Blood, Guts, & Whiskey Page 2
She laid that smile on me again and it peeled off another couple years so that now she was the older one, the one in charge.
“Maybe you want to close up shop early,” she said, sliding off the stool.
“Maybe I do.” I walked around the bar, hoping she couldn’t see me tenting out my jeans. I threw the deadbolt on the front door and pulled the strings on the blinds on the window. Before I did, I peeked out into the parking lot, which was empty except my old truck. Maybe she parked down the street, I figured, and turned to ask her. The words got jammed in my mouth. She was in the corner of the bar, sitting on the glass top of the sit-down Ms. Pac-Man machine. I wondered if her ass was cold, seeing as how while my back was turned she’d stripped out of those black leather pants and didn’t have a thing on except a pair of high-heeled cowboy boots.
“I thought this would be fine,” she said, patting the video game table under her ass.
It was fine, all right. Fine, indeed.
And time passed slowly and, well, the way it did back when I was young and time seemed like it would last forever. Every now and then someone would rattle the door, as the regulars who couldn’t believe I would shut the door came calling. A few times the phone rang, and I knew that had to be some right thirsty boys indeed who’d go home to look the number up to see if they could rouse me. But none of the noise bothered us at all, except once, later on, after the sun set and there wasn’t any light but the orange glow of the Budweiser clock over the bar. A noise like a long loud rip of fabric went by. It was the sound of a motorcycle, something chopped and mufflerless. At that, Jolene stiffened under me like a deer who hears the step of a clumsy hunter. But then it passed and faded and after a few seconds she unlocked her joints and turned back into the slippery slick she-devil. Where there’d been fear in her eyes, I only saw thunder.
So we talked and then we’d wrestle some more, and then talk again. She told me about growing up in Georgia, about how her grandmother was an honest-to-God dirt eater who’d scoop soil off the ground and pop it in her mouth, embarrassing Jolene something proper. She told me about how football was king then and how she’d put her prom dress on layaway. She told me more than that and I noticed that none of her stories ever reached up into the past few years. What had happened to her since that prom stayed a mystery.
I talked too, and if she really listened, she might have noticed that I did just the opposite. Everything I told her was in the now, ever since I opened Jackie Blue’s. Mostly stories about what the drunks did, like the time Mad Dog McClure opened up Mike Lewis’s head with a claw hammer not a foot from where we now lay. Stories about bad men, but I didn’t delve back into the dark days, back when I was bad myself.
So when we talked we kept our secrets. But when we wasn’t talking, there weren’t no lies between us, and she saw me for who I used to be—a dangerous man. And I saw her in danger. So much danger. I got it in my head that maybe I was the man to get her out, and then I thought maybe that’s just what she wanted me to think.
We slept on a bed of our clothes and woke around dawn, to the sound of songbirds outside. It was a sound that didn’t fit in Jackie Blue’s any more than if you heard Lynyrd Skynyrd coming out of the treetops. God, she still looked good in that morning light, and let me tell you: that was a thing I wasn’t used to anymore. A man who owns himself a bar don’t hardly ever need to go to bed alone, but what you wake up with is usually a poisoned head and possum bait smiling next to you, the kind you’d chew your arm off to get away from. But not her. I stared at her until my old eyes started to burn and then I took some time to look at me instead. The fur on my chest and belly had all faded from black to gray over the last few years, like I’d spent the time soaking in hot water and the ink had leeched on out. The gut had gotten bigger, but I hadn’t gone soft. No, not yet. I still had some pretty good muscle, hauling kegs and tossing drunks. And under the faded India ink tattoos on my forearm, I still had some ropes of muscle. Maybe I wasn’t just Jackie the bartender yet. Maybe there was still some Jackie Blue underneath, ready to bark at the moon.
She turned herself over, blinking in the sunlight, just as I was finishing pulling on my old leather boots.
