Nick Sword–Two: Dr. Ronnie

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With leash in hand, Nick left Taft’s apartment building and walked to a nearby park. It was a good place for Nick to chill out and for Ceasar to do his business. The resume lady would have to wait her turn.

The park itself was wide but not very deep, just deep enough for a small baseball field. The city street ran along the front, with railroad tracks along the back. On one side, a couple rows of run-down apartments sat next to the baseball field. After the ball field, there was a shelter house next to the tracks, and a paved drive that looped through the full width of the park and connected with the street at either end. The park’s neighbor on the other side was a trailer court. The ball field was not lighted, and it was empty in the early evening.

Nick left the sidewalk and walked through the grass toward the shelter house, letting Ceasar lift his leg to pee along the outfield fence. He stopped in the shade of a tree to send a quick text to the resume lady, arranging to meet her in the parking lot outside her office building in about an hour and a half. Her reply came as Sid Caesar stopped to poop. Nick picked up what the dog left behind in a plastic bag before reading the message.

“Okay,” she texted. “See you there. I HAVE to talk to you!!!”

She sounded distraught, thought Nick, as he tied a knot in the bag and watched a black late-model Ford Explorer cruise the park’s drive. The driver was slouched in the seat with the bill of a ball cap pulled low. He slowed as he passed Nick, but didn’t stop. It was the second time the SUV had looped through the park, and Nick watched as it moved out on the street and came back around. This time, the Explorer stopped a few feet from Nick.

The man wore sunglasses, and beneath the cap’s bill, Nick could see little of his face. The guy also wore about a two-day stubble of beard, and a palm tree print shirt. He had one hand out the open window, the other hand draped over the top of the steering wheel. A half-smoked cigarette dangled from his lips, and his voice came low and raspy.

“Are you from Dr. Ronnie?” mumbled the driver.

Nick played along.

“I might be,” tested Nick. “Do you know Dr. Ronnie?”

The man did not answer immediately. He drew on the cigarette, exhaled smoke out his nose, and tapped the ash out the window. Smoke drifted from his mouth as he spoke.

“Come on, man,” he said, more plainly with the cigarette removed. “Sure I know Dr. Ronnie. Don’t play coy. I been doing business with the good doctor for a long time.”

Nick fished deeper.

“If I AM from Dr. Ronnie, what kind of business are we talking?”

The driver blew a plume of smoke out the window in a long sigh, seemingly exasperated by Nick’s attitude.

“I really don’t have time to fuck around, man!” he rasped. “I’ve got a party tonight, and Dr. Ronnie said he’d send what I need! This is the drop point, you’re the only one here, and you’ve got a bag in your hand! Now, is that the shit, or not?”

Nick liked a man who got right to the point. He looked at the bag in his hand, and actually, it WAS the shit.

“Yeah, this is it!” answered Nick.

The guy reached out the Explorer’s window and pressed a wad of bills into Nick’s hand. Nick didn’t count it, but he could see pictures of Alexander Hamilton. Still, he paused before passing the bag. It all seemed too easy. There should be more drama or something.

“Is it primo shit?” he asked.

Nick bit his tongue to keep a straight face.

“Oh, it’s primo, all right!” said Nick. “This is pure D shit!”

As a matter of fact, it was still warm.

“All right! All right!” came the reply.

The guy pressed more bills into Nick’s hand.

“Let’s not negotiate! Just give it to me! I’m in a hurry!”

Nick stuck the bills in his pocket and handed over the bag which the guy tossed into the console. Then, he jammed the Ford into gear, squealed the tires all the way out of the park, and disappeared down the street.

Almost before the first SUV was out of sight, another one slowed on the street and turned into the park’s drive.

“Come on Caesar, let’s make ourselves scarce!” exclaimed Nick.

Nick drug Sid Caesar behind him and walked quickly toward the railroad tracks and the sheltering growth of scrub trees and bushes along the right of way. The new car might be the real courier, late for the “buy”, and Nick wanted no part of explanations. That was between Dr. Ronnie and Party Man.

Nick stayed out of sight along the tracks for half a mile or so before cutting to a side street and a back way to Taft’s. As he walked, he counted the wad of twenty dollar bills, whistling softly between his teeth.

“Holy shit, Caesar!” he announced to the dog with new-found respect and no pun intended. “You should be proud of yourself! For you, that was one massive dump! Not a bad score for a bag of dog turds!”

Sid Caesar seemed to soak up the praise, and he pranced proudly along the sidewalk.

Once back in Taft’s apartment, Nick scanned the place to see if anything had changed. It hadn’t. The cold disaster remained on the dinner table, and he could hear the sounds of a movie from Taft’s room. Steven Seagal must have ended, because a Pink Panther movie had begun. Peter Seller’s flicks were another of Taft’s favorites, and Nick knew them all by heart, all seven of them. He could hear what sounded like one of Cato’s karate attacks on Sellers in A Shot In The Dark. In this one, besides Inspector Clouseau and Cato, there was Elke Sommer, and she was hot!

Dum-da-dum-dum played on Nick’s phone. It was Taft.

“Binge watching Pink Panther tonight,” read the text. “Leave Caesar in his room. Talk to you tomorrow. Master Cho in the morning. Remember about practice sessions!”

Just as well about binging Pink Panther, thought Nick. He had to go to work, anyway. He wasn’t sure what she meant about “practice sessions”, unless Taft had taken him seriously about surprise attacks. If she had, it would be her mistake, he chuckled to himself.

Sid Caesar had started humping his leg again, and he walked awkwardly to the spare bedroom, detached the dog, and closed the door. Then, he headed for his car.

Nick arrived at the parking lot ahead of the resume lady. With time to kill, he reached into his backseat filing system and found a crossword puzzle book. He used it to swat at a wasp before turning to an unfinished puzzle.

What was a seven letter word for covered  entrance? Asshole. It didn’t fit, though. Apparently, the author did not share Nick’s wit. Since the puzzle’s theme was architecture, Nick went with portico, which fit better. Not as much fun, but what did crossword puzzle writers know?.

The resume lady arrived in her BMW. She parked next to Nick’s Corolla and immediately got out of the car. By the way she pushed her fingers through her hair, Nick guessed she was upset. That’s what he did when he was upset. Nick laid aside his crossword book and got out also.

“I’m so glad you came to see me!” she began.
 
She waved her hands as she spoke, which Nick also did when he was upset.
 
“Good,” said Nick. “And by the way, let’s just start all over again after our first meeting. I’m Nick Sword.”
 
She took his offered hand and shook it.
 
“I’m Sheila O’Rourke,” she said. “But I guess you already know that.”
 
“What can I do for you, Sheila?”

“Well, I’ll get right to the point!” she continued, “My son is missing!”

“Okay,” countered Nick. “For how long?”

“It’s been about five days now, and I’m getting worried!” she continued.

“Is that a long time for him?”

“Yes. Sometimes he stays out most of the night, but he comes back the next day. He’s never been gone this long!”

“Have you been to the police?”

“Yes. I filed a report. They told me they would check into it, but you know how that goes. They won’t. Not until it’s too late.”

“How old is your son?”

“Thirty-four.”

Nick gave her what Taft called his blank stare.

“So, he’s not exactly in your custody,” he remarked.

“Well, no!” she said.

Nick waited.

“He’s just between jobs!” she added.

So, a thirty-four year old kid living with his mother had gone missing. It was beginning to sound like a bad joke.

“Could he be with his father?” asked Nick.

“I don’t think so. My ex hasn’t had anything to do with him since before the divorce was final,” she explained.

Nick resumed his blank stare.

“I will pay you,” she interjected before he had time to speak.

“My fee is three hundred a day plus expenses.”

“I can do that. I have enough cash with me to get you started.”

She smiled.

“Might be kind of ironic,” she said, “You’re on a case about my resumes, and I’m paying your fee from my own fee.”

Nick liked that idea.

“Might be,” he said, smiling back. “Except that case ended. My client decided not to pursue it any further.”

“Good for them,” she said. “Hate to see them lose in court.”

“I’ll need a current picture of your son for starters.”

“I brought one.”

She reached through her open car window for the photo and handed it to Nick.

“What’s his name?” he asked.

“Sidney,” she replied. “Sidney O’Rourke.”

“Also his father’s name and whereabouts,” Nick continued.

Nick had cell phone in hand, and he typed the information into a note. He also got names of friends and places the kid might go.

“Anything else you can think of that might be helpful?” asked Nick.

“No,” she said. “Well, maybe. He has seemed distracted for several weeks, but it was nothing he would talk about. I asked him, but he wouldn’t open up. So I can’t tell you what it was. Perhaps nothing, but I sensed something was bothering him. Just a mother’s intuition.”

“Okay,” said Nick, sticking the cell phone back in his pocket. “That will get me started.”

“Thank you so much,” she said with a tone of relief. “This makes me feel better! I haven’t slept well in four or five nights.”

Nick took the cash she gave him, and they got in their cars.

“I’ll keep you posted on any progress,” added Nick.

“Please do!” she responded. “I’ll be waiting!”

As Nick started his car, a wasp brushed his cheek. He tried to wave it away with his hand, but it stung him on the ear.

“God DAMN!” he cried in exasperation.

“Are you all right?” called Sheila.

“It’s the freaking wasps!” he answered. “Don’t they bother you in this lot?”

“Not really,” she said before rolling up her window and driving away.

Fucking christ, Nick swore to himself! The little dip shits were only after him!

Maxwell–Four: Against The Wind

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Norman walked on the road until it quit being a road. It just faded into the prairie. There was a small cabin in the distance at the base of a hill, and he headed for it, kicking at dirt clods and rocks  as he went. There were faint ruts from tires and wagon wheels that made a straight line to the cabin.

The cabin stood in a small grove of trees. They were scrub trees, but trees nevertheless, some of the only ones in the settlement. Their branches bent and tossed in the steady wind, and Norman welcomed their shade as he walked beneath them.

The cabin was small, and it looked like it had been built in stages over the years. The center room was the largest and probably the oldest, built of limestone with a short limestone chimney. There were smaller rooms on two sides with wooden walls that might have come later.

One addition, off the side opposite the chimney, looked like a wooden continuation of the limestone cabin. It was a little narrower, its roof slightly lower, but it had the same wood shake shingles as the cabin. It also had a door at the end with glass panels on either side. Outside that door was a small, square, limestone patio with a metal roof.

About a hundred feet past the patio was a well with a cover and square roof with a bucket underneath. It must have been spring fed. A trickle of water ran in the creek bed that sloped away from the well.

The cabin’s other addition, a smaller wooden room set in the wall to the right of the chimney had a metal roof like the one over the patio.

There was also another entry door that appeared to be the back door in the limestone wall next to the chimney. About twenty feet outside that door was a root cellar dug into the base of the hill behind the cabin, and Norman looked inside. The cellar itself was down three steps, dank and musty with limestone walls, low ceiling and dirt floor. It was about ten by ten with shelves lining the walls stocked with jars of canned who knows what, the glass so dusty that you couldn’t see through it. In the back wall was an opening supported by wooden posts that looked like the beginning of a tunnel that went further under the hill. It might have been the mine that Maxine talked about. With the cellar door open, there was barely enough light to see inside the tunnel. It could have been the opening to an old mine in years past, but now it was all caved in.  The tunnel ended abruptly in a sloping dirt wall about six feet past the posts.

The only windows in the cabin, besides the glass panels at the front door, covered the wall on the side of the chimney opposite the smaller addition.

After he circled the place without seeing signs of life, Norman chose the front door and knocked on one of the glass panels, tentatively at first, but then more boldly. His knocks brought no sounds of movement from within, so he tried the knob, and the door swung easily inward.

“Hello!” he called. “Is anyone here?”

The only response came from the whine of the wind around the corners of the cabin, and Norman stepped inside, leaving the door open behind him. He called again, but there was only silence.

The room inside the door was the wooden addition opposite the chimney that had wood shake shingles like the original part of the cabin. It was short, little more than the length of a bed, and narrow. In fact, there were two beds, twin size, on each side against the walls, neatly made with quilts spread over them. Between was maybe six feet of walking space. The room opened into the center of the cabin with the fireplace straight ahead.

