Between Wrecks (4 page)

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Authors: George Singleton

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BOOK: Between Wrecks
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Pat Taft said, “Okay. Here we go. Mind if I sit down?” He sat two stools away from Mal and stuck the knuckles on his right hand out. “This is why they call me Prison Tat Pat.”

Where most people have L-O-V-E or H-A-T-E tattooed in India Ink or cigarette ashes across their knuckles, Pat Taft had a crude G-O-L-D. Windshield got up from his seat to examine it. He said, “Cold.”


Gold,”
Pat Taft said. “It says ‘
Gold.'”

“That's a good idea,” Windshield said. “You could put ‘Hot' on the other hand, and then you'd always remember which handle on the sink meant what. Like if you got All-timer's you could remember what was hot and what was cold.” He lost interest and returned to his seat.

Mal Mardis placed the film in his right side pants pocket. He said, “It kind of does look like C-O-L-D.”

“Well it's not. Anyway, I'm from Nashville. Just quit my job working as a stockbroker, you know. Been with Edward Jones for sixteen years. Company didn't like what I was doing, letting my clients get all rich and all. They said that the last thing a brokerage firm needs is people making so much money that they can afford to buy a computer and start trading online, you know. I wouldn't toe the company line. No, sir. They'd tell me to push Putnam Voyager mutual funds, or Doubleclick, and to not let anyone buy a stock under four dollars a share. Let me just say that I got people into Amazon and Google when they went public going for nothing.” Gus cleared his throat and didn't make eye contact with anyone.

Mal looked past Prison Tat Pat at the red light on his camcorder. He brushed hair out of his face. He said, “I work for Home Depot. I get stock options, but I don't trust the market.”

“He won $250,000 dollars playing one them scratch cards,” Gus said. “Now he's got a house that's worth eighty grand on the outside, and about two hundred grand on the inside.”

Prison Tat Pat didn't respond. He said, “So I lost my job—and I used to be the stockbroker for the likes of Sheb Wooley and Porter Wagoner and Boxcar Willie, you know—and Emma left me, and I decided that I was going to do what I've always wanted to do. I sold my house, bought an RV, and am on my way to Myrtle Beach. I tattooed myself on the right hand, but I can't decide on what I want to do with the left. Maybe I'll print out B-R-I-C-K. Or S-O-L-I-D. Or C-O-I-N. Not only am I going to prove that I can keep up a conversation with normal people, but I'm going to prove I have a dangerous side to me. Emma said she thought I was too safe, too absorbed. So here we are.” He turned to Gus and said, “If you got moonshine, then I'd like to buy some moonshine. If you don't, then I guess I'll take a Miller Lite.”

Windshield got up off his stool and looked down at the river. He said, “Is that your Winnebago nose down in the river? That ain't safe.”

Prison Tat Pat hadn't used the parking brake. He said, “I would cuss, but I don't want it on camera.”

Mal Mardis's cell phone began to ring in his left side pants pocket. It came out James Taylor's “Fire and Rain.” Brenda was always changing his ringer tone, as a joke. He spent a month showing people plants at work while his pants rang out “Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, and Thyme” before he figured out what his wife was doing.

Mal pulled his phone out and read “Brenda” on the readout. It kept ringing. He shrugged, looked at Gus, and answered. He said, “Man, you won't believe what happened down here. I went down to the One-Hour Photo place—they're closed because the UPS guy didn't bring the right chemicals or something—so I stopped by Gus's place to ask if he knew another photo shop, and this guy walked in saying he's the reason why Merle Haggard and George Jones have so much money, and the next thing you know his RV's in the river. You wouldn't believe it!”

Brenda listened. She said, “I just realized that I don't have enough grout. I need more grout. Now, sometimes they don't have it marked right, so I want you to go into Lowe's and open up the ten-pound bag of Keracolor Gray. It's supposed to be something called ‘Gris Gray.' But I opened up some Gris Gray that ended up being red. Originally I thought about using red, but I looked at it and didn't like it. They got some kind of grout they call Rouge Red, but I don't want that. I want Gris Gray. I need one more ten-pound bag of Gris Gray.”

Mal held the phone away from his head. Down on the riverbank, Prison Tat Pat and Windshield looked at the Winnebago. Brenda didn't seem upset that he was in the bar already. He said, “I'll get right on it. This might take some time. Gus says the next closest one-hour picture place is about thirty miles away.”

