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Authors: Jackson Cordd

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Cleats in Clay (29 page)

BOOK: Cleats in Clay
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Tuck pulled back and grinned. “Fuck a duck.”
Bobby gazed. “Where’d you learn to kiss like that?”
Chuckling, Tuck wrapped his casted arm around Bobby’s neck. “Don’t think that’s the kinda thing ya learn. It’s chemistry, as they say.”
“I’ll say. It’s
somethin’
,” Bobby said with a grin as he looked down at Tuck’s erection peeking its way out from under the towel in Tuck’s lap.
The sound of a clearing throat came from above them. They both looked up to see Odis standing behind the couch, smirking at them. “I leave for two minutes…,” he teased as he shook his head and came around the couch.
“Then get over here,” Tuck said as he scooted closer to Bobby and made room on the other side. Odis sat next to him. “Ya won’t miss us while we’re gone?”
“Prob’ly get a whole lotta work done with you guys outta the way. Get the house totally back in shape.” Odis looked over at Bobby. “Ya takin’ yer dog with ya?”

My
dog?” Bobby blanched.
Tuck laughed. “What’s this? Bobby got a dog?”
“Heimdalla adopted him,” Odis told Tuck. “She’s gonna be a miserable bitch while yer gone.”
“Adopted?” Tuck asked.
“Since Saturday, she’s been Bobby’s shadow when we’re at the B and B.”
Bobby shook his head. “I’m sure she’ll be okay once you get moved back into the house. It might just be trauma from the fire and all.”
“No,” Odis said. “Don’t think so. She was gettin’ chummy with ya Friday night, before the fire even happened.”
“I don’t think I can take her on a plane last-minute. That’s the sort of thing they need advance warning on.” Bobby stood up and fished his cell phone out of his pocket. “Speaking of which,” he said while scrolling the screen and punching buttons before bringing the phone to his ear. “Hey, Gertie,” Bobby said. He paused and nodded. “Oh, settled in now. He’s fine. You busy right now?”
Odis looked over at Tuck and lowered his voice. “You sure about this? Did you tell him?”
Tuck shook his head. “That was a long time ago. I’m not a kid anymore. Nothin’ to tell,” he said flatly.
“Okay, then,” Odis drawled, not sounding the least convinced. “Better call Hawk, though. He’ll get mad if ya leave town and he don’t have time to dote over you first.”
Tuck smirked. “My brother doesn’t dote.”
“Bullshit.” Odis chuckled. “He’s as bad as Gertie.”
“Dammit.” Tuck fastened the towel and stood up. “I was hopin’ for some playtime,” he said as he headed to the hall table and his cell phone.
“We got all night, don’t we?” Odis said while waggling his eyebrows.
Bobby hung up his phone. “All night for what?”
“Playtime,” Odis said with a grin.
Tuck grabbed his phone and made his way with a slight limp to the bedroom.
“You need help?” Bobby asked.
“Nah,” Tuck replied as he paused in the doorway. “I’m just gonna throw on some sweats.”
Bobby looked over at Odis. “Why’s he gettin’ dressed?”
“Gonna call Hawk and tell him about the trip. He’ll surely run over here.”
“Oh. Gertie’s gonna check on gettin’ a ticket for Tuck.”
Odis laughed at Bobby’s language. “We’ll have ya turned into a Texan in no time.”
“Shut up,” Bobby said with a smirk. “Tuck’s already made fun of me. Don’t need
you
in on it too.”
“I’m not teasin’,” Odis said with a grin. “I think it’s sexy, you gettin’ all Texa-fied.”
“Hush.” Bobby smirked again. “I’m gonna go check on Tuck,” he said as he went to the bedroom. He walked in to see Tuck already dressed in sweatpants and a T-shirt, getting a pair of socks from his dresser drawer. “Odie said ya called Hawk.”
Tuck nodded. “The Hurricane will be here shortly.”
“Hurricane?”
“That was his nickname in high school. Hurricane Hawk,” Tuck said as he sat on the bed and struggled with trying to pull on a sock with just one hand.
Bobby laughed. “I can definitely see that,” he said as he moved to the bed to help.
Tuck smiled down as Bobby took over the socking operation. “Nathan musta really loved you.”
Bobby scowled. “Yer bringing him up? Shit, I can’t even go a day without hearing his name.”
“Sorry,” Tuck said with quiet sincerity. “I didn’t mean anythin’ bad.”
Bobby softened. “I know. It’s just kinda frustrating, being reminded all the time.”
Tuck just nodded quietly.
“There,” Bobby said as he stood up. “All dressed now.”
“Unfortunately.” He stood up and followed Bobby to the living room.