“Good morning, cowboy,” she said, not bothering to cover herself in the daylight. “Sorry to see you’ve already got yourself dressed. A lot of effort for nothing, if you ask me.”
“Protein,” I said. “This old goat needs protein if he’s planning on walking, much less working, today. There’s a diner down a block, should be opening about now. How do you like your eggs?”
She sat up and hugged herself, as if all the sudden she knew she was naked. Then she slipped that mask back on and leaned back to show herself, pale skin against the leather pants beneath her.
“I’ll put you to work, Daddy,” she said. “All you need is a little bit of that popcorn and a belt of brown stuff to get you back in the saddle. What do you say?”
Lord, even after the night she’d gave me there was something in me kicking its heels up for more. But I picked up my keys, partways because I truly needed some grub, and partways to force her hand. It was time to get some truth from the little lady.
“Over easy suit you?” I jingled my keys at her.
“Don’t go.” See, there was some of that honesty she showed me on the floor last night.
“Why not?”
She hugged herself tight again. “I need you. I need shelter, don’t you see?”
“You hiding from a man?”
She laughed. “I suppose you could say it that way. I prefer calling him a low-down son of a bitch.”
“And what’s this son of a bitch want with a pretty little lady like yourself?”
“Can’t you guess it?” She stood up in all her glory. “The dummy thinks we’re still in love.”
It’s a story I can believe.
That don’t mean I do, just yet.
“This dude got a name?”
“Cole.”
“Cole? Just plain old Cole? Like Slash?”
“That’s all I know to call him.”
“That’s all you know? And you’re his woman?”
“Was. As of last night, I’m all my own again.”
She’d met him in Tulsa, she said, and picked up with him and his boys. Bikers—called themselves the Sloppy Satans. That name meant something to me from stories I’d heard from some of my meaner customers. Oklahoma boys, I told her, who moved some Nazi dope up and down I-44.
“Cole weren’t a Nazi,” she said. “No more than anybody else, anyway.”
I shook my head.
“I’m not saying the boys are Nazis. The dope is. You ain’t never heard of Nazi meth?”
She shook her head.
“Some good old boy from around these parts, around twenty years ago, he went over to the library over at Missouri State—they called it SMSU back then—and found the recipe that the Nazis had for cooking up amphetamines back in World War II. It’s the premier recipe for Ozarks meth. Our little contribution to that world.”
She nodded, like something in her head just clicked. She pulled her purse close to her and then stood up to pull on her leather pants. It pained me to see her do it, even if it was fun to watch.
“I don’t know from Nazi dope,” she said. “What I do know is I’ll take a whole lot of lip of a man if he’s as much fun as Cole was, but I’ll be damned if I’ll let him put his hands on me. Last night, Cole had a little bike trouble—the ride had gotten real bumpy. We were all pulled over on the side of the exit, just where the highway is up the road?”
I nodded to let her know I knew where she meant. That was only a quarter mile from here.
“Well, I asked Cole when we’d be heading back to Oklahoma. Now, I’d ridden with him long enough to know that I came in a weak second place, if that, to that bike of his. But I guess I never saw it in him to smack me around like that.”
She touched the side of her face, turning it towards me to examine. It looked flawless to me.
“And that was that, huh?”
She purred a laugh.
“I jumped the guardrail and marched through a couple of yards and then saw your place. I grabbed that there barstool and figured I’d start up a new life right then and there.”
“Is that what you figured? You didn’t walk into here like a woman on the run. You walked in like a goddamn cannonball.”
She smiled. “Ain’t you ever cut free of something and it made you feel wild?”
Not for a while, would be the truth of it. Not since I walked out of the life and into this bar. But the way she said it, and the way she looked, made me think that maybe I could do it again.
“Think that motorcycle man is looking for you? That why you don’t want for me to leave?”
She stepped closer, put a hand on my arm. The whiteness of her made my skin look dirty.
“You ever dump a mean son of a bitch?”
I pushed her hand away and grabbed onto the bar.