Norman surveyed the main cabin from left to right. A pot bellied stove sat on the hearth, piped up the chimney flue, and a wood bin against the wall to the left of it was stocked with split logs. Norman knew from seeing the outside of the cabin that the chimney was short, not tall enough to draw well. A fire on the open hearth would probably have been smoky, and besides being used for cooking, he guessed the stove kept the smoke down. The wall to the left of the fireplace was the side with the windows. Beneath them was an armchair with a cover thrown over it, stuffing peeking from the holes in the well-worn arms and a round cloth-covered table. On the table was an oil lamp with a glass shade, and a glass ashtray. Norman had not seen Noah smoke, so the ashtray might have been a holdover from Angus, or a previous Mac Taggert. Against the wall to the right of the fireplace was a table with fold-down leaves and a hutch with plates and drinking glasses. The corner on that side of the fireplace was flanked by two doors. The one in the back wall was the outside door. The door in the sidewall opened into a small bedroom that was the smaller wooden addition, the one with the metal roof. It was barely large enough to hold a double bed, a nightstand, and a short chest with drawers. There was no closet, just hooks on the wall.

There was no electricity or indoor plumbing in the place. The walls were paneled with knotty pine, and the floor was rough wooden planks. It was impossible to keep out the dust, the way the wind blew, but the place was clean enough. It was small and cozy with everything you needed, stove for heat and cooking, beds, and a place to sit and look out the windows. Norman looked around one more time before he departed the same way he came in,closing the door behind him.

He sat in the patio’s shade, letting the breeze cool him.

So, why had he come, he asked himself? What was he looking for? Was he just drawn by curiosity and the lack of anything better to do, or was there something else? After speaking to the man at the store, walking through what little there was of Maxwell, talking with Maxine, trudging along the road to the cabin, and finding nothing there of consequence, he had to reassess the whole thing. What seemed like a quest of some kind now seemed like a dead end, not much different than the bus ride that started the whole journey. He knew it was Noah’s strange words that drew him initially, but what did they really say? He had been rolling them over in his mind ever since, during the hitchhike with truckers and farmers, and finally during the last miles to town, but maybe the old guy was just loony. Maybe it was no more than the babbling of a confused mind that was never right from the start. Maxine said as much.

“Noah was a drinker.”

That was the first thing she had to say, almost like an apology. And Norman knew first hand about the fragmented mind of a drinker.

“You kind of had to throw out the normal way you think about people, and start over again with Noah.”

Noah’s talk seemed at first to Norman like it made a strange kind of sense, posing a mystery that opened the door to an adventure, but did it? Seeing the dried-up town and ramshackle cabin brought him back to square one, right where Norman had begun the journey, washed up and down to his last dime. He scuffed at the flat stones of the patio floor with the toe of his shoe. Just let it go, he told himself.

“Just let it go, God damn it!” he said aloud.

At that point, as he sat in the weathered chair beside the weathered table on the weathered patio, everything began crashing in on him. Everything in his life was gone, his job, his daughter and granddaughter, Henry… Why keep fighting it?

Norman laid his head on his arms on the table and began to weep. And once he started, he could not stop. He felt like he was at rock bottom, and the despair of it all was more than he could bear. The tears came, and he sobbed uncontrollably.

He had cried like that twice before in his life, once when his mother died, and again when Henry passed. But this seemed worse. There was no reason to stop, no light at the end of the tunnel, no kind hand on his shoulder or kind voice in his ear. There was only the wind whistling around the cabin.

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Norman did not know how long he sat there. At some point, he stopped sobbing, but he kept his head on his arms. He was exhausted mentally and physically. He might have slept for a while, and maybe it was the wind that tugged him awake. He didn’t know. He felt like he had been running against the wind for his whole life, but it didn’t matter anymore. Nothing mattered. It was not like he was in a void, for the space was filled with something, maybe a presence of some kind. He became briefly aware that his mind had emptied of all thoughts, and then he returned to the silence. Henry’s voice was the only thing he heard.

“Don’t ever surrender, you hear me? That’s like giving up! You just allow. Allow the fact that your dumb ass is responsible for all this. That’s when things will start getting better.”

In the silence, Norman allowed. It didn’t change anything in the outer, but it changed something inside. For the first time that he could remember, he felt peace.

“Don’t nothing happen by accident!” Henry sometimes said. “Sometimes you got to look real hard for the reason, but it’s there.”

Norman opened his eyes and looked around, but he saw nothing except that the sun was much lower in the sky. He saw nothing that seemed like a good reason for his being there. Maybe he wasn’t looking with the right eyes. Maybe he needed to see in a different way.

Maxine said that Angus MacTaggert was old when Noah was young, and there were MacTaggerts before Angus. How far back was that? A hundred and fifty years? That would be when this territory first opened up. What did the land that later became Maxwell look like then? A hundred and fifty years ago, people were still plowing up the prairie sod and building houses out of it.

“Colder than a well digger’s ass!” Noah had said and laughed at Angus’s joke.

And suddenly Norman knew it. Maybe it came from emptying his mind and allowing a new inspiration, but he finally got it.

“Angus knew right where to look, and he shared it.”

Noah’s talk was about two different things at once.

Norman walked to the well, and pulled on the wooden cover that was on top of the bricks. It gave easily in his hands, and he tugged it loose and rolled it aside. Looking inside the well, Norman could see the reflection of water at the bottom.

A hundred and fifty years ago, water would have been the lifeline as people settled the territory and moved further west, and the first MacTaggert knew right where to look for it. The man knew how to find water and dig a well. There was still water in it a century later.

Peering inside, Norman saw a patch of blue on one of the bricks.

“Blue ten down,” had been Noah’s words, words that did not fit with the rest.

Norman counted down ten rows of bricks to the one with the blue mark. Getting to the brick was as far as Norman could reach, but it was loose, and he pulled it from the wall of the well. Behind the brick was a sack, and Norman removed it from the cavity.

Norman emptied the contents on the wooden well cover. He was no expert, but the nuggets appeared to be ore, maybe silver. Norman stretched his arm back down inside the well. There was a second bag, and he brought it up also.

So, the MacTaggerts knew right where to look for two things, water and silver. They shared the water with everyone, and Angus shared the silver with Noah. Maxine told Norman that Noah was the last one out here. There were no other MacTaggerts. Norman could take the ore and see what it was worth.

Another thing became crystal clear to Norman. The town’s name might have changed over the years to Maxwell, but it didn’t start that way. It began as Mack’s well.

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————–

With a fresh supply of food, Lizzie was back to feeding the ducks, squealing joyfully as her favorite, the little white one, grabbed a piece for itself. She had plenty to share with the quacking throng.

Norman eased back against the park bench to watch the fun and soak up the late afternoon sun, relaxing as much as he could, though still fearing that it all might slip away again. That fear would probably be present for the rest of his life, but he had a new resolve as well. The vein that yielded Noah’s silver nuggets proved to be pure, and it gave Norman a new lease. Like Angus, he vowed to share it.

“I don’t know what brought you back to us, Dad,” Lisa told him. “I’m just glad you’re back! I don’t want to lose you again!”

And Henry’s wisdom was never far away.

“You don’t never get no do-overs,” Henry would say, “but life is funny. Sometimes it gives you a second chance. What’s done is done, but you can pick up the pieces and start over. And if you ever get that break, hang on to it!”

Norman knew he got one, and he hung on. It was a gift.

 

Maxwell–Three: Twelve-Thirty

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Once the sun was higher in the sky, Norman was out on the state highway with his thumb up. He hitched a ride with an eighteen wheeler to a county road, where he got a ride from a farmer, and then walked on a dirt road into the town.

That is, if you could call it a town. Small wonder that it even deserved a dot on the map. There were a few dilapidated buildings, most of them boarded-up, some scattered houses, but that was all. It was hard to tell if anyone lived in them. Norman didn’t see any signs of life. One of the better looking buildings had a hand-painted sign that read “Maxwell General Store.” It was a metal building with a small, covered wooden porch with a wooden bench by the door. The building’s metal sides and roof might have been a particular color at one time, but it had long since faded, and now the whole thing was the general shade of dirt. Norman climbed the steps to the porch, crossed a rubber mat with “Welcome” printed in fade red letters, and tried the door. It opened inward with a squeak.

Norman closed the door behind him. As it hissed shut, he noticed how much the wind was blowing. Until then, he hadn’t thought much about it, probably because it was so constant, but it never quit. The wind had an energy all its own, and Norman had to force the door shut with his shoulder. Even then, he could hear it whining around the edges. The light was dim inside, and Norman’s eyes had to adjust before he could see clearly.

It wasn’t much of a store, not very big anyway, but every inch of it was packed. There were a few groceries, clothing, hardware items, paper goods, toys and candy, magazines and paperback books, toiletries, and that was just what Norman saw at a quick scan. What wouldn’t fit on the shelves was hanging from the ceiling. In the far corner, there was a counter with an old time cash register, and behind the counter was a separate world altogether with cigarettes and tobacco, bottles of liquor, soft porn magazines, hunting knives, hand guns and ammunition, over-the-counter drugs, and God knew what all.

Amid all the clutter and paraphernalia, Norman didn’t see the figure behind he counter at first. The man sort of blended into the shadows with all the stuff. The light that came through the dusty window behind his shoulder shone on the page of the book that was spread on his lap. His sandy or gray-colored hair and his flannel shirt were all about the same shade as everything else. His eyes were bright, though, as they looked at Norman.

“What can I do for you, stranger?” he asked.

As Norman became more aware of the man, he couldn’t really tell how old he was, although he didn’t seem very young, and he didn’t seem very old, but somewhere in between. The only thing that moved was the man’s mouth. He never bothered to get up. He just sat there eying Norman, his chair tilted back against the shelves, his feet propped up under the counter.

“Well, I guess I’m just looking for some information, really,” began Norman.

Norman leaned forward against the counter, keeping his hands on the top in plain sight. That was the cop in him. He knew that you always wanted to see a stranger’s hands, and he noticed the man looking at his. That was all the man did, though. He said nothing, so Norman continued.

“I ran into a kind of strange situation last night during a bus ride.”

Norman didn’t know quite where to start, but he gave a brief rundown of the experience that he had the night before, including a description of Noah.

“The old guy had a funny way of talking, kind of double talk, like you were supposed to already know the people in the story,” continued Norman.

Norman hoped that the man would say something, anything to help him out, maybe pick it up and fill in some blanks, but he didn’t. He just sat there watching Norman with a vacant stare.

“And he had a funny way of talking about himself, too, like he wasn’t part of the story at all, but detached from the whole thing,” Norman went on. “It was never I or me, but always he or him.”

Still no help from the man behind the counter, but Norman thought that he saw a faint glimmer of recognition in his eyes. However, that was all, only a faint glimmer.

“The old guy might have just been loony, for all I know,” concluded Norman. “Ever know of a man like that around here?”

Norman was beginning to think he was wasting his time until the man behind the counter slowly folded back a corner of the page and closed his book.

“Sounds like old Noah,” he said. “He used to come in every once in a while, always carrying on like you said, but I haven’t seen him for a long time. I never paid him much mind, because he didn’t make no sense.”

The man paused, and Norman waited, hoping he would offer more.

“I don’t know too much about him,” he said, “but I’ll tell you. Theres a lady you need to see, name of Maxine. Been here forever. Just keep going up the road past the store. Hers is the last house before you get out of town.”

Before the storekeeper finished speaking, he had the book open again, and his gaze was back on the page.

“Thanks for the information,” said Norman.

Outside, a dust devil whirled ahead of him as he walked up the road. Everything was relative, thought Norman. The guy talked like Maxwell was a real town. The last house was really the only house, at least what Norman would call a house. It was about a hundred yards past the store. There were a couple of ramshackle huts in between that looked like they hadn’t seen life for decades.

What must have been Maxine’s house was a two-story place, and it was far and away the most notable dwelling in the burg. In Normans opinion, it was stately in comparison. It looked like one of countless other farmhouses built across the plains at the turn of the twentieth century. It was an L-shaped house with three gables and a high, peaked roofline. A porch stretched across the front side. The yard and outbuildings around it might have been the center of a prosperous farm at one time. There were two barns behind the house, one much larger than the other, and a barnyard in between. There was a small chicken coop surrounded by a chicken wire fence. Not far from the larger barn stood a windmill still trying to turn in the wind, although it only had two remaining vanes.

The house actually had two front doors, and Norman picked the one on the left. He stood on the porch and knocked at the screen door, careful to stay back far enough so that anyone could see him clearly from within. That was another cop thing, less threatening that way. No one answered the first knock, so he tried again, although he sensed being watched from a window, probably watched before he ever got to the porch. After a bit, the second knock brought the outline of a figure behind the lace curtain at the full-length glass in the door. A hand fumbled with the doorknob, and the door swung inward. The woman behind the screen was tall, nearly as tall as Norman, and Norman introduced himself.