Chapter 26

 

I
T WASN

T
long before a hard knock sounded at the front, right before
the door burst open. “Ya just got out of the hospital,” Hawk yelled as he came down the hallway. “Ya can’t leave town.”

 

“Yes, I can,” Tuck said as he stood up from the couch. “Take it down a notch.”

Hawk stepped closer and appraised him. “You
sure
? What if ya have a relapse?”
Tuck nearly laughed. “A relapse from what? It’s a broken hand, not fuckin’ pneumonia or somethin’.”
“Still,” Hawk tried to argue.

“I won’t be doin’ anything but sittin’ around here for six weeks anyway. I might as well be productive and help Bobby move.”
Hawk looked over at Odis and Bobby sitting on the couch, as if he just realized they were there. “Oh. Bobby’s movin’?”

“Yeah. I told ya about things yesterday.”
“I know, just didn’t think… I guess he would hafta move, huh?” Hawk walked around and sat in the reclining chair, looking a bit calmer. “So this? All
three
of ya guys are really…? It’s for real?” He glanced over at Odis.
“Yes,” Odis said with a nod. “It really is real.”
Hawk turned his gaze to Bobby. “And yer gonna take care of him? Out there?”
Bobby chuckled. “I don’t think Tuck needs taken care of. He’s a big strong man. But I’ll keep an eye on him.”
Hawk studied Bobby a moment and then nodded. “Ya better.” He glanced over at Tuck. “I still don’t understand all this, but I ain’t gonna get in front of yer happiness.” Hawk turned a harder gaze to Odis and Bobby. “But I’m watchin’. I won’t hesitate ta stomp either one of yer asses if ya do him wrong.”
“Fuck you, Hawk,” Tuck barked. “I ain’t yer fuckin’
sister
. I can take care of myself. Don’t you go meddlin’ with this like ya did Vic.”
Hawk bristled and stood up. “I only had ta get after Vic ’cause
you
didn’t tell me about it. I had ta get some answers some way.”
“Right,” Tuck said strongly. “I didn’t tell ya.
But
ya could have fuckin’
asked
me instead of goin’ all Wild West over it.”
The two glared over the coffee table, staring each other down. After a minute, Hawk finally dropped his shoulders and let out his breath. “I just worry about ya,” he said softly.
“Don’t need ya to, but I’m glad you do. I know it’s because you love me.”
Hawk smirked. “Don’t start throwin’
that
word around, or I’m outta here.”
“Why not?” Tuck stepped forward and grabbed Hawk in a tight hug. “I’m not afraid to say I love my brother.”
Hawk rolled his eyes and patted Tuck on the back as if he was placating a toddler. “All right, enough.”
Tuck winced from the pressure on his bruise when he tightened his grip. “Say it.”
Hawk squirmed and tried to break Tuck’s hold.
“Say it,” Tuck demanded.
“Okay, I love my brother. Now let me go.”
Odis glanced over at Bobby, ready to make a joke, until he saw the tear forming in the corner of Bobby’s eye. Odis turned and threw Tuck a look.
Tuck caught the look and glanced back at Bobby. Remembering that comment Bobby made about brothers in the hospital, Tuck released Hawk. “Now get on outta here. I got some packing and shit. And I promise to call every day.”
Hawk smirked as he headed for the door. “Ya don’t hafta go
that
far. Just one or two calls will do. Have a nice trip, then.”
“I will,” Tuck yelled as Hawk closed the door behind him. He quickly turned his attention to Bobby, who was trying his best to look normal, but his moist eyes betrayed him. “You okay, stud?” Tuck asked gently.
Bobby nodded. “Mostly,” he tried to say without a sniffle.
Odis patted his shoulder. “This has to do with
your
brother, don’t it.”
Bobby nodded as Tuck sat on the couch next to him. “The one who won’t look at you,” Tuck said.
Bobby grabbed his mug from the coffee table and drank.
Odis frowned. “That must be cold by now. Let me get ya a refill.”
“I don’t care,” Bobby said.