“Is he coming? Is that why you’re here?”
“I figured if he was coming, he’d come right away. It wasn’t until I thought it was safe that I made my move with you. You see?”
I did. I saw that Jackie Blue’s was on a back road, and while it might be the first place you’d find on foot, it’d be real easy to miss from the road, especially if Springfield weren’t your town. And I saw that she knew that, and that she hadn’t given that fellow near enough time to give up on her before the two of us got busy. But I also saw that it’d been near fifteen hours since she came through the door, and even as fine as she was, fifteen hours is longer than a man could look for a woman with his buddies in tow.
“If he were coming, he’d a been here by now,” I said. “So there ain’t no harm in me running to get us some breakfast. You can keep laying low here, and then the two of us can sit and figure out what the next part of your grand adventure is going to be once you leave here.”
“That’s what you want?”
I wanted to run across the room and mash myself to her. I wanted to sell the bar and buy a bike and see how far across the planet the money could get us. I wanted to shave the gray out of my hair and step back into my old boots and stomp and steal for enough money for us to last forever.
“Yeah,” I told her. “That’s what I want.”
I drove over to Aunt Martha’s Pancake House and ordered up a couple stacks to go. I picked up a News-Leader and took a seat, turning straight to the editorial page to read the letters from the loonies. There was one about how abortion stops a beating heart, one about how the school board was trying to teach kids evolution, or, as the letter put it, “from goo to you via the zoo.” The last letter was about how the Ten Commandments needed to be posted up in every school. All three quoted the Bible in the first paragraph.
I love living in the Ozarks.
“Jackie?”
I looked up and there was Pinkle. Don Pinkle, that is, looking every bit the methed-out redneck that he was. He stood there Nazi-dope skinny with a sad, scraggly goatee and bags under his eyes that looked like full-grown slugs. If he’d slept in forty-eight hours, it had been forty-eight hours ago. He flashed me a smile, but that isn’t the right word, because there wasn’t nothing flashing in that brown meth mouth of his, just teeth, yellow and orange and brown like dry dog food. He came by the bar some nights with some of the boys, every once in a while getting on a rebar crew to earn an honest dollar—which must have felt lonely and out of place in his vinyl and Velcro wallet. He never tipped on a drink, not once.
“Pinkle,” I said like it was the whole conversation, and tried to get back to my newspaper. But he wasn’t having it.
“Went by the bar last night.”
“Did you now?”
“Wasn’t open.”
I dropped the paper, seeing as it was clear he wasn’t going away.
“Now, Pinkle, don’t you think I know that?”
“Knocked on the door and everything.”
“Well, trust in your senses, boy. We were closed.”
“Thought I heard something,” he said, scratching a scratched-up face. His nostrils stood out bloodred and ragged against the trout belly of his skin. “That’s why I knocked, see? But nobody answered.”
“Hear voices? You? You can’t tell me that hearin’ voices is some sort of strange occurrence in your life, the shit you’ve got floating in that lump of gristle you probably call a head. I bet it sounds like happy hour in there most times.”
“I thought maybe you were in there with someone, is all,” he said, trying to give me a saucy look. “Ain’t nothing to it but to do it, right?”
I stood up fast and took pleasure in how he scurried back a few steps. Sometimes folks forget just how big I am, or what I used to be able to do. Sometimes I forget myself.
“And I thought,” I said, “that what I do in there or don’t do is exactly one hundred percent none of your goddamn business. Care to tell me how I got so misled about that?”
Just then a waitress called out, saying Pinkle’s food was ready and that mine was getting bagged up.
“That’s a whole lot of food for a body,” he said, looking at my order. “Got yourself a tapeworm?”
“Got something to plug that hole I’m getting ready to stomp into your head?” I asked back.
“Not meaning to aggravate you,” he said, holding up his palms.
So I took a few deep breaths and just told myself that the dumb twiddlepatted motherfucker is too stupid to barely breathe, much less know when to leave well enough alone.