“Are you Maxine?” he asked.

“Maybe,” answered the woman.

“I came to bring news about an old timer named Noah that I met the other night during a bus ride,” began Norman by way of explanation. “The man at the store pointed me in your direction. He said if anyone in town knew about Noah, it would be you. Said you’d been here forever.”

The woman was silent at first. She put her hand to a hair comb above one ear and fidgeted with it, seemingly uncertain whether to speak with a stranger.

“Is that true?” Norman asked with a slight smile. “Have you been here that long?”

The question caused the corners of her mouth to curve upward a little, and the skin crinkled at the corners of her eyes in what Norman took for a smile.

“Well, it probably is,” she said. “If not forever, damned near.”

She unhooked the screen door and pushed it open.

“Come on in,” she said. “I wondered if someone might pay me a visit about Noah one day.”

As Norman took the screen door, he had to hold it tightly in the tug of the wind, and as Maxine closed the inside door, the air hissed around the edges like at the store.

Inside, the house was full of large windows. All of the ones that Norman could see were hung with sheer lace curtains, and the place was full of sunlight. In the wall to the right of the left front door, the one that Norman entered, was a wide opening with pocket doors slid into the woodwork on either side that looked into the dining room. The other front door opened into that room, and besides a big dining table and chairs, Norman could see a tall grandfather clock against the far wall, its gleaming brass pendulum motionless, and the hands in its big face stuck squarely on twelve-thirty.

Like the clock, the house had the same feel, silent and frozen in time, as if Norman had just stepped through a time warp. Everything in it was from a by-gone day. Every wall was papered in faded floral prints, and the furniture as well as glass pieces and what not that were scattered around on tables looked like what you might see in a museum. In the corner of the room toward the center of the house was a freestanding metal furnace with an isinglass door to keep things cozy during the winter.

“I don’t get too much company anymore,” Maxine said.

She sat in an overstuffed armchair near the door, and she waved Norman to another chair facing hers that was next to a bay window. She plucked a cigarette from a pack that lay on a smoking stand next to her chair, and she looked at Norman.

“Care for one?” she asked.

“No, thanks,” he answered.

She lit the cigarette with a lighter that was set in green carnival glass that had its place on the top of the stand. She drew from the unfiltered cigarette and tilted back her head to blow a plume of smoke toward the ceiling. To the rear of the smoking stand was a pipe rack, full of half a dozen pipes, each bowl and each stem nestled in its place. On the bottom shelf was a can of Sir Walter Raleigh pipe tobacco, an open package of pipe cleaners, and an assortment of other pipe smoking tools. It was a long time since Norman had seen a fully equipped smoking station. Smoking a pipe was a lot of work. He was aware that Maxine watched him closely, and she followed his gaze. She tapped the ash from her cigarette into the ashtray that matched the cigarette lighter, and she held the cigarette to the side of her face to keep the smoke from her eyes.

“That was Daddy’s,” she told him. “He used to sit here after lunch, after he came in from the fields, and smoke those pipes. He would get one going, and he was usually asleep before it was done.”

As she spoke, the smoke from her cigarette exhaled gently from her mouth and nose, and she tapped the ash again in the green ashtray.

“Now, what was it that you came to tell me about Noah?” she asked.

Her voice trailed off at the end of the question, almost like she was not finished speaking, as if she had something else to offer, but she was silent. She watched Norman closely, and he shifted in his chair, unsure exactly how to begin the story.

“Actually,” continued Maxine before Norman had a chance to start, “I had a dream about Noah. Night before last, I believe it was. I had to think about that dream for a while, trying to figure out what it meant, but I finally arrived at the conclusion that he came to tell me goodbye, you know, in his strange kind of way. Old Noah was a little different. His brain didn’t work like most peoples’, but you probably already know that, if you talked much with him. I’ll let you go ahead. Sorry to interrupt.”

Norman started the story right at the beginning, at the point when he first became aware of Noah. His mind went back to the bus ride, and he described the events of the late afternoon and evening.

“I didn’t pay much attention to him at first,” said Norman, “but I knew someone was there that was getting on people’s nerves, the way the other riders kept moving away from him after each stop. That just gave him a fresh ear to bend. After a while, I looked over there to see what was going on, and I saw him, saw the paper bag that he kept tilting to his mouth. I could tell what he was doing. Been there, done that, and I knew.”

Norman paused, but Maxine just watched him.

“Noah was a drinker,” she said. “He always was. We just kind of looked out for him around here.”

Norman continued and moved the story into the nighttime and the dinner stop. He told about helping Noah back on the bus and riding next to him, about listening and talking to him.

“Noah never talked about himself, not directly, anyway,” put in Maxine. “It was always like he was somebody else. He’s been like that ever since I first knew him.”

“Yes,” said Norman. “That’s how he talked to me, too. I had to listen to him for a while, kind of step outside the box and get into his wavelength. Then, he started making a little sense.”

Maxine nodded.

“You kind of had to throw out the normal way you think about people, and start over again with Noah,” she said.

“He talked a lot about Angus,” said Norman. “Did you know anybody by that name?”

“Well, now you’re going back a ways,” she answered.

Maxine fumbled for the pack on the smoking stand without looking, picked out another cigarette and lit it from the end of the first one to start a chain before she stubbed out the the first and continued. Norman’s question had made her pause, and he could sense the wheels of her mind churning, like her thoughts had been thrown into reverse.

“That would be Angus MacTaggert,” she said, after she sent another plume of smoke at the ceiling, her cigarette again held behind her ear. “Angus took Noah in as an orphan. You see, Noah wasn’t a Mac Taggert. Noah was older than me, closer to my parents’ age, and Angus passed away when Noah was a young man. I was just a tiny girl, and I probably don’t remember the man at all. I seem to have a recollection of him, but it might be from things I heard my parents say. I’m not sure memories begin that young.”

She paused again, and Norman did not want to disturb her reflections. He waited for more.

“I know from the dates on the tombstone out in the cemetery that Angus lived to be eighty or ninety,” she went on. “There are some other Mac Taggerts out there in the cemetery, too, a couple generations of them before Angus. The first one had to be one of the earliest settlers in these parts.”

Norman was doing the math in his own head and putting together dates. That put things back to right after the Civil War.

“In other words, Angus was like me, older than dirt,” Maxine said with a smile, “and he lived here a long time ago. I’m the last one in my family, and he was the last one in his. There ain’t no more Mac Taggerts that I know of. Noah has been out there living in their cabin by himself ever since. Noah’s mind was probably just going back to the Mac Taggerts as his light was getting dim, if you know what I mean.”

“What did Angus do here?” asked Norman.

“Well, I imagine it took most of his time just to stay alive,” she said. “He probably took Noah in for the help. This would be a pretty tough country to live in before the days when you could go to the store to get what you needed. Some winters are real hard. There isn’t much out there except that cabin. I don’t really know how he managed.”

Maxine brushed stray ashes from her lap and turned her head toward the window, although she didn’t appear to be looking at anything in particular.

“Some say Angus found a treasure in that old mine out there that was dug into the hill behind the cabin,” she said, “although nobody’s ever saw any evidence of it. I think it sounded like a good story to make up. God knows Noah didn’t live like a king, if Angus gave him any of it. Noah lived off something, though, and I’m not real sure what.”

Whenever Maxine stopped talking, it was silent in the house, except for the whistling of the wind around the corners.

“So, I guess I’m not much help with your question about Angus MacTaggert,” she concluded. “Far as I know, there isn’t much to tell.”

“No, you’ve been a big help,” said Norman as he rose from his chair. “Do you think anyone would care if I went out there to look around? I’d kind of like to see where Noah called home.”

“Feel free,” she said. “I don’t think there’s anyone left around here to object. Most everyone has had their looks out there anyway, without finding much, certainly not any treasure. If anyone did, believe me, I would have heard about it. After all, I’ve been here forever.”

The “forever” part made Norman smile. He thanked the woman, and she saw him to the door. Norman could see her standing inside the screen and watching as he walked away, leaving her alone in the house with the clock that always said twelve-thirty. 

Maxwell–Two: Noah Talk

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Norman thought the old guy might sleep the rest of the way, but no such luck. He soon stirred.

“He figured as much,” he mumbled.

The man reached inside his rumpled jacket for the paper bag, fumbled with the cap, and tilted the bottle to his mouth. He gulped softly before lowering the bag. Norman watched, curious to see how the old man would act and what he had gotten himself into. He sensed the guy knew he had done him a favor, and the feeling was fortified when the man paused before replacing the cap. He slowly pushed the bag in Norm’s direction. Norman put his hand gently on the man’s forearm and shook his head. The fingers screwed the cap back on the bottle and pushed the sack back inside the coat.

‘That’s what Angus would do,” he mumbled further. “Angus always shared with him. Angus always knew what to do, even if he didn’t.”

Norman looked at the whiskered chin and listened to the fuzzy words. No wonder everybody had moved away from the old guy at the first chance. His whiskey talk would drive you nuts, but the night was long, and Norm needed something to pass the hours, something better than fitful dreams. Besides, the old timer’s eyes were bright under the silver brows. The light was on in there. You never knew what went on in another person’s head, and Norman had nothing better to do than find out.

“Angus was smart, too,” the old man continued after a short pause, wagging his finger at no one in particular, “smart like a fox. Angus knew right where to look. After all the rest of them gave up, Angus could find it. And Angus was good. There was plenty to go around, and Angus shared it with him.”

Norman humored the old guy.

“Who’s Angus?”

The man stared at the blackness outside the window, but Norman could still see the reflected face in the glass.

“Angus shared it with him,” he mumbled.

Norman thought the man was falling asleep, but the voice started again.

“Everybody liked Angus. Angus was good. He didn’t like everybody, and everybody didn’t like him, but Angus did. Angus gave them all they could drink.”

It sounded like he was talking about two things at once. Maybe Angus was a drinker too.

“Blue ten down. And it never ran out. There was always more. Angus made sure of it, and Angus shared with him. Angus was always good for a drink, too. It never ran out. None of it did.”

More of the same.

“Colder than a well digger’s ass!” declared the old man, slapping his thigh and laughing.

He didn’t really laugh like normal. His breath just wheezed from his throat in short bursts. He didn’t have much breath in the first place, and the wheezing that passed for laughter soon ended in a hacking cough that started deep in his chest. Norman didn’t like the sound of the cough. A cough like that usually came from people with tombstones in their eyes, just about like this old guy. He soon recovered, though, to continue the joke he had made.

“A well digger’s ass!” he repeated, still laughing in his funny way. “That’s what Angus always said. Angus joked with him about it.”

Norman began to see some sense in the he and him stuff. It sounded like “him” was the old timer. He always referred to himself in the third person, like he was detached and watching himself from a distance.

The old timer patted Norman on the forearm.

“You’re good, too, just like Angus. You helped him. You didn’t have to, but you helped him. Everybody liked Angus, because he was good, and he always gave them a drink. They liked Maxwell. ‘Cause there was always more to share. Angus knew right where to look, even after the rest of them gave up.”

And so it went as the Hound motored through the night, blurry talk about Angus and” him”, about sharing and being good, about a well digger’s ass, about always having enough to go around. As the minutes passed into hours. Norman only half listened, since the old timer repeated the same things over and over. It helped Norman to stay awake.

After a long time, the old man was quiet. It was late, and the whiskey bottle was empty. Norman thought the old guy was asleep until his bony fingers grasped Norm’s forearm again.

“There’s plenty to go around,” he said softly without opening his eyes. “Help yourself. He doesn’t have anybody. You helped him. Help yourself.”

Soon after that, the old guy was snoring softly.

Norman tried to sleep, too, but when he closed his eyes, he saw Lisa frowning at him. She didn’t speak, but she didn’t have to, either. He knew she was unhappy with him. Everyone was always unhappy with him in his dreams, unhappy, or disappointed, or something. The help group at his AA meetings said it was because he was unhappy with himself, and he figured that was probably right. Some even said that the people in his dreams were merely different parts of himself. Maybe that was right, too. Anyway, the dreams bothered him deeply.

He awoke with a start. Outside the window, he could see the slightest hint of dawn, the palest pink at the edge of the flat landscape, barely enough pink to define where the land stopped and the sky began. He looked over at the old guy beside him. He thought about trying to wake him, but decided against it. The man was sleeping too soundly. Instead, Norman watched the pink deepen at the horizon until he could make out the shapes of trees, houses and barns. The sun would soon be up.

Norman looked again at the man beside him.

“Hey!” he said softly. “We’ll soon be at the next stop.”