“We’re all here now,” Odis told him with another shoulder pat. “Just go ahead and tell us. Then ya won’t ever hafta say it again.”
Tuck reached out and grasped Bobby’s thigh gently. “We’re here. Right here for ya.”
Bobby stared down into his empty mug, watching the reflections of light in the dark-glazed interior as he turned it in his hands. “My childhood wasn’t the best. It wasn’t the worst—I’m sure it could have been much, much worse. But it wasn’t the best.”
Odis reached out and took the mug from Bobby’s hands, then quietly went to the kitchen. He returned and handed a full mug back to Bobby.
“Dad’s kind of a hothead. He never beat on us or anything, but he could be very vocal, and I guess—” Bobby took a gingerly sip. “He mouthed off a lot, so he spent a lot of time ‘looking for better jobs’. We moved around a lot because of that.”
Tuck kept watching Bobby. “He got fired a lot?”
Bobby nodded. “Never
his
fault, of course.”
Odis had to bite his tongue. He didn’t like seeing Bobby struggle with this. It made him wish he had thought to grab some weed when they were at the house the other day. That might have helped Bobby relax. Couldn’t worry about that now, though. He’d just have to be patient and look supportive.
“Anyway, his name’s Ricky. My brother.”
Tuck nodded as if all of this made perfect sense. It was a technique he’d learned to help keep witnesses at ease when they had to discuss painful events. Sympathy and obliquely probing questions were his best strengths. “What about other siblings?”
“It was just the four of us until junior high. Then, I never did really know if Mom kicked him out or if he just left, but Dad was gone after that, mostly.”
Bobby paused and sipped from his mug. “Ricky’s the smart one. Skinny but smart. I knew I’d never be as smart as him, but I had the body and coordination he didn’t have, so I kinda concentrated on that. And started baseball.”
Tuck nodded. “He’s older?”
“By about two and a half years.”
“And ya started baseball ta get your dad’s approval?” Tuck asked in a leading way.
Bobby scowled. “Not Dad. I—I guess instinctually, I knew he was never gonna be happy with anything, so I didn’t try. It was for Ricky. With so much moving around, he was my only friend, and I looked up to him.”
“What about your ma?” Tuck asked.
“Oh, she rode on me a bit, but I’m sure she was proud of anything I did, as long as I didn’t grow up to be a loudmouth drunk.”
“So, it was just you, your mom, and Ricky,” Tuck prodded.
“Right. He graduated and got some kind of brainy scholarship and went to college. By then, I was in high school and getting a lot of attention with baseball. So I focused more on that. I knew baseball would have to be
my
ticket.”
Tuck nodded. “Where’d Ricky go to college?”
“MIT. That’s how we ended up in Boston. Mom wanted to move closer, and since she just had a waitress job at the time, she figured she could do that anywhere.”
With another nod, Tuck asked, “So she just moved ya? In the middle of high school?”
“Yeah. I shoulda realized then….” Bobby trailed off before finishing his coffee.
Tuck watched Bobby carefully. As his story got closer and closer to that moment of pain, Bobby’s face tightened with more tension, looking more like a cringe.
Odis reached out for the empty mug and asked, “Realized what?”
Bobby clutched the mug and wouldn’t let Odis take it. “That
he
was her favorite.”
Tuck raised his hand from Bobby’s thigh and took hold of the mug. Bobby finally released it. Tuck left and returned a moment later with a full mug, which he handed over.
When Bobby brought the drink up close to his lips, he could smell the alcohol. “What the hell is this?” he asked, staring at Tuck.
“Hot Jack,” Tuck said, but Bobby just looked confused. “Coffee with Jack Daniel’s.”