I was wrong, it turns out. Pinkle really is stupid, just not as stupid as I gave him credit for. Not that I figured it out by his next move, which was to try to pay for his breakfast with a hundred dollar bill. It was early yet and of course the joint couldn’t handle that, so I groaned and paid for his while mine was still being put together. I didn’t even ask where he’d gotten the hundred. I didn’t want to know.
“Could you throw in a dollar extra?” he asked me with a sheepish grin. “I need me some quarters.”
“You need to be laying off that dope,” I told him, but pushed the quarters across anyway. “And you need to not think about setting foot in Jackie Blue’s until you’re ready to pay me back, hear?”
He grabbed his food and hotfooted out the door. I went back to the waitress, who was kind of cute, and gave her a wink. Well, the goat had really woke up, hadn’t he?
“Some dude, huh?”
“Yeah, people suck,” she said. “Bank on it.”
“Rosy disposition.” God, I wish I knew what it was about girls with too much eyeliner and a bad attitude that got to me. Then I thought of Jolene grabbing the brass pole that ran under the bar and I knew that I was good to go again.
“Mister,” she said, pushing my bag of food over to me. “Work the night shift at a diner some time, and then you can tell me about how great people are. Especially people like that one.”
I was about to tell her about how I worked a bar and knew how people could be, when it struck me that there was something strange in the way she’d said “like that one.” She stressed the that like she could still see him, so I turned around, and there he was at the gas station across the street, jabbering into a pay phone. I didn’t like that. And then I remembered that hundred dollar bill, and I liked it all even less. There was plenty of ways that a man like Pinkle could get some cash money, none of them nice. But to have a fresh hundred to spend on breakfast at the end of a binge, that didn’t set right. It was probably nothing, I thought, but decided I’d walk over there and see what he had to say. And then he looked up and saw me crossing the street and dropped the phone. A piece of paper fluttered to the ground in his wake.
A big semi rolled past the road and by the time it passed, Pinkle had a good head start. Besides, I wasn’t going to win no footrace with a meth head. I stopped at the phone and picked up the paper scrap. Then I dropped the breakfast. There was an out-of-town phone number scrawled on it,
with one word under it, and that word was Cole.
The chopper was a beauty, all silver fire and wheels. It slouched in front of the front door of Jackie Blue’s, which hung open. The wood around the doorknob was splintered like someone had kicked it open. He couldn’t have been there long—less than ten minutes had passed since Pinkle made his call. In fact, when I climbed out of the truck I could still hear the bike’s engine ticking. Then that sound was ripped out of my ears by a scream coming out the door. I ran inside, my fists balled at my sides, hoping he didn’t have a gun.
He probably had a gun.
The insides of the bar looked like someone had picked the whole place up, turned it upside down, and given it a shake. The register was popped open and the cash drawer hung crookedly out, the shelf lifted to search out the underneath. Bottles had been shoved off the shelf, some of them breaking on the floor. A cloud of booze stung my eyes and plugged my nose. All this came to me out of the sides of my mind. Right there in the foreground was a big old boy with an arm inked with jailhouse tats he had wrapped around Jolene’s throat. His other hand muffled the screams with his palm. Jolene’s eyes bulged out over his hand, and her own hands didn’t fight his but instead clutched her black leather purse.
“Just stand back there, Pops,” he said with an Oklahoma twang. “Just keep a cool head and we can all walk out of this.”
“Funny words coming from a man just trashed my bar.”
He barked a little laugh at that.
“Brother,” he said, “I just got here. This little bitch”—he gave her a shake for emphasis—“is the fucking source of all our troubles, yours and mine. I don’t know how she’s been playing you, but if I had to guess, I think I could. I know how she suckered me.”
He took his arm away from her throat and cupped the crotch of her leather pants. She tried to say something through his other hand, but it kept her muffled.
“Played me but good, brother, and now she’s playing you. When I came through that door she’d done cleaned your register out.”