The old guy didn’t rouse, so Norman took hold of his wrist to give it a gentle shake.

“Hey! You should be waking up.”

The wrist was cool to the touch. Norman raised it, and then let go. It dropped limply back to the old timer’s leg. He felt without success for a pulse at the wrist, and again at the man’s neck. As a cop, Norman had seen death enough times to recognize it.

Norman walked quietly to the front of the bus and spoke with the driver who seemed to be a seasoned veteran of the road, maybe in his late fifties. He listened calmly to the news and responded as if he had dealt with that type of thing before. He said that they were nearly to the morning stop, and that he would call ahead to have an ambulance team ready. He thanked Norm and asked him to return to his seat without alarming the other passengers, which Norman did.

Norman knew of nothing else he could do, so he sank back into the cushion. Some time during the night, during his own fitful dreams, a life had slipped away beside him. He watched the peaceful expression on the old man’s face as the sun rose, sensing his own mortality, and wondering at the fleeting existence that we lived, fleeting, yet timeless, multiple lifetimes rolled into one, less difference between any of us than we could wrap our minds around.

When the bus slowed to a stop, the medical team was waiting. They checked the old man as the riders stretched their legs, going for breakfast at the restaurant. The EMT’s confirmed the death, and loaded him into an ambulance. Two sheriff’s deputies questioned the driver and Norman. Norm gave what information he could for the official report, and the officers thanked him and left. There was little to question anyway.

The old guy’s name turned out to be Noah. Norman thought about the whole thing over sausage, eggs and coffee. There was something that didn’t quite fit into the standard just-another-dead-drunk, no-big-deal explanation. Was that all there was to it? A small, nagging voice in the back of Norman’s brain said it wasn’t.

“Nothing in this universe happens by accident,” Henry used to say. “Everything has a reason. You just got to find it.”

The more Norman thought about it, the louder the nagging voice became, and the more he thought no, that was not all there was to it.

“There’s plenty to go around.”

Noah’s words rattled in Norman’s head.

“He doesn’t have anybody. You helped him. Help yourself.”

Maybe the words weren’t so crazy after all.

By the time the eggs, sausage, toast and coffee were gone, Norman’s mind was made up. The least he could do was pass along the news of Noah’s death to whoever might be alive to care. Maybe Angus was really a person. Or there could be some family. A personal visit would be better than a letter in the mail from the authorities, if one was ever sent. That was Norman’s logical reasoning anyway.

But then, there was also some illogical reasoning that drove him on. The old guy’s crazy ranting had planted the seed of a mystery somewhere deep inside Norman. Noah mentioned Maxwell, and a look at a map showed a town by that name that was directly north. Norman decided to find out what was there.

Maxwell–One: Other Afternoon

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The little hand tugged hard to be free of his, and he let it go, even though it seemed that a little piece of him slipped away with her. There had been a time when he feared that he would never hold Lizzie’s tiny hand again, and that fear still persisted, like now when she gave her full attention to reaching into the bag for a handful of feed, oblivious to his caring and doting, unable to wait another second to share the food with the quacking, splashing throng in the water, and it gripped him harder, especially in the middle of the night when he lay awake, his demons dancing in his head, the ”what if” committee standing firmly on his chest, hashing and rehashing his guilt. It was then that his past played in agonizing torment, like the phonograph needle hitting the scratched spot in the record, bouncing back over and over again to repeat his pain. It was a fear that would probably never leave, gone, perhaps, for brief respites, but never forgotten.

“They’re so hungry, Grampa!” she exclaimed.

“Feed them what you have, babe, and we’ll get some more.”

Elizabeth seemed like such a proper name for the tiny, dark-haired, brown-eyed angel that she was, so he called her Lizzie. It seemed more fitting, even though her mother hated nicknames. He rationalized by saying that it wasn’t a real nickname, just a shorter version of her given name. He would have given her anything he had, and he often did, even if it meant getting chastised for spoiling her. She squatted by the bank, tossing bits of food to the ducks, laughing and smiling when their bills got too close to her fingers. He stayed within arms reach and watched intently in case she might slip toward the water.

“See the white one, Grampa? He’s my favorite. I’m trying to throw him some food, but the others keep gobbling it all up before he gets there.”

“I think he got the last one. I saw him duck his head in the water for it.”

She tossed the last of the pellets and turned to him, her face beaming.

“Can we get some more?”

“Of course we can. As much as you want.”

She took his hand as they moved away from the water’s edge and walked toward the feed dispenser.

“I want to give all I can to the little white one!” she cried.

He nodded, eager to prolong their fun.

It was late afternoon. The people walking in the park, and the trees and bushes cast long shadows across the grass that reminded him of another afternoon, in many ways not too different from this one, miles and perhaps lifetimes away, yet closer than he cared to admit. Funny how the mind can skip from one experience to another, triggered by the simplest things, and transport you to another time and place in the blink of an eye. In fact, the memory was always on the edge of his consciousness, and he was there as vividly and clearly as the day it happened, not really wanting to, but unable to stop.

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————–

It was true that the shadows lengthened in that other afternoon, the same as this one, and it too was a warm one in late spring, but that was where the similarities ended. It was not a happy one like this one with Lizzie. That afternoon, he was riding a steel Hound as it rolled across the plains. The flat landscape streamed by outside the bus windows, mile after mile looking much the same as the one before. He remembered very plainly the angry voices in his head during the ride on that afternoon, and he could still hear them, the ones he had heard for years leading up to that point, the ones that had gotten angrier as he persisted on digging the hole that was his life deeper and deeper into oblivion.

“This is it, Dad! I can’t take anymore! You’re driving me away just like you did Mom!”

It was Lisa, his daughter.

“You’re screwing up my life and Elizabeth’s, and God knows your own! You’re killing yourself! You need help.”

He could see her pushing her hand up her forehead and back through her hair, the way she did when she was very upset.

“I can’t depend on you anymore, can’t trust you. All you had to do was pick her up from school! That’s all I asked! They called me at work, wanting to know if anyone was coming for her. She cried all the way home, Dad, and you know it breaks my heart to see her like that. She’s just a little girl. She doesn’t need this crap! And I don’t either!”

“And where were you? I don’t even have to ask! I know! You were getting drunk somewhere, sitting on a barstool, probably, until you fell off, talking to your new best friend next to you, or behind the bar, or wherever! Well what about me, Dad? I’m your best friend, too, aren’t I? I’m about the only one you have left, and you’re trying your damnedest to drive me away!”

The words couldn’t have hit him harder than if she used her fists.

“Can’t you even talk to me? Oh! Excuse me! I know why you don’t talk to me! It’s because I won’t drink with you! I won’t sit there while you drink yourself to death!”

“Good old Norman, always ready to buy the next round, always ready to give away his last dime, even though he has mouths to feed at home.”

She leaned her elbow against the wall, put her face in her hand, and sobbed, but only for a moment. She was tough, like her old man in that way, at least when he was sober. She sniffled, but stood up straight and ran her hand through her hair again.

“Well, I can’t do this anymore. I’m done. I won’t allow you to drag me and your granddaughter down with you.”

He dreaded the next words, dreaded them more than death, more than anything.

“I can’t let you see Elizabeth anymore, Dad. I don’t want you around her. It’s tearing her apart. She won’t understand, but I can’t let it go on. Letting you tear me apart is one thing, Dad, but her…. She’s too tiny, too fragile, too defenseless. Until you can quit drinking and get your life back together again, if that ever happens, I have to walk away.”

And that was exactly what she did. It was another way that she was like her old man, at least when he was sober. She made up her mind, and that was that.

Across the aisle of the bus, a man’s voice rose and fell, getting louder and more animated as he jawed at the person next to him. He was an old guy, and Norman had been watching him from the corner of his eye. Norman didn’t know him from Adam, but he knew what he was doing. Norman had been there too many times. He knew what was in the sack that the old guy raised to his lips between speeches. It didn’t matter who was next to him. It could have been anyone. He just needed someone to listen. The guy would probably be sitting by himself before long.

Norman’s own voices weren’t done with him, though.

“Christ, Norm, don’t you ever learn?”

It was his sergeant at the Precinct, looking tired and gray across the desk.

“How many times do you think I can cover for your sorry ass, anyway? I’ve done it time and time again, and you know it. It’s not like this is the first time, or even the tenth time! I quit counting. Hell, I’m the stupid one for letting it go on this long!”

Norm knew it was bad. His sergeant wouldn’t even look at him.

“Come on Sarge. Give me a chance. I’ll make it right. It isn’t that bad. I’ve done worse.”

“It IS that bad! And if you’ve done worse, it’s nothing to brag about!”

The sergeant clicked the button on the end of the ballpoint pen so much that it stuck, and he tossed it aside, only to pick up another and start fidgeting with it.

“The crazy part is that I’ve become a player in this thing, too. Yeh, I’ve written you up and put you on probation more than once, but then I’ve turned my head and looked the other way, I’ve joined the cast. There’s a name for that. What do they call it, an enabler? I’ve become a goddamn enabler, just like the shrinks talk about all the time! I’m not doing you any favors, or me either. I’ve got a family of my own, and a retirement to think about.”

“We’ve known each other too many years for this not to be hard, Norm, but I’m going to have to ask you to turn in your badge.”

All those years on the force, and it had come to that. All those years of being a good cop, of protecting the law-abiding public, of watching out for everyone but himself, and it had come down to losing everything he had worked for.

But he wasn’t done, yet. He still managed to get security jobs, making enough money to feed his habit. And he never ran out of someone to blame, as long as it wasn’t himself. He blamed anyone that he could for a long time. Bitter and angry, he drank even more, and dug his hole so deep that he couldn’t see the top anymore.

Norman always figured it was his old sergeant who sent a friend to save him. The friend’s name was Henry, and he literally saved Norman’s life. He drug Norman out of a rat trap hotel, took him home and kept him there until he got him dried out. It wasn’t pretty, and Norman didn’t help things at first, but he had sense enough to hang on to the hand that reached for his. Henry got him into a support group.

The meetings helped, just like Henry said they would. Things had gotten so bad for Norman that they couldn’t get much worse, and, for the first time in his life, he actually started listening, listening to the other drunks talk about their problems. At first, he didn’t want to believe that he was like them, but deep inside, he knew it. He began to hear their stories, and along with the listening to story after story, mistake after mistake, excuse after excuse, as difficult as it was for him, he began to accept the fact that he was the same. At least he had that much sense left in his thick skull. Henry had said as much.

“Believe me, I wouldn’t waste my time on your sorry ass if I didn’t think you was worth it!”

And it was in the accepting and admitting that Norman turned on to the long road back. He quit drinking ten times, or however many, before he actually did, but he got there. Henry told him he would. It didn’t take days, or months, but years, close to five of them, before he could function again like a normal human being.

Henry died not long after that. They said it was a massive heart attack. At least, it took him quickly. Norman always knew that Henry was an angel sent by a compassionate universe.

But the guy across the aisle on the Hound definitely wasn’t functioning like a normal human being. Again he brought Norman from his reverie. By then, the man had gone through three people in the seat next to him. Each time the bus stopped, someone new took the seat, and each time, the partnership was short lived. The old guy got louder and sloppier each time he raised the paper bag to his mouth. Norman could hear his slurred words clearly from where he sat, which was a third of the way further back in the coach. From the frustrated comments that Norman heard from those around him, he could tell that many of the passengers were fed up with the man by the time the Hound slowed for another stop. This time, it was a major rest stop at a place with a diner.

Norman got off for a bathroom break. Then, he went in to the restaurant to get a burger and fries. It was probably half an hour or forty-five minutes before he reboarded the bus, and another fifteen minutes before the driver got back in his seat.

“We’ll be driving for quite a ways, folks, so sit back and relax,” he said over the speaker. “Is everybody back? We’ll be leaving in a couple of minutes.”

“Everybody but that drunken bastard!” came a voice somewhere over Norm’s left shoulder. “Let’s get rolling before he wakes up!”

The comment brought a few laughs. Others voiced their approval.

Norman might have been the only one with any sympathy for the old timer. He walked to the front of the coach and spoke to the driver.

“Do you know where he was going?” Norman asked.

“His ticket was for a few stops down the road,” the driver answered. “If you help him back on, you’ll have to take him under your wing and keep him quiet. Otherwise, I’m leaving him. He’s causing too much trouble. You never know what someone like him might do, and I’ve got a bus load of passengers to keep safe. I don’t want to chance it.”

“I understand,” said Norman.