Bobby looked down at the drink, then sipped it.
Tuck nudged his arm. “Yer in a new high school…,” he encouraged.
“Right. New high school. I dated girls, just enough to avoid any rumors, and put all my energy into baseball. And it paid off. Scouts started noticing me.”
“That must have been exciting,” Tuck said when he saw the brief look of joy on Bobby’s face.
“It was. And Mom was so excited when Notre Dame people came to visit. Most of her family’s Irish Catholic.”
Odis looked surprised. “That’s where ya went?”
“No.” Bobby shook his head. “Got a scholarship at Boston University, but she was just as happy about that.”
Tuck chuckled. “I’ll bet,” he said with a grin.
“Things got… kinda weird after that.”
“Weird?” Odis asked.
“Mom started gushing all over me, which she’d never, ever done before. It made Ricky a bit jealous, I think. Anyway, then she married this guy she’s been seeing awhile, Gerry. A real creepy guy. So I tried to avoid them.”
Tuck nodded. “What do ya mean by ‘creepy’?”
“Still don’t really know. Wasn’t anything I could ever put my finger on, but the first time we were alone, I got so weirded out by him that I thought my skin was gonna crawl off.”
Odis nodded. “So that Gerry guy’s why ya didn’t wanna go home that first summer?”
“Yeah.” Bobby took another sip. “I steered clear of him as much as possible.”
Tuck looked over Bobby, feeling perplexed. Usually he had no trouble at all putting together various little pieces of a story and figuring out where it was going, but deducing the ending of Bobby’s story eluded him. Who was the principal player? This Gerry guy? The mom? Tuck knew the brother factored into it somehow, but he couldn’t see how Ricky fit into this mosaic.
Feeling dumb, Odis looked over at Tuck. He could see the guy’s cop gears turning and churning, but they didn’t seem to be getting any traction. Tuck was just as confused as he was, which made him feel a little bit better.
Bobby sat quietly, sipping without saying more.
Tuck patted Bobby’s leg. “So ya graduated Boston University? What was your degree?”
“Business. Generic business. I didn’t have it in me to be a lawyer or anything. I only had a 3.6 grade average.”
“Then?” Odis asked, thinking that kind of school record was nothing to sneeze at. “What happened at Boston U.?”
“Well.” Bobby drained the mug. “You know I met Nathan that summer. He suggested we go see my mom that weekend, and I could come out and show him off. But I didn’t listen.” Bobby shook his head. “Looking back, I bet he was trying to change the course of things, but I was too stubborn.”
Odis took the mugs this time. After he brought back the refills, Bobby sniffed it and smelled only coffee.
“So,” Bobby continued, “on Tuesday, we decided to have breakfast on his porch. We horsed around a little and started making out. We moved it inside to the living room, and things got really hot and heavy on the couch. In our hurry, we didn’t close the front door all the way.”
Bobby grimaced briefly. “When we heard someone come in the hallway, we didn’t have time to scramble and get dressed before he came into the living room.” Bobby clutched the mug.
Tuck patted his leg again. “Who came in?”
Hesitantly, Bobby said, “Ricky.” He gulped down some of the coffee, but it was still hot, burning his tongue, and he winced. “He—when he saw—Nathan on top of me, he—Ricky went absolutely bat-shit. I mean utterly, insanely crazy.”
Tuck gave Bobby a moment to collect himself, then urged the story forward. “What did Ricky do?”
“He went into a rage and started babbling all kinds of shit while he pulled Nate off of me and punched him. When I stood up, he punched me, then screamed something and took off. I pulled on my clothes and tried to follow him, but he was already gone.”
Odis put his hand under Bobby’s chin and pulled his gaze out of the coffee mug he was clutching so tightly. “What kind of shit did he say?”
“It was, like, babbling mostly. Gerry, he said his name a few times, something about being corrupted, called Nathan a faggot. Not very coherent stuff.”
“Okay,” Tuck said. “So you tried to follow him, but he’d left. What happened next?”
“I came back in the house and Nathan was waiting for me. He’d already packed up a bag and handed it to me. Then Nate said, ‘Go to your mom’s. You need to get through this,’ before he tried to push me out the door.”
Odis frowned. “That’s what Nathan said?”
Bobby nodded. “So he knew. He already knew what was gonna happen. I can see that now.”
Tuck nodded. “Then what happened?”
“I argued with him. Tried to steer Nate to the kitchen and get some ice or something for the red mark on his cheek that was swelling up and starting to bruise. But he argued back, getting more insistent, and eventually pushed me out the door.”
“Okay,” Tuck said with a nod. “Then you went to your mom’s?”
“No, not right away. I went back to the apartment to get some stuff. I don’t even remember what was so fucking important I had to go get.”
“Then what?” Tuck asked.
“I drove out to Mom’s. She wouldn’t open the screen door for me. She wouldn’t look me in the eye, either. She told me to take my business elsewhere, like I was the fuckin’ Avon Lady or something.”
“What did you do then?”
“I tried to talk to her. I begged her to look at me. She started crying. Then Ricky came up behind her and pulled her out of the doorway and slammed the door in my face.”
“And after that?” Tuck asked.
“I hung around. I thought maybe once she had time to calm down, we could chat. So I hung around down the street until I saw Ricky leave. And I went back.” Bobby took a deep breath. “She still wouldn’t open the door. Mom told me Ricky was too disgusted to deal with me. I told her that I’d seen Ricky leave, and it was just me and her. I begged her to let me in. She started crying again and said she wasn’t gonna go against Ricky’s wishes and closed the door on me.”
Odis scowled. “Holy fuckin’ shit. How could a mother
do
that?”
Bobby shook his head. “She felt like she had to choose, I guess.” His face twisted with grief. “Shit. That fucker Nathan. Why didn’t he
tell
me? Be more direct? If I’d gone that weekend or even left right when Ricky did, I might have been able to talk to her before Ricky poisoned her against me.”
Tuck wrapped his arm around Bobby’s shoulder in a reassuring hug. “You can’t beat yourself up over it. You didn’t know.”
“But
he
did. Fucking bastard Nathan
knew
.”
“Stud,” Odis said and waited for Bobby to look at him. “We don’t have any way of knowing
what
Nathan saw. Maybe, from his side, it just looked like a speed bump or something. Ya can’t blame him, or yerself, for any of it.”
Nodding in agreement, Tuck said, “It was the actions of Ricky. He’s the one responsible.”
“I’m responsible too, though. If I hadn’t been so careless and stupid. If—”
“Stop it,” Odis said sharply. “Those ‘what ifs’ never go anywhere but Crazytown.”
“Right,” Tuck agreed. “Did you try to see her again?”
“Not until the funeral. Didn’t get to talk to her, though. Gerry saw me first and had his brother throw me out. Damn weasel couldn’t even do his own dirty work.”
“What funeral?” Tuck asked pointedly, following some strange suspicion.
Bobby clutched the coffee mug so tightly, Odis thought the clay cup was going to shatter in his hands. Bobby finally whispered, “Ricky’s.”
“When was this?” Tuck asked.
“End of that year.”
“How…?” Odis asked.
“Ninety-five-mile-an-hour collision into a highway bridge pylon. Right after Christmas.”

BOOK: Cleats in Clay
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