“Have you got the frames yet?” Brenda asked.

“Yes. Yes, I got the frames. I went straight to the Kmart and got the frames. Noir Black, just like you said.”

After he pressed the hang up button he pushed it down hard so as to turn off the phone altogether. Gus said, “It ain't called ‘gris gray,' you idiot. That just means French gray, English gray. It means gray-gray. Just like ‘noir black' means black-black. French black, English black.”

Gus lost his reputation. Mal said, “How do you know that?”

Gus turned around and said, “I should maybe call the law. I'm thinking this guy is in some trouble we don't need to know about. One thing we need to do is be careful about not blurting out how we got those plants upriver. Last thing we need is for some hammerhead we don't know to find out about the crop.”

Mal said, “It's a good thing Windshield has no memory.”

They didn't think about how the camcorder still ran.

Prison Tat Pat and Windshield returned. Pat said, “That's all right. I can pull that one out of the water and get it to a mechanic and lease me another one in the meantime.” He sat down and said, “Miller Lite ain't doing it for me. Do you know how to make a perfect Manhattan? You got you any cherries back there?”

Windshield said to Prison Tat Pat, “Frankie Perkins once had a girlfriend they called Cherry. I went to his funeral on Sunday, but she didn't show up there. He asked about her, though.”

Pat Taft said, “You kind of remind me of Frank Sinatra, my man. One time Frank and all his boys came to Nashville, back when I lived there. Well, let me tell you, they say that Nashville cats know how to party hard, but they ain't got nothing on the old Brat Pack.” Gus said nothing about the misnomer. “They was wanting to smoke some dope? And I just happened to have some with me? The next thing you know—they got Sammy Davis, Jr. to pop out his glass eye. Then old Frank took some screen and put it in the empty eye socket, you know. Then he pinched a good bowl down there. You had to hold Sammy's nose clamped and inhale from his mouth. It was the damnedest bong I ever hit in my life. Good old Sammy Davis, Jr.”

Mal sat up and looked at the Winnebago. He said, “You say your ex wants to know that you can act right in front of people? I haven't ever studied up on the etiquette books, but maybe you shouldn't be telling her about smoking the marijuana.” Mal looked at Gus. He gave a look that let Gus know that this was Mal's way of changing the subject.

“She was there!” Prison Tat Pat said. “Hell, man, she was there! Well, I take that back. She might've been off showing Joey Bishop and Peter Lawford Tootsie's Orchard at that point, I forget.”

Gus said, “You full of shit, man. I was going to hold off, but I call bullshit on all this. You ain't much more than forty years old. Joey Bishop and Peter Lawford were long gone from the Rat Pack by the time you could've been old enough.”

The bar's telephone rang. Gus stared at Prison Tat Pat. Mal said, “If that's for me, I'm not here.” It rang another twenty times before stopping. “It was for me.”

Pat Taft placed his right palm up. He looked back at his camcorder and said to the lens, “Tell them, honey. Tell them it's true.” He drank his Manhattan—which was really only bourbon and a splash of Cheerwine mixed together—and said, “You some kind of racist? If you're some kind of racist judging me because I pinched down Sammy Davis, Jr.'s nose and intook weed from his face, then I don't want anything to do with you. It wasn't like I was kissing him.”

Gus shook his head. “I'm not a racist. You might just be in the wrong place, buddy.”

“Okay. As long as you ain't a racist. I handled both Charlie Pride and B.B. King at one time. Say, this is good,” he said, drinking Gus's version of a Manhattan. Prison Tat Pat looked back at the camera. “Hey, I'm not slurring my speech or anything.”

Mal Mardis thought, I should call up Brenda and ask her to meet me here. She could look at Prison Tat Pat and understand that living with a lottery card-scratching drunk isn't all that bad.

Pat Taft said to Gus, “You know anyone around here with a tow truck with a wench? You mind if when I pull out the RV I leave it here for a while till it dries out and I can sell it? I'll pay you rental space. I'll pay you whatever they charge at one of those RV storage places.”

Gus said, “Beer's five dollars a can. The Manhattan's ten.” They weren't, but they would've been in Nashville, he figured. Gus liked to memorize all the bar prices from around the nation, just in case a stranger walked in. People used to make fun of him for knowing what the going price was for a margarita in Los Angeles, a gin fizz in Detroit.