There was no good reason for doing the old geezer a favor, except that Norman had a soft spot in his heart for a drunk, and it took one to know one. So, he searched first in the bathroom, and then in the restaurant. He found him slumped forward on the table of the rear booth, his unshaven chin nestled on his folded arms, snoring softly. Norm roused him from his slumber.

“Now, what the sam hell?” he began with a start.

His speech was slurred, and his eyes were glazed, but he was docile enough. Norman hoisted the man’s arm over his shoulders, and half carried, half dragged him. The old man weighed practically nothing, so it wasn’t difficult to maneuver him through the restaurant, out the door, and up the steps of the coach. The door hissed shut behind them, and voices grumbled as the two jostled down the aisle to a rear seat. Norman pushed the man in ahead of him to the seat by the window, and sat on the aisle to pen him in. The coach shuddered to a start as the driver ground through the low gears, steered out of the parking lot and rolled back onto the highway. The glow from what few streetlights there were in the burg shone through the windows before the night engulfed the riders, save for a few overhead reading lights. Those too were soon extinguished as most tried to sleep, and the Hound was silent and dark as it sped into the night.

Six Pack To Go–Two: Last Call For Alcohol

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The wipers fought to clear the water from the windshield, but it was a losing battle. The rain would not stop, and Jake drove fast, too fast for the sloppy roads.

So he didn’t make it by midnight! What the hell! Right? Surely, his father had nothing THAT urgent! Like what was Jake missing, a family party? Sibling banter? Scrabble? Nothing new! Still, the nagging doubt persisted, and even though he tried to convince himself there was no hurry, Jake’s foot pressed harder on the accelerator.

He turned off the highway and headed toward his dad’s place. The road was graveled all the way. It usually stood up well under rain, but this rain was different. He hurried onward. Familiar landmarks always looked strange at night, but he knew where he was going. The road wound back between the timbered hillsides. The twin headlight beams probed the dark tree trunks and underbrush as the truck took the curves, picking out stumps, fallen logs and creeks that, usually dry, were now swollen bank full. Everything was dark and dripping.

With Carol Ann gone, Jake had plenty of time to think while he drove, and he began sifting through things that he kept in the back of his brain because he was not sure what else to do with them, mainly all the stuff his father had been studying the last few years. Normally, Jake dismissed that stuff as interesting but harmless, but in light of the midnight ultimatum thing, he got them back out for another look. Jake’s father always kept busy with something, reading, research, meditation, whatever, and it was the whatever that bothered Jake the most.

A lot of it was okay, especially the meditation. That was one thing Jake had learned from his father, one thing that in fact kept him going. The best part of Jake’s day was when he emptied his mind and thought of nothing. Finding the brain’s off switch and actually turning off the incessant chatter was not an easy thing, but if you could manage a few minutes, even seconds, and enter the silence, the peace was incredible.

His father studied a lot of ancient earth stuff, and that was okay too, stuff that seemed random at first, but upon closer inspection painted a broader picture. Jake found a lot of it fascinating. Part of his dad’s research was studying anomalies from around the world that could not be squeezed into the tight framework of Western Judeo-Christian history, especially since the end of the last Ice Age.

Things like human skeletal remains ten feet tall found in parts of the upper central United States which carbon dated to be ten thousand years old. Where did giants come from?

Mayan remains discovered in Florida. The Mayans were supposed to be in Mexico. Why Florida? And then the entire Mayan population flourished, and then didn’t. They just disappeared. Why?

There were stories of entire continents, Lemuria and Atlantis, that sank beneath rising seas, broke apart through cataclysms, or both. Were there remains, and if so, where? Scholars wouldn’t even know about these places if not for myths passed down orally by the earth’s oldest remaining cultures, and for surviving writings by Greek philosophers. The real evidence probably went up in flames when the Christians burned the ancient library at Alexandria.

Or perhaps the best evidence of lost civilizations was found in other parts of the earth. Perhaps the most compelling proof of Atlantis and Lemuria could never be destroyed by those wanting to erase history, and could be traced to fledgling cultures that suddenly exploded into advanced ones, places like Sumeria, Egypt, Mexico and Peru, places where migrant people fleeing global catastrophes might have gone for refuge, taking their higher technologies and more evolved sciences with them.

Another possibility could be that researchers were not looking in the right locations for these vanished civilizations. Perhaps the evidence for their existence was not where it should be at all, but somewhere entirely off the radar.

Jake’s father spoke of a theory called Earth’s Crust Displacement, which gained credibility when Albert Einstein thought it to be quite plausible. According to the Theory, when subjected to enormous tensions from inertia and gravity, the top layers of the earth’s crust broke loose and shifted atop the underlying mantle, moving the surface of the earth intact and relocating it many hundreds of miles away, probably to the south, and, in the process, creating incredible earthquakes, and tsunami waves hundreds of feet in height, that would either topple entire civilizations, or wash over anything in their paths. The phenomenon occurred when the sun reached the furthest point in its own elliptical orbit and turned the corner, so to speak, taking its orbiting planets with it, and placing extreme gravitational pulls on them in an archetypal game of crack the whip. That happened approximately every thirty-two thousand years, or at this point in time, maybe eighteen thousand years ago. Ancient myths described the stars falling from the sky, which is probably how the view of the heavens appeared as the surface of the earth shifted hundreds, maybe thousands of miles in an instant. Along with massive flooding of Biblical proportions, such a theory might explain the evidence of abrupt climate changes found by scientists in different parts of the world. Some researchers even surmise that Atlantis, said by Plato to be somewhere west of the Mediterranean, might now be under the Antarctic ice cap. The Crust Displacement Theory could also explain what caused or ended the Ice Ages, depending upon your location on the shifting crust.

All this was plausible, perhaps even possible. It was the stuff after that, his dad’s research into alien extra-terrestrial theories, that, for Jake, descended into varying depths of weirditude.

Some of it was okay, like cave drawings or depictions on canvas, wood or stone of beings in what appeared to be space suits or flying craft. In all fairness, the pictures looked an awful lot like space helmets and flying saucers, but it was difficult to tell today what the artists tried to convey thousands of years ago.

And what about all the gigantic monuments around the world? Jake’s father was into that big time. Who built them, and how? Furthermore, not only how, but why? Jake did not find the traditional explanations remotely believable. Ancient civilizations could not have done it with hordes of builders alone, rolling enormous stones on logs or whatever to get them into position. Modern technology would be hard pressed to do it. Arts of levitation seemed the best bet to Jake. And were these monuments all just burial places? That too seemed hard to believe.

Many origin myths from ancient civilizations around the world claimed that their first gods came from the stars. If so, did they go back? Maybe they never left and were still here. The Pleiades and the three stars in Orion’s belt came up often as places of origin for these “gods”, and that pattern of three recurred in ancient sites around the world, most notably in the great pyramids at Giza in Egypt. Maybe the structures were landmarks to guide returning space craft. And they were not just random piles of rocks, either. They were put together using the most advanced mathematical and astronomical principles. It was shades of Chariots Of The Gods.

Perhaps it was not all accomplished peacefully, either. There was soil content in parts of the world that could only be attributed to nuclear blasts. Stone Age civilizations that purportedly existed on earth did not have nuclear wars with each other. Jake’s father believed the combatants to be extra-terrestrial, and perhaps they were. But whether they were terrestrial with a high technology that evolved on this planet, or extra-terrestrial with a superiority that was brought here with them from the stars, a nuclear war was all the same, and it would make no difference to a Stone Age culture.

The weirdest of all, however, was the animal DNA research. That was the most recent kick, and the part of which Jake knew the least. Jake’s father got into that just in the last year or so, and Jake had no idea what it was all about. It didn’t really fit with any of the other stuff. It was off on a tangent. Why did he want to know about animal DNA? Jake couldn’t figure that one.

It all kept Jake’s head spinning as he drove the graveled road.  

Finally, Jake’s truck passed through his father’s open gate. Jake’s dad always left it open when he expected company. It seemed to beckon like waiting arms. The house was just around the driveway’s final bend. Then, perhaps it was the rain, perhaps the beer, perhaps Jake drove too fast, or maybe it was just too much distracted thinking, but the tires slid on the gravel, and Jake lost control of the pick-up. He tried to steer with the skid, whipping the wheel left and then right. He hit the brakes, but it was too late. The truck left the road and smashed into a big tree.

 

 ________________________________________________________________________________________________

Naked thighs sliding languorously over silken sheets. Impassioned voices caught in the throes of love softly sounding sighs and moans. Warm palms tracing circles on yielding flesh. Swollen nipples. Lonely rain drops spattering the window pane on the other side of the room, or the other side of the world, too far away to alarm, too close to comfort and soothe. Someone calling. Who? For whom? Stern old men with hoary hair and flowing robes, arms raised and staffs held high toward lightning-streaked heavens. Wordless warning. Running. Moving toward a bright light at the end of a long tunnel. Hurry. Too far. Too fast. Freely flowing, oozing. Salty taste.

 

Jake licked the corner of his mouth. Something warm and salty. He moved his fingers. His senses drained back to him. He opened his eyes. His head ached, and it occurred to him that he must have hit the steering wheel. He pinched himself to make sure he wasn’t still dreaming. He was not sure where he went while he was unconscious, but he felt like he had been somewhere. At least he felt the pain from where he pinched his arm. He licked again at the salty taste on his lips. It was still dark outside, so he had not been unconscious very long.

The trunk of the tree he hit stood halfway into the crumpled hood. One of the truck headlights was still on. It looked weak, but it shone past the tree and the wrecked hood, and through the pouring rain. There was some building out there that Jake had not seen before, maybe a new barn or something.

He took a flashlight from the glove compartment and got out of the truck. He walked around the back and shined the light down the road. The beam picked up ripples of water. He moved down closer, shining the light around. There shouldn’t have been water, but there was. It covered the road to the point where he stood, where the ground began to rise more sharply. The fence and gate were half submerged. The flashlight beam picked out the tops of trees, but it was all water as far as Jake could see! My God, he thought! This was massive! It was way more than the river being out of its banks. The dams upstream must have burst. It looked like a lake. The whole valley must be flooded.

He walked around in front of the truck to see the new building, looking it over in the flashlight beam, and what he saw stopped him in his tracks. It was no barn. It appeared to be some kind of a long, low boat, all built in with a flat bottom. It wasn’t huge, maybe the size of a long, two-story house boat. Jake’s light picked up the end of it near the edge of the water. There was something very strange about it, though. More than strange, it was creepy. The gnawing in Jake’s stomach that he had been feeling all night began turning into dread.

He ran to the house and looked in all the rooms. The electricity was out, so the only light came from his flashlight. Everything was in order, beds made, kitchen clean, things picked up and in their places. No people, though. His father’s desktop was bare of papers and letters, unlike its usual clutter. The tidiness seemed deliberate, final, and creepy like the boat. When Jake opened the back door, his flashlight picked up more water and half submerged trees, just like on the front side.

Jake searched for computers and cell phones, but as he feared, there was nothing. He kicked himself for forgetting his phone at Carol Ann’s. In his mind’s eye, he could see it on the nightstand.

Back out in the rain, Jake skirted around the boat or ark or whatever it was, examining it from different sides. When he got  close and walked around, it was bigger than it seemed at first, maybe a hundred feet long and thirty or forty wide. Definitely not big enough for all the animals. The thing about animal DNA came back to Jake. That would have been the thing, even for the Biblical ark. The Sunday School version of Noah and his family loading the pairs of animals was cute but stupid. There were no windows in the sides, and Jake could not see what it looked like on top. There was only the outline of a door painted with a black substance. He rubbed some of it between his thumb and forefinger. It was greasy, like tar or pitch, the kind used to make boats watertight.

“Dad!”

He whacked the side of the boat with his flashlight. No answer.

“Dad! Open up!”

For a moment, he panicked. He beat and kicked at the door, yelling to be heard. His imagination went wild leaping first to legends of a great flood and an ark that floated away to safety, then to lost civilizations sinking beneath the waves like Atlantis and Lemuria, and then to cycles of time that began and ended without a trace, save for incredible pyramids and gargantuan monuments. Finally, he just slumped against the door.

Drained of energy and emotion, he sat there in the pouring rain. What was the use? It was funny in a dark sort of way. He began turning the events of the entire night over in his mind. Either this was flooding that he would soon read about in the newspapers, or he had been out screwing around on the night that began the end of an eon.

There were different ways to look at it.

The best case would be to wake up in the morning with the rain stopped, the skies clearing and some neighbor calling him from a boat. His father would eventually come out and start putting his life back together. The other times when his dad had been laughing stock would pale in comparison to this one. The whole thing would probably make national news, the crazy old guy who thought he was Noah. Jake might even go on all the late night talk shows with his own story. He would never live it down with Carol Ann, but so what? It would bring a book deal with big bucks. Jake would be rich. He could move far away, live wherever he wanted.

He could even have his own version of the ark. It was called a YACHT! Jake Noah, they would call him. He would paint it on the back of his boat. The late night hosts would take it and run with it.

No, wait, wait. Jake of Ark. Oh yeh! Jake of Ark! That rocked! Jake would be famous all over the world! He could see himself doing all the exotic places–the Riviera, Monaco, Rio, Hong Kong. There was no end. Who wouldn’t want to party with Jake of Ark? Australia! The Aussies love to party! He could party all over the world!

Jake might have champagne and wine on board, but beer would be king on the Jake of Ark. He would have entire cooler rooms below deck full of beer. Any kind you wanted! It could replace the ballast in the hull of the yacht! And there would be no such thing as “free beer yesterday” on Jake’s ship. It would be “thank you, drill sergeant, may I have another”?

Jake could go on and on with that scenario. He liked that one.

Then, there was the worst case. His dad could be right! He obviously THOUGHT so. Taking the time to build a boat and setting a deadline to get inside and make it watertight kind of spoke for itself. If he was right, there would be another Great Flood. Bad news. The rains had already fallen for many days, and Jake and the rest of humankind could be well on the way to disaster.

Okay. Maybe so. Still, the thing that bothered Jake the most about the Great Flood thing was why Noah, or why his dad? Why did he get to be Noah? Why did he get away and leave everybody else behind?

In the Bible story, God liked Noah, and said that everybody else was evil, wicked, mean and nasty. Seriously? What got Noah on the Good Boys and Girls List? Did he somehow pray harder? Was he more humble? Or did God just play favorites? SOMETHING got Noah the best present under the tree!

What did everyone else do to get on the Naughty List? Did they cuss too much? Did they drink too much beer? Did they believe in a different God? Did they swap wives and husbands and party all night? Whatever it was, it was bad enough to erase the whole chalk board and start clean. God was pretty judgmental! Don’t catch this Guy on a bad day! And what happened to free choice? The Bible said there was violence on the earth. What did that mean? Was everyone shooting dice and playing poker? Were the fights at the pool tables and the apartment robberies a total deal breaker?

And speaking of deals.This flood thing wasn’t supposed to happen again, was it? Wasn’t there some kind of a covenant about that? After the rain stopped and Noah got to dry land, didn’t God promise He would never flood the earth again? He supposedly brought out a rainbow as a symbol of good faith, right? So, what about all that? Was that just a pinky promise?

And actually, besides the first two, there was a third scenario. It was a lot like the second one, but without the Santa Claus God part. Maybe all this just WAS. Maybe another Great Flood was Mother Earth regenerating herself. Mankind hadn’t exactly taken the best care of the old girl. People polluted the air until it was unbreathable, poisoned the water until it was undrinkable, tested bombs under ground, fracked for oil, cut down all the rain forests and destroyed the entire ecological balance. That could only go on so long before something had to give. Maybe the earth was taking it all back now and washing things off. Maybe Mother Earth was saying enough was enough. Time to restore. There was no judgment. It just was. And for Jake, there was a sort of peace in that. It just was!

However Jake looked at it though, the bottom line in the present moment was that it was pitch black, raining to beat hell, he had no phone or internet, no way to reach anyone to find out what was truly happening, and he was stuck on a hilltop with water rising on all sides. It was his worst day ever! He wasn’t just late for his dad’s deadline, he was REALLY late. And the six pack to go was a six pack to GO.

Tilting his head up to the heavens, he cried out.

“Are you shitting me?”

The rain and dampness absorbed the sound as quickly as it left his lips.

Giant raindrops pelted his head and shoulders as he returned to the truck. His flashlight batteries were almost spent. The water level might have risen, but he couldn’t tell. It seemed like it had. He got in the truck. Maybe things would look better when it got light. There were still two cans of beer on the floorboard. He opened one and turned on the radio. Searching for stations brought nothing but static. It cackled at him like derisive laughter.

 

 

THE END

Six Pack To Go–One: Party On

Standard

The joint was rocking, but Jake’s mind was somewhere else. He checked his watch. Almost eleven thirty! The time wa nearly gone. Now, he had to rush, and on a lousy night, besides.

Carol Ann could not sit still, and she had been pushing him out to the dance floor all evening. He had gone through the motions, but the words of his father’s note kept nagging at him.

“Drink up, Carol Ann,” Jake said, nudging his shoulder against hers. “We’ve got to go.”

“Just relax, baby,” she objected, nudging back. “The band still has another set.”

He finished the rest of his beer. How could he blame her for not understanding? He didn’t understand it himself. What did he know about this other nonsense, anyway?

“I probably shouldn’t have gone out tonight at all,” he said, “but you know I always want to see you when I’m in town.”

“You’d better,” she returned, “if you know what’s good for you! Well, we’re here, now. You even picked me up on time.  I couldn’t believe it. I mean, you’re like a charter member of Procrastinator’s Anonymous.”

“I love that organization,” he joked. “Anyway, I would have picked you up earlier, but I had to make that police report about the stolen stuff from my apartment.”

“I know. That’s so scary. Why do you even live in the city? There’s so much theft and violence.”

“You can’t get away from that. It’s not just the city. It happens everywhere.”

He picked up her purse and set it in front of her.

“I can’t believe you’re worried about getting there on time,” she chided. “What are you going to do, turn into a pumpkin or something?”

“I’m already in Procrastinator’s Anonymous, remember? I can’t be in Cinderella, too. I’d never have time to see you. Now, can we go, please?”

“Okay, okay, OKAY!” she grumbled.

She swayed as she rose from the chair, and steadied herself with a hand on the table, looking wistfully at the stage as the band members straggled back to their places, donning guitars and preparing for the next song. The piano player chorded a brief rhythm.

“The least you could do is get a six pack to go.”

“That’s a good idea!” agreed Jake.

Jake got the beer and stuck the sack under his arm. With Carol Ann in front, they picked their way through the tables toward the exit. A fight had started a few tables away, and a bartender came over to break it up with the help of a sawed-off pool cue. Jake and Carol Ann maneuvered around the melee.

“More violence!” she said.

He opened the door for her, but stopped when he stuck his head outside.

“Damn!” exclaimed Jake. “It’s coming down harder than ever!”

The rain had picked up again while they were inside, and it descended with force, drumming on the cars and trucks, and splashing the puddles in the parking lot. The street lamp by the road spotlighted the drops as they passed from the darkness into the island of light. To Jake, it seemed like their motion was frozen for an instant, as if they paused in the bright orb before falling to the ground. He wished they would hang there, suspended in midair, and disappear. The clouds had brought rain for more than a week. The ground was saturated.

“We’ll have to make a run for it,” he said.

He took Carol Ann by the arm and pulled her into the rain. They sloshed through the water and mud to Jake’s pick-up. It took only a few seconds to scramble inside, but their clothes were already drenched and clinging. Carol Ann shivered. Her hair hung in wet strings.

Jake looked in his side mirror at the reflection of the tavern’s blinking neon sign. It looked like two signs: one on the building, and one reflected in a huge puddle in the lot. They flashed their red messages into the night: Riverside…Riverside…Riverside.

He headed the truck onto the highway. Carol Ann scooted across the bench seat and sat against the passenger window, probably pouting, he guessed.

“I’ve never seen it rain like this,” he said, attempting to ignore her distance, even though he knew that never worked.

No answer.

“Oh, come on. I’m sorry we had to leave, but I think it’s something important. My dad doesn’t ask many favors.”

“Oh, Jacob! What could it be that wouldn’t wait until morning?”

Jake knew that she only called him Jacob when she was being condescending.

“I don’t know. He just said to be there by midnight.”

“Well, your dad’s weird, anyway.”

She popped open two cans of beer and handed one to him. As he took it, their hands touched. She had returned halfway across the seat.

“Dad’s not really weird,” he offered in defense. “It’s just that nobody understands him.”

“He stays back there on his farm and never sees anybody. I’d call that kind of weird. People say he sits around meditating all the time.”

“He does that a lot. His religion is kind of Eastern.”

“Eastern? What like Buddhism?”

“Not exactly, but sort of.”

“Well, there you go. You know any other Buddhists here in Blue Valley? That’s totally weird!”

“No, but Jesus was Eastern, too.”

She drank her beer before answering.

“I don’t really think of him like that,” she said. “I mean, not like Buddhist or something!”

“Well, you should. I mean, he was only a freaking Jewish rabbi!”

“A-a-ahm-m-m! You’re going to get struck by a lightning bolt for saying things like that.”

“Bring it on! Might put me out of my misery!”

“Poor baby,” she comforted.

“Well, anyway, you can’t just sum up my father’s religion on a bumper sticker.”

“Yeh, so what’s your point with that? Are you knocking my religion, just because of that “WWJD” on the back of my car? What the hell do you believe in?”

“I don’t know.”

“See? You’re not exactly Mr. Commitment!”

“Now, you sound like my ex.”

“Which one?”

“My last one,” he retorted.

“Ouch!” she said softly, patting his leg.

It was true. Commitments had never been his strong point. Besides spoiled marriages, and a lack of much faith in anything, he was at his third newspaper job. The longest thing he could commit to writing was a daily column, and he was shaky at that.

“Better than MY ex, slapping me around,” Carol Ann continued.

“You don’t deserve that.”

They watched the wipers fight the rain on the windshield, and listened to the talk on the radio about flooding upstream and lakes straining at their dams. It was Jake who finally broke the silence.

“Talking about my dad, though. He’s not really a Buddhist. He just goes by the beat of a different drum.”

“What drum?”

“That’s from Thoreau.”

“Thor who?”

“Never mind.”

“Um-m-m,” she said into the bottom of her upturned beer can.

Jake turned left at the flashing caution light and drove across the dam. The reservoir was high, higher than he had ever seen it.

Carol Ann was too young to remember the problems his father had encountered with the local people. The family attempted to make friends with the others, but it was no good. Unconventional religious beliefs built tall fences in Blue Valley, too high to be tolerated, too thick to pierce. People smiled to their faces, but talked behind their backs. The gossip and unkind words grew, and his father kept more and more to himself.

The public censure was too much for Jake, like the time he lost his job at the bank. As the stories about his family spread, he knew the bank president wanted to fire him. At first, there were subtle pressures. Then, one day, a sizable deposit turned up missing. Everyone’s pockets were searched, and they pulled the money from his coat. It was a neat trick.

Jake fled from home when he was nineteen, and moved far enough away where he could not hear the cutting comments. The wounds were deep. He drank a lot. Being different was too great a burden for him. He conformed, shedding any outer indications of his upbringing, and burying everything else deep within. At one point, he even told people he was an atheist, and he was pretty convincing on the surface. Deep down, however, he couldn’t fool himself.

The twinkle of lights ahead became clearer as they neared. Jake turned the truck into the trailer court, and parked in front of Carol Ann’s. When he turned off the engine, the noise of the rain hitting the cab of the truck was loud. They listened, reluctant to leave the truck’s shelter.

“Come on. I’ll go with you to the door.”

They ran across the yard and up the steps to get under the awning of the small porch. There wasn’t much room with water streaming down on either side. Carol Ann circled her arms around his neck and drew against him. He held her awkwardly.

“Good night,” he said, uncertain how to leave without making her angry.

She responded by pulling down on his head and raising up to meet him. Her lips were parted, and they moved hungrily as he returned the kiss. Their breaths quickened, and her tongue sought his, flicking lightly at first, then more aggressively. She slipped her leg between his knees, pressing her thigh against him. After a moment, she leaned away to look in his eyes.

“Why don’t you come in for a while? You’re going to be late, anyway.”

She moved her mouth to his neck, trailing moist kisses toward his ear. He looked over her shoulder at his watch. Five till twelve. She was right. He would be late, but only by ten or fifteen minutes if he left right away. She tugged gently at his ear lobe with her teeth.

“You used to stay late all the time,” she whispered. “We could get out of these wet clothes.”

He didn’t answer, but she was relentless.

“Maybe you’re getting old.”

He stiffened involuntarily, trying to pass it off with a contemptuous chuckle.

“Old, huh?” he muttered. “I’ll show you old.”

Finally, his ego tore at the fragile walls of his better judgment, and he backed her through the door, kicking it shut behind him.

 

 

TO BE CONTINUED

 

3:30 Hound–Three: Cow Town

Standard

So, we went to the West Bottoms, back where the city had first begun to grow more than a century earlier when the Hannibal Bridge across the Missouri River opened an Eastern market to beef that was driven up the trails from Texas. I drove down the long 12th Street Viaduct which linked the Missouri river bluffs to the bottoms below, and out Gennessee Street past rows of old brick warehouses and the venerable Livestock Exchange Building until I found a parking place next to the Golden Ox Restaurant. Behind it, the stockyards stretched north, back the way we had come, all the way to 12th Street. The rest of the city might still be waking up, but the day was well under way in the Bottoms, since long before sunup. People there were just pausing to eat breakfast and get a second wind.

The place never changed. We walked past the Back Door Grill, in the rear of the Golden Ox, where most of the cattle people ate breakfast. Across the yards to the west stood the swine packinghouse with its gigantic wooden ramp that took the hogs up to their final destination. The space beneath the incline was filled with an enormous pile of hay bales used in the cattle pens. The entire yard was paved with thousands upon thousands of bricks, and we walked north along the main road where the cattle trucks pulled in to unload their cargo. Ahead was the huge auction barn. At any time of the day or night, the place was alive with action, trucks pulling in and out, men milling around, cattle being bought and sold. Many times, the cattle were sold before they ever reached the auction floor, bought with the nod of a head by agents who wrote a check on the spot. The farmers and ranchers were able to walk away with cash in hand from the bank within the Livestock Exchange Building.

Behind the auction barn, seemingly endless cattle pens stretched away to the north and west. We threaded our way through them. I told Dee Dee to get a good look at the cowboys we passed, especially the ones on horseback. They worked for the stockyards, riding around, opening gates and moving cattle from holding pens to company pens as the cattle were bought and sold. The rest of the men and boys were just looking at the livestock or taking in the excitement of the place. They paid me little mind, eyes flitting beneath their hat brims. The way I dressed, I fit right in, passing for one of the cattlemen, but Dee Dee was one of the few women I saw. The men watched her as she passed.

We walked clear across the yards with no luck, and I could tell she was disappointed. We paused in front of some sheds to figure out our next move.

“Well, next thing, we can start asking some of these guys if they know your man,” I offered. “What’s his name, anyway?”

“Bobby,” she answered vaguely.

She must have been listening to something, because she heard it before I did, a clear baritone coming from one of the sheds, the lyrics of a sad country song rising above the stockyard sounds

“Now, blue ain’t the word for the way that I feel. A storm is brewin’ in this heart of mine.”

“That’s him!” she exclaimed. “That’s Bobby!”

She ran around the end of the nearest building and in the door. I was right behind her. Inside was a tack room with saddles and bridles and other stuff, smelling of leather and hay, lit by a couple of windows set high in the walls and a single light bulb dangling from its cord. A young man stood with his back to us brushing a dapple-gray horse. He stopped his song in mid-line and turned to see who had come in the door.

“Gawd, Dee Dee!” was all he could say.

Then, she was in his arms, pressing her face against his neck and sobbing. He held her close, kissing her forehead and eyes.

I turned my back to give them some privacy, and stepped outside the door, although I could still hear their voices. There was silence for a while. Holding each other must have been better than words. Then, I could hear his baritone.

“Don’t cry, baby. It tears me up when you do that. I had to leave the way I did. I couldn’t tell you good-bye.”

“You could have called or written a letter.”

“I ain’t good at letters.”

There was a short pause.

“Didn’t you care about the baby?” she asked

“Of course I did! You know I did! I planned to come back for you after I got some money and a place to stay. But the rodeo grind ain’t no place for a baby.”

Another pause.

“After a while, maybe you could settle down some place,” she continued.

“Yeh, probably,” he replied. “I mean, I think I could. You can’t ride the rodeo forever.”

Further pause.

“Was it a girl or a boy?” asked Bobby.

“I lost the baby!” she burst out. “I couldn’t help it!”

Then, she cried again, broken sobs that started up that ache in me. I lit a cigarette and drew the smoke deep into my lungs before letting it out with a long sigh, unable to keep my thoughts from drifting back to my own rodeo days and those four wild kids who used to ride the winds across Oklahoma. Until the rainy night when a pick-up truck crossed the white line. I could still hear the crash of the metal, see the overturned vehicles in the ditch, the broken bodies scattered in the rain and the mud, and feel the soft head that I held in my lap as she took a last breath, my hand resting on her belly as I had done so many nights before, feeling the baby inside. 

“I know how much that baby meant to you, a baby and a family.”

He said it so softly I could barely hear.

“It’ll happen again, Dee Dee, I know it will. You got your whole life ahead of you.”

They were silent for what seemed like a long time.

“So, what will you do, now?” she asked.

“I don’t know. I just been biding my time here through the winter until the rodeo tour starts up again. In a few more weeks, I’m gonna head down towards Amarillo. They’ve got a big show there in the spring. Amarillo and Tucumcari. I did real good in some of my events last summer. I had some good rides. They even say my name over the loud speaker every once in a while, now. People are starting to know who I am.”

“That’s good,” she said. “I’m proud of you.”

“How about you?” he asked. “What will you do? You gonna hang around here a while?”

“I don’t know,” she said. “I haven’t thought that far ahead. I’d need a place to stay.”

“Let me talk to an old boy today. I think he knows a place.”

She didn’t say anything, but I could hear their kisses again.

“Can I see you tonight when I get off work?” he asked.

“Maybe.”

“Please, Dee Dee,” he insisted. “Come right here at about four o’clock, and I’ll meet you. Okay?”

She said nothing.

“You could go out on the road with me, go to Amarillo. Will you think about it?”

“I might,” she answered. “Where would I stay? Where would I sleep?”

“I don’t know,” he said, sounding kind of absent, like he was thinking out loud. “I could get a truck cheap, and maybe a little trailer. We wouldn’t need much.”

“What if I got pregnant again?”

“We’d figure it out, baby!” he insisted. “People make it work. We could, too!”

A long silence followed, and I was beginning to wonder if I should stick around. Finally, I heard her again.

“Listen, I’d better go.”

“So, I’ll see you later?” he asked.

I didn’t hear her answer, but she came out right after that, wiping tears from her cheeks.

“Can you give me a ride somewhere?” she asked me.

Bobby had followed her to the door. He looked me up and down as he found a tooth pick in his shirt pocket and stuck it in the corner of his mouth. We nodded at each other.

“How you doing’?” he said in a monotone.

He was nearly as tall as me, dressed in a faded, western-cut chambray shirt and jeans with a large silver belt buckle. Lean and angular, with blonde hair that needed to be cut, he was square-jawed with a crooked smile that never left his lips. His blue eyes watched intently, taking everything in. He had that look of a raw kid turning into a man. I couldn’t help but like him.

Dee Dee never looked back, and I had to hurry a few steps to catch up. She was silent during the long walk back, so I was too. It was her business. She didn’t speak until we were both in the car.

“He’ll never change,” she said, looking out the window at the traffic. “That rodeo’s the most important thing in his life. I knew that. I just wanted to see him.”

She sniffed and wiped her eyes. I hated to see her cry, but there was nothing I could say. I didn’t even ask where she wanted to go. All I had to do for the day was get my pictures developed and call Mrs. Nash, so I started the engine, and we drove for a while, out of the Bottoms and back up the viaduct.

“I don’t know what I expected to find. I shouldn’t have come all the way out here, I guess. Maybe I thought he was going to grow up and be different, but that’s not fair either. He’s just who he is. We’re so far apart.”

She was looking out the window, holding the silver and turquoise cross between her thumb and forefinger, and talking to herself more than anything else.

“When we were in Frisco, he told me I was the best time he’d ever had.”

She paused and looked at me.

“I’d never been anybody’s best time.”

Saying that sent fresh tears down her face. We had already cruised through Quality Hill on downtown’s west edge, an old neighborhood that was now a contradiction in itself since the once stately homes had long ago become apartments or flop houses. On the other side of the City Market, I stopped at a gas station. It was a little truck at the south end of the A.S.B. Bridge.

“It’s best just to let it be,” she said, sniffing again.

“Don’t beat yourself up too much,” I told her. “If you hadn’t hunted him down, you’d always wonder about it. Now, at least you know.”

That almost made her smile, but no matter how you sifted through the pieces, there was no happy ending. The two of them fit together until they got to the part called the rest of their lives. Then, it was like a light passing through a prism, turning into yellows and blues.

“Can I get you anything here?” I asked, but she shook her head.

I went inside to get a pack of cigarettes and pay for the gas, but when I came out, she wasn’t in the car. I looked around just in time to see her waving at me from the passenger window of a tractor-trailer truck that was pulling out of the lot, headed for the bridge. I started to call to her, but decided against it, and raised my hand in farewell. I watched the truck until it turned the corner a few blocks away, crawling through the low gears on its way across the river.

I sat in the Goat with the door open and lit a cigarette, feeling disconnected, and strangely alone. I didn’t feel like going back to the office. I didn’t feel like doing anything, to tell the truth. I just smoked and watched the cars on the bridge.

I didn’t notice it right away, but she had left a present dangling from the radio knob. I smiled. It was her turquoise cross, and I slipped it around my neck.

I figured she was the “someone special” in my fortune at the bus station, someone special enough to force a short breather in a grubby business. Anyway, I couldn’t get her face out of my mind, dark brown eyes through the truck window saying good-bye better than any words. I knew what they were saying because I’d been there. I’d felt the same kind of ache that was in those eyes ever since that rainy night beside the Oklahoma highway. Different people handled it in different ways. Maybe hers was the best, hitching a ride on a truck going to Anywhere, U.S.A.

3:30 Hound–Two: Town Topic

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Outside on the downtown street, it was still dark, the time of the morning when normal people were sound asleep with a couple of hours left before their alarm clocks went off. There was no one stirring. It was cold enough that you could see the steam rising from the grates in the sidewalks. The city busses had not begun their scheduled routes yet, and aside from an occasional passing car, there was nothing moving in the wee hours. Even the street people had found their spots for the night.

The air stunk, too. People said the city had grown up from being a cow town, and maybe it had, but when the wind blew from the stockyards, it still smelled like one.

Besides that, the wind was sharp and cold, It went right through my corduroy jacket. They were already playing baseball in spring training, but back home, the March wind made opening day seem like more than just a month away.

We got into my maroon, rag top G.T.O., and I started the engine. I had it tuned the week before, and the motor sounded good with a low throb as we wound through the deserted streets and headed south on Broadway.

The Town Topic was just a few blocks from the Union Station. It was one of my favorite hangouts, a little greasy-spoon joint that never closed, a dying breed that had dropped through the cracks since the forties, and somehow managed to survive in a faster time. The Station used to bring it diners around the clock, but most of that business dried up with the demise of the passenger trains. It still had its regular crowd, but nothing like back in the day.

We had the place all to ourselves except for the fry cook, and we sat on stools at the counter. Dee Dee ordered a hamburger and fries while I had coffee and a piece of cherry pie. She hadn’t said much since we left the bus depot, just small talk about her trek from San Francisco where she had been living. She wanted to know about the man I was following, and I told how his wife had come to my office with her sob story, wanting pictures to have ready for a divorce case. All the time, I drank my coffee and watched her wolf down the burger, just like I watched everybody, figuring them out, piecing together the puzzles of their lives from the hints they left behind.

“You know, I don’t think you’re a very good liar,” I said as she dipped the last of the fries in the ketchup on her plate.

She was slow in answering.

“What do you mean?”

“I mean that I don’t think you’re really here looking for your little girl.”

A slight blush colored her face, and she looked away.

“Why do you say that?” she asked.

“I’ve never known a mother of a three-year-old who couldn’t whip out a picture or two on a moment’s notice. And I can’t imagine your parents letting you go off searching for their grand daughter without giving you some help. Besides, you just don’t fit the part.”

I started to say more, but left it at that.

“Well, you’re a pretty smart detective,” she answered after a while. “And I’m not a good liar. I never have been.”

She met my eyes again.

“I didn’t think you’d help me if I told you the truth.”

“And you don’t have a daughter, either, do you?”

“No.”

I looked away and took a drink of coffee.

“What made you pick me out from the crowd at the bus station?”

“Just because you looked kind of like a cowboy with your boots and blue jeans.”

“You got a thing for cowboys?”

She blushed and shrugged her shoulders.

“Not really. Maybe.”

“Okay,” I said. “Let’s start all over again. Just give it to me straight.”

She nodded, and her voice broke a bit.

“I will. I’m sorry I lied to you. That wasn’t fair. You’ve been nice to me.”

I waited.

“Okay,” she began. “The part about living in San Francisco is the truth. I’ve been out there a couple of years, staying with some other people around Haight-Ashbury. I met a cowboy.”

She paused to brush her hair behind her ear. She wasn’t looking at me as she talked. She sat hunched  over, speaking in a monotone until she got to this part. Then, her voice took on some life again.

“He was really a cowboy. He followed the rodeos around the country, and he just needed a place to stay for a while. He was wild, probably the most unpredictable guy I’d ever known. He was that, but at the same time, he was gentle and caring, vulnerable, you know, honest. I trusted him.”

She had turned her eyes back to me during this part, like she wanted to make sure I understood.

“Anyway, he stayed with me during the winter. That was a year ago. I loved him so much, I lost track of everything else. It was the first time I’d ever felt like that, you know, where you just give yourself up. Oh, I’d had boyfriends before, but not like that. I think he loved me back, in the way he could.”

She stirred her coke with the straw.

“But I don’t think he loved anything as much as his damned rodeo. That’s all he talked about, the different places like Cheyenne, Wichita, Albuquerque, Flagstaff, and all the bulls he rode. I was never more jealous of anything in my life, but you couldn’t really hate it, it was such a part of him. You’d have to hate him first, and I couldn’t do that.”

“He left when the weather turned. I guess I knew that would happen, but I tried to put it out of my mind. It was one of those unspoken things that both of us knew. He never talked much, anyway. I just took the time he gave me. He was so wild.”

“Anyway, by the time he left, I was pregnant. He said he’d come back as soon as he could, and I think he meant it. He’d lie next to me at night with his hand on my belly, feeling that baby growing inside.”

“Then, one morning he was gone before I woke up. It hurt me a lot, but he always said he was never big on good-byes. Not too long after that, I lost the baby. I guess it just wasn’t meant to be, you know?”

She looked at me with a soft smile.

“So, I didn’t really lie about a baby, either, though I never got to find out if it was a little girl or not.”

“Did he ever come back?” I asked, although I knew the answer.

She shook her head, playing with the straw.

“No. I never saw him again. So, after a few months passed, I decided to go after him. He used to talk about coming here to some show. I can’t remember the name. American something.”

“American Royal?”

She nodded.

“I just couldn’t let the whole thing go. It’s all I could think about. Does that make any sense?”

“Yeah, that makes sense.”

My mind was in that other lifetime, thinking of another cowboy and his friends, four wild kids riding the wind out of western Oklahoma and the Texas panhandle. But that was another story, two of them already dead. My jeans and boots were about all the traces left of that cowboy, that and a lonely ache that never quite went away, no matter how hard I tried to forget.

Dee Dee searched my face, and I sensed she saw the pain. I shrugged away the ghosts.

“So, you want me to help you find your cowboy?” I asked.

She nodded.

“Yes, but I told you another lie that I have to confess. My parents don’t care about me. Oh, I suppose my mother does, when she thinks about it. She divorced my father when I was five, and I don’t even know where he is. My stepfather already had two kids of his own, so I just kind of got lost in the shuffle. The part about them not knowing where I am was the truth. Anyway, they wouldn’t give me any money. The only thing I have to pay you with is this.”

She held up a silver cross that hung from a chain around her neck. I felt it, rubbing my thumb over the inlaid turquoise and smooth silver, then let it fall back against her shirt.

“It must be special,” I said.

“He gave it to me about a week before he left.”

I nodded, and the talk trailed off to an awkward pause.

“Well, let’s give it a shot. There’s really just one place I know of in this town to look for cowboys.”

 

 

TO BE CONTINUED

3:30 Hound–One: Night Work

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Mr. Nash sat at the back of the waiting room, his face buried in last night’s Kansas City Star. He wore a rumpled, cheap-looking gray business suit, jacket unbuttoned over the beginning of a paunch, but it was the loud tie that jumped out at you. He must have salvaged it from his dad’s World War II wardrobe. It was purple, flowery, and way too wide. His light-brown hair had probably always been thin, but now, the top of his head was bald, and the hair he had left was graying around his ears. He sold shoes for a living, but Mrs. Nash, his wife and my client, became suspicious that his frequent traveling and dwindling paychecks did not match up. She started looking for a private detective after she found the love letter in his breast pocket in the closet. He called the whole thing a one night stand after closing time, but she didn’t buy it. He claimed the temptation was the price he paid for having to drink to sleep at night after slaving for so many hours to earn a decent living for her. She claimed that temptations like those usually came in a door left intentionally ajar, which, by the way, was the most poetic thing I ever heard her say.

“You can see what a heartless bastard he is, can’t you, Mr. Crow?” she had said through broken sobs, placing her hand on my forearm as she leaned across the desk in my tiny office. “If my third husband had paid his taxes, I wouldn’t have to deal with all this! And he was no saint, I can assure you. He operated a cock fighting pit in the basement of our house, but until the trial, which I can tell you was a joke from the start because the judge was paid off, he earned twice as much money as this one! I just couldn’t stay married to him after he went to jail! I mean, what woman could?”

With her, it was usually too much information. I probably should have squeezed her hand and said, “Please, call me Bart”, and told her that jerks like her husbands got whatever they got, but I couldn’t do it. Maybe that’s why I had a drawer full of unpaid bills, too.

“Now, now,” I consoled instead, as much to change the subject before she got into the pros and cons of being married to a convicted felon doing prison time as anything else. “You don’t need all this. It isn’t fair, is it?”

That caused her to collapse on my arm, shaking her head, whispering “no, no,” weeping piteously, and peeking at me from the corner of her eye. Good thing my sleeve was rolled up, or all her makeup would have ruined my fresh shirt.

Anyway, that’s what had brought me to the bus station in the middle of the night in the first place. For the last hour or so, I had set up shop behind a pillar, out of sight from most of the room, but in clear view of the doors coming from the busses. The Kansas City depot was grand by bus terminal standards, big enough for me to be inconspicuous. It covered the basement of the Pickwick Hotel, and even had escalators coming down from the hotel lobby.

The place was fairly crowded for that time of the night. There was the usual assortment of sailors and soldiers, either going home or catching a last bus back to their bases. 1970 had begun like the last years of the sixties, keeping score by the body counts on the Sunday night news. President Nixon had resumed the bombing of Hanoi, and the Vietnam War drug on. I had paid my dues there, but not before some shrapnel in my thigh bought my ticket home. So, it wasn’t hard for me to read the faces behind the uniforms. The rest of the crowd was different, though. People minded their own business, smoked cigarettes and read magazines or newspapers.

There was still a little time left before the bus pulled in, so I stepped onto the public scale I had been alternately leaning against and using for a footrest, and deposited a dime in the slot. The scale was one that told your fortune, too. “Someone special will pay you a visit,” it said. The dial stopped on 210 pounds. I had gained a few since the summer, drinking too many beers and spending too much time on my butt. I stooped to see my face in the mirror, and pushed the K. C. A’s cap higher on my forehead for a better look. Even in the winter, my skin looked sun tanned. That was the Cherokee blood from my mother and grandfather. The jet-black hair and high cheekbones came from them, too, but the hump in the bridge of my nose came from a bull ride that ended with my face in a fence.

I tugged the Athletics hat back into place and arched the brim with both hands. It was tough for me to let the A’s go, even though they had packed up and moved to Oakland. At least, the city still had baseball, although I hadn’t completely bought into the new team, yet. I listened to the games. The Royals had just been there a year.

The riders from Denver began trickling in from the 3:30 Hound, so I stubbed out my cigarette and went to work with the 35mm camera I had brought back from Saigon. Mr. Nash’s girlfriend was one of the first through the door. He was glad to see her judging from the way he kissed her and had his hands all over her. She must have been glad to see him, too. She gave back what she got. She traveled light, just like the last few visits. All she had with her was a small, carry-on bag, so they didn’t have to wait for any suitcases from the bowels of the bus. If they stayed true to form, they would head upstairs to the hotel.

I wanted one last shot as they rode up the escalator, but a face blocked my view. I lowered the camera to ask the person to move, but I never got the words out. I found myself looking into a pair of deep, dark eyes, so clear and sharp they seemed to pierce right through me. They reminded me of another pair of eyes that I used to know, in another lifetime, it seemed, and I couldn’t help staring. The young lady who owned them stared back without flinching.

“Can I talk to you for a minute?” she asked

I watched Mr. Nash and his girlfriend to the top of the escalator, and she followed my gaze. She seemed about to say something, but stopped short. I could see her changing directions as she played catch-up with me.

“You were taking pictures. Do you know those two?”

I started to answer before it struck me how crazy this was.

“You don’t, do you?” she quizzed, more of a realization than a question.

“Excuse me? Have we met? I mean, what’s it to you?”

“Are you a detective, or something?” she asked tentatively, like she was thinking out loud.

“Yeah, or something!” I shot back, mad at myself for allowing her to muddy things up.

It had to be the eyes. A slight smile began playing on her lips.

“Oo-o-o! I’ve never met a detective! Why the pictures of that guy and his wife? Are they spies?”

“No, they’re not spies! You’ve watched too many James Bond movies! And she’s not his wife, either! Listen, why all the questions?”

“Will you help me?” she asked.

The question caught me flat-footed. I lowered my eyes from hers, and began putting the camera back in the bag.

“Girl, I doubt if you need much help, the way you just barged in here and screwed up my whole night’s work!”

“I’m sorry!” she exclaimed. “I really am! I didn’t know at first what you were doing! Don’t be mad!”

I finished zipping up the bag, knowing how easy I was, but not caring.

“Where’d you come from, anyway? Were you on the bus?”

She nodded.

“I just got off the one from Denver.”

The eyes might have been like ones from another lifetime, but the rest of this girl wasn’t. Her face was clear of makeup, and her straight, dark brown hair hung down to the middle of her back. She wore a big, red-plaid flannel shirt halfway unbuttoned over a white T-shirt, and faded, bell-bottom jeans with a hole in one knee. Bright, multicolored, embroidered bands of cloth were sewn around each cuff, mostly hiding the dirty sneakers underneath. I guessed her at twenty. She had a short, flat nose that turned up just a little, and a wide mouth that looked comfortable wearing a smile.

“Will you help me?” she asked again.

“Sounds like there’s an echo in here,” I cracked.

It was a weak joke, but it made her smile. She swept her long, dark hair out of her face and tucked it behind her ears.

“You’re not a cop, are you?”

“No, I’m not a cop.”

I fished a business card out of my jacket pocket and gave it to her.

“Bartholemew Crow?” she asked, heavy on the Bartholemew.

“Bart,” I said.

“I’d like to hire you, Bart. I can pay.”

She must have seen the doubt in my eyes.

“I really can!” she insisted. “My parents are loaded.”

“They send you all the way here by yourself?”

She gave a short pause.

“They don’t know I’m here.”

“What’s the trouble?”

“I’m looking for my daughter.”

“And you think she’s in Kansas City?”

She nodded as she spoke.

“Her father took her. He’s hiding her somewhere.”

At that moment, I didn’t need someone else’s problems. What I needed was to follow an errant husband so his wife would pay my fee, but there was an ache in these brown eyes that wouldn’t let me go.

“When did it happen?” I asked.

“About a month ago. I’ve been trying to catch up to him, but I spent all I had on this bus ticket.”

“Did you report it to the police?”

“Yes, but they didn’t do very much.”

I looked at her hard before I continued.

“How old is your daughter?”

“She’s three. Three and a half, actually. He took her from the baby sitter’s place while I was at work.”

“Can I see a picture of her?”

She looked surprised for a split second, like it caught her off guard.

“I left home so fast that I forgot to bring one.”

Again, I gave her a hard look. Something wasn’t right.

“What makes you so sure they’re here?”

“I just know this is where he would come. He has an aunt that lives here.”

She paused to sweep her hair behind her ears.

“Will you help me find them?”

“If they’re in Kansas City, I can.”

That made her smile.

“Far out!”

It struck me that she hadn’t introduced herself.

“What’s your name, anyway?”

“I’m sorry,” she said. “It’s Delores, but everybody calls me Dee Dee.”

Sounded like something a younger brother or sister came up with.

“Whatever you say. Dee Dee it is. Listen, are you hungry?”

She nodded.

“There’s a diner down the street that stays open all night. Come on, and I’ll buy you breakfast.”

“Bitchin’!”

Whatever she had with her besides the clothes on her back was rolled up in a sleeping bag. She stuck it under her arm, and we walked outside to my car.

 

 

TO BE CONTINUED