Authors: Bonnie Nadzam
She crossed the smooth concrete floor and kissed John Walker on the cheek. He put his arm around her and pulled her close in a half hug.
“Bring him back,” John said. “And tell him he's got work out here.”
She met Gordon outside the shop beside the truck and they climbed in. The late afternoon sun picked out golden threads in the weeds around the gravel drive as he backed up and hit the frontage road.
“What were you doing inside?” she asked him.
“Watching a ball game.”
“You were not.”
“I was.”
“What kind of ball?”
He raised an eyebrow. “Bring something to eat?”
“Got us a couple beers and sandwiches.”
He touched her face. “You look good.”
“
You
look good.”
“Sixty-three days,” she said.
“Not that you're counting.”
“If I had two thousand dollars saved, I'd leave tomorrow.”
“When you're there you'll wish you were here.”
“Never.”
“You watch.” He reached over and interlaced his fingers with hers.
She rolled her eyes, and told him about the woman in the Lucy Graves. He slowed the truck and looked at her.
“Who was she?” he asked.
“Never seen her before. She had South Dakota plates. It's creeping me out. Do you ever feel like that? What she said? Like something's bargaining with you?”
“What,” he said. “Like the devil?” He set his gaze back to the road and smiled.
Leigh scooted to the middle of the truck. “These things come in threes, you know.”
“What things?”
She held out her forefinger. “One,” she said, and pointed out the window as they passed the ground where the man had buried his dog earlier in the week. She glanced at him, then lifted her second finger. “Two, the woman at the Lucy Graves. So, what's the third thing going to be?”
“The lady today doesn't count.”
“Why not?”
“Because you're the only one who knew. Besides me.”
She agreed that something in the texture of it felt different.
“And if you're not sure there's a second thing,” he said, “then you can't really call the first thing the first thing.”
“I guess not.”
“So no things coming in threes,” he said. “Come back to planet Earth. Blue pickup truck.” He pointed out the window beside her, and before them, the weeds and grass a pale yellow green, lavender green, and silver and lettuce and willow green, and Prussian blue and forget-me-not-blue and rose pink and gold.
“The thing is,” she began, and looked at him.
“Go on,” he said, “get it out.”
“I don't know,” she said. “It's like a tightness right here.” She lifted her fingers to her chest and throat. “Anxiousness. Like there's something important I'm ignoring. But I can't place it.”
Gordon stared straight ahead, not responding.
“Let's drive out to the buttes,” he finally said. She studied him.Â
“Why weren't you welding today?”
“There have to be a hundred kinds of birds out there now.”
“It's a long drive,” she said, and put her arm across his neck and shoulders.Â
“Good. Scoot over.”
It was one of a string of perfect nights, like beads threaded on a brilliant necklace that isn't yours to keep. They sat in the cab of the truck, his back against the driver's side door, her back against his chest, his arms around her. They kept the passenger side window down, and spoke little.
“Let's just sit here forever in the dark like this,” he said, and tightened his grip around her waist. Outside the truck the wind shushed through the grass and lengthening weeds.
“No morning?”
“No morning.”
“No evening? No factory? No school?”
“No. No nothing,” he said. “Just this.”
The evening slowly drifted west and shadows crept across the cool grass. Night bled into the trees. By the time they drove back around toward the outskirts of town, it was midnight. The yellow square of the Walkers' kitchen window was hovering before them.
“Were you supposed to bring the truck back earlier or something?” She thought Gordon was in trouble. The stars themselves could set their clocks by the daily routines of John and Georgianna Walker. If John was up measuring coffee in his white shirt and blue jeans, it was 5
AM
and the sun was just cracking the eastern sky with a long and even white line of light. If Georgianna was rinsing greens in the sink, it was 7
PM
and silver white moths were on the wing. If the downstairs lights were on at this hour, something was wrong.
Gordon dropped Leigh off first, at her house a couple hundred feet away, then circled back around, parked the truck, and went through the kitchen into the house where he found his father on the floor breathing heavily, his bare feet on top of two end pillows. His brow was furrowed. Georgianna was in her flowered nightgown on her knees beside him, her long gray hair all around her. She looked up at Gordon, her eyes streaming tears. John shifted his glance to his son. Gordon squatted beside his parents, his heart beating fast and high in his chest. Tree shadows cast by the waning moon spread black veins across the faded wallpaper roses.
There were six rules in John Walker's shop that comprised not a checklist, but a cycling number of items to be continually considered: be safe; be clean; plan ahead; check your power and connections; take care of yourself; and do the job right.
It was the first of these Gordon thought of as he drove from the clinic in Burnsville back into Lions to get a change of clothes for his mother, who'd gone in the ambulance in her nightgown while Gordon followed in the truck. The morning was the first promise of what would be a record-breaking hot summer, and under normal circumstances his father would have already been in the shop at this hour, black coffee made, in heavy work pants and a wool shirt. God, the hot days Gordon had spent as a boy in the shop dressed in boots, pants, and wool. The pitiful looks he'd cast at his father.
You can't wear cotton and weld, you can't wear polyester and weld, his father would say as Gordon flushed red and the sweat broke out in beads, a slick sheen on his upper lip and at his temples, under his arms. Set down your torch and get yourself another glass of water.
In the house Gordon gathered things for his mother: a dress, a light sweater, sandals, her toothbrush, and set them in the passenger seat of the truck. He went into the shop through the side door. No radio. No coffee. All the walls and pegboards painted white for visibility and safety were washed a pale gas blue by the early morning light. The metal of the wheels, wire brushes, cabinets, sockets, ratchets, and clamps gleamed from their ordered places. The cans of Derustit, ChemClean, and Bradford No.1 were all lined up with paint cans in the green metal corrosives cabinet. First-aid kit. Fire extinguishers, one in each corner. The old binoculars. The green and silver Stanley Thermos.
“People's lives depend upon a good weld,” his father had said, and put a heavy plate of ten practice beads before him. This was some years ago. Outside it was high summer. Eighty miles down the highway every kid he knew was out in it. He watched carefully as his father drew his finger over the top of each bead, naming its flