't know.

He was about to help him­self to a sec­ond slice of pie and I was about to get up for some ice cream for him.  This wasn't kind­ness on my part or even habit of set­ting out to please.

Then Jeff got up and, with­out a word, went to the cab­i­net under the sink counter where he kept the pots and bent way in.  He came out hold­ing the mouse by its tail, its legs caught on a glue board.  I hadn't heard a thing, but I sup­pose he'd heard a squeak or its tiny lit­tle struggle.

I'd had enough of trou­ble with men in my life to rec­og­nize the expres­sion on Jeff's face, so I let out a long wail­ing "No" and ducked.  I didn't hear a splat or thud, what with the sound of my protest, and then I looked up.

Jeff just stood there by the sink, still hold­ing the mouse by its tail.  He had a look on his face as though he'd been slapped by some stranger.   He lift­ed the lid off the trash and dropped in the mouse.

I lis­tened for its muf­fled scrab­bling.  Noth­ing.  I knew enough not to do more than mur­mur, "I'm sor­ry."   I couldn't ask him, "Why, of all the girls in town, do you have to chase after Rose Lee's best friend?  Aren't my friends good enough for you?”

I could tell he wouldn't try to stop me as I left, and I was care­ful not to slam the door.  I was sure I'd be talk­ing to him tomor­row, but judg­ing by his face, he wouldn't be throw­ing much of any­thing at me for a while.

If it hadn't been for feel­ing sor­ry for the mouse, I sup­pose what hap­pened could be kind of fun­ny if you have the right sort of sense of humor.   Rose Lee wouldn't see the joke in it, and I decid­ed that I'd best not men­tion what had hap­pened tonight.  By the time I'd dri­ven home I'd have some sto­ry ready to tell her to explain why I hadn't stayed over.  I didn't like to tell out­right lies, so I planned to shuf­fle around until she assumed we'd had a squab­ble about some­thing unim­por­tant, and I'd come home for some peace.  The fact is, my leav­ing had noth­ing to do with the mouse. We could have made that up easy enough.

 

My life is not a movie, and so when I came home, I didn’t expect to find Delia sit­ting with Rose Lee at my kitchen table, with a half-emp­ty bot­tle of Jack Daniels for a prop.   Rose Lee and Delia had iden­ti­cal­ly paint­ed frost­ed mauve nails each with a sil­ver star on the ring fin­ger.  The nail pol­ish and the sheet of appliqué nail dec­o­ra­tions sat on the table right by the Jack Black.    The light was good in the kitchen, and I could tell from the way they held their hands that they'd just done each other's nails.

Rose Lee was look­ing more like me these days.  "Rose Lee, " I said, and after just a heart-beat's pause, "Delia."

"Mom­ma," Rose Lee said, not at all apolo­getic for what she'd brought into our kitchen.

"Pauline," said Delia, smil­ing as though she belonged here with­out my invi­ta­tion shar­ing my whiskey and my boyfriend with me, shar­ing a bot­tle of nail pol­ish with my daughter.

I hadn't been this near to Delia since she'd start­ed see­ing Jeff, so I took a hard look at her hen­naed hair and her pea­cock-blue eyes.  The sto­ry around was she didn't need the con­tact lens­es to see.

"You're home ear­ly," said Rose Lee.

"Mmmm," I said.  I poured myself two fin­gers of the whiskey, but I didn't sit down.

"Mom­ma," said Rose Lee, talk­ing just as stern as I'd ever spoke to her, "when will you ever real­ize that Jeff is a jerk?

I was glad she'd used the old-fash­ioned word.  Still, I didn't like hear­ing what she was say­ing, espe­cial­ly while Delia was lis­ten­ing, though I'd had some thoughts along those lines myself.

I won­dered whether Delia or I would defend him, and then I con­sid­ered what would hap­pen if I dumped mauve nail pol­ish into Delia's hen­naed hair, but I knew that I want­ed Rose Lee to stay at home for a while longer, and an assault on Delia wouldn't help keep her here.  I would have to be on good behavior.

But at least I was going to enjoy telling Jan­ice and Mary Beth about this.

"Pauline," Delia's voice was just the least bit blurred. "I nev­er meant any harm."  She looked, for a moment, like a repen­tant child until her face lit with a grin that remind­ed me why I had wor­ried that she'd be a bad influ­ence on Rose Lee.  "But then again, to be hon­est, I nev­er gave it much thought."

I won­dered how that could be true when she was with Rose Lee so often and they seemed to be so close, but then maybe some women are born with­out moral sense, the same as men, and Delia could be one of them.

"Delia," I said, sit­ting down, "I'm not sure I want to be hav­ing this dis­cus­sion with you."

"I under­stand that," she said.   "But it can't hurt now.  Under the circumstances."

"Your friend­ship with Rose Lee?"  We both looked over at her.

Rose Lee had the grace at last to look embarrassed.

"I didn't mean that, but yes."  She paused.  "It's just, didn't you know, I'm not see­ing him any more."

I did all three of us the favor of not ask­ing how I was sup­posed to know.   "Oh," I said, with the faintest lilt rock­ing my state­ment towards a question.

"It wasn't much fun."

Not much fun.  I told myself that she was twenty-seven.

"I can't say noth­ing ever hap­pened."  She was almost sulking.

Well, at least she wasn't a liar, too.

"But one thing you ought to know.  He nev­er once even men­tioned your name."

"Thank you, Delia."  Maybe twen­ty-sev­en wasn't so young, then, if she could real­ize that although he'd slept with her there was one worse betray­al I hadn't suf­fered.  "I am glad to know that."

I sup­posed Rose Lee could do worse in friends and, after all, I could do still worse in men.

Sat­ur­day night that week a crowd was at the Cab­in hav­ing Clayton's ver­sion of a good time.  This time last year I was free.  I'd go out to the Cab­in with the girls on Fri­day nights, and some­times on Sat­ur­day, too.  And the usu­al guys would be there to buy us an occa­sion­al pitch­er and from time to time slide us across the floor.  I had no one spe­cial like Jeff to make love with, or to cry over.  I fig­ure that five years from now I'll still be work­ing at Clark’s, com­ing reg­u­lar to the Cab­in, and I'll watch Jeff do his ver­sion of a slow dance, his hips glued to Jan­ice or who­ev­er. And maybe if I'm lucky, some nights instead of com­ing here I'll stay home and watch TV so Rose Lee and her hus­band can have a night out.

Jeff picked up his beer and stared down at the ring of water on the var­nished table, delib­er­ate­ly replac­ing the glass sev­er­al inch­es away.  For some time he did not look at me, as though what he was doing took all his atten­tion.  He drew out­ward lines from the cir­cle, then, final­ly, looked up at me and smiled.  "Sun," he said, "Sun­shine.  You are my."

"Am I?"  I looked down at what he'd drawn.  "Am I really?"

"Sure you are, Sug­ar." he replied.  With the flat of his hand, he swooshed across the sun he had made, so that only a wet smear remained.

I looked over his shoul­der across the room to where Delia was sit­ting with Rose Lee.  I caught Delia's eye and winked.  She winked back and Rose Lee waved to me and I heard him say, "Real­ly and tru­ly.  My one and only.  Yes­ter­day, today, tomor­row."  He held his hand out across the table and I put mine in his.  He traced a soft wet path from my wrist bone to my ring fin­ger and all the way down over its frost­ed mauve nail where a tiny sil­ver star caught all the light there ever was.

 

pho­to by Al Gury

A col­lec­tion of my flash, Just Desserts, was pub­lished by Star Cloud Press in 2010. I have three col­lec­tions of poet­ry, the most recent of which is Tak­ing Stock (Star Cloud 2011). My work, which has been nom­i­nat­ed five times for a Push­cart Prize, has been pub­lished in or is forth­com­ing in such places as Shenan­doah, The Dead Mule, South­ern Hum, Eclec­ti­ca, Thieves Jar­gon, Under­ground Voic­es, Frigg, and Boule­vard. I'm a con­tribut­ing edi­tor for Boule­vard and a found­ing edi­tor of Per Con­tra.

I teach cre­ative writ­ing and lit­er­a­ture at Drex­el Uni­ver­si­ty, where I also co-direct the Cer­tifi­cate Pro­gram in Writ­ing and Publishing.

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