“You take credit cards?” Prison Tat Pat asked. “You got an ATM machine?”

“The answer's ‘no' to all of your questions, going all the way back to the tow truck.”

Gus poured a bourbon and placed it in front of Mal. He said, “Three bourbons, two beers. Your tab's six-fifty.” Prison Tat Pat didn't flinch at obvious favoritism. He smiled at the bartender, then back to his camcorder.

Mal got up to go to the bathroom. Inside, he called his wife.

Windshield finally caught up with the conversation and said, “You used my head for a bong, you might get a mouthful of glass. They say I still got little chunks of glass stuck in my face.”

Mal came back from the bathroom and slid his bourbon toward Prison Tat Pat. He said, “You might need this more than I do. Hey, Gus, make me some kind of vodka drink and set it in front of my seat. Brenda's on her way over and y'all need to say I didn't drink any brown liquor. I need to run over to the closest place that sells frames so it looks like at least I got that far.”

Gus said, “I tell you what. Stranger from Nashville, you drinking anymore Manhattans?”

Pat Taft said, “They call me Prison Tat Pat.”

“I need me either some real cherries in a jar, or a couple more bottles of Cheerwine soda, Mal. Whichever you come across first.”

Mal said okay and left. He got in his pickup and made sure to keep one foot hard on the brake before getting in reverse and popping the clutch. He looked down at the bottom side of the Winnebago and thought about how it resembled a lodged metal turtle of sorts. He thought, That guy did it on purpose, so we'd all feel sorry for him.

Mal drove his truck south on Saluda Dam Road not more than two miles before coming up on a Dollar General store he'd never noticed. He went inside, brought twelve frames they had on the shelf up to the checkout, and read the cashier's nametag. It seemed misspelled. “Hey, Maime, I got a lot of pictures I need behind glass. You think y'all got any more of these things in back?”

Maime looked at Mal hard. She chewed gum. She said, “You might want buy breath mints. Cop comes in here smells you, charge for public drunk.”

Mal picked some Tic Tacs off the counter. He shoved them beside his stack of frames. He said, “I know, I know. I normally don't drink this early, believe me.”

“I ain't judging you none,” Maime said. She picked up one frame, studied it, and yelled toward the back of the store, “Hey Rena! Rena! Go in back and see we got any more these big frames.” To Mal she said, quieter, “How many you want?”

“I need another dozen.”

Rena called from the back, “We got some. I know where they are.”

“Fifteen more!” Maime yelled. “Not the little ones. The
noir black
ones.”

Mal laughed out loud. Maime cocked her head as if to say, “I'll call the deputies on you, son.” She said, “What?”

He shook his head. He stepped back and picked two sixteen-ounce bottles of Cheerwine out of the point-of-purchase soft drink cooler. He set them on the counter. Maime ran them across the electric eye and placed them in one yellow plastic Dollar General bag. Mal said, “Nothing. I'm just laughing at my own wife.” He explained how she renovated rooms then put pictures up on the wall of the old room.

Maime said, “I'd like to meet her. Damn. That's a good one. Back when I lived in Rock Hill, I had me a second husband used to make a big production out of painting the bedroom about twice a year. Word was someone got shot in there before us, and Byron thought the blood still bled through. Anyways, he'd paint a different color every time he painted and always leave a little square down behind the bed to show what the last color looked like. It looked like a gotdang weird checkerboard by the time I finally had enough and moved out.”

Mal tried to imagine what she talked about. Rena brought the fifteen extra frames, which he bought without correcting anyone. There would come a time, he knew, when he'd need to fill up the walk-in closet with photographs of the old walk-in closet. I'll have a head start, he thought. To Maime he said, “Where in the world is ‘Raw Kill'?”

“Rock Hill's up by Charlotte. You ain't ever heard of Rock Hill?”

He shook his head. He paid in cash and said he didn't need a bag. “Raw Kill,” he said on his way out of the store. “Raw Kill, Raw Kill, Raw Kill.” He said, “Maim me. Maim me. Maim me. Raw Kill.”

Mal was surprised to not find his wife's car parked in front of Gus. He walked in to find Rodney Sheets sitting in front of what Mal assumed was his last bourbon ordered. Mal said, “You off not doing chores today, Rodney?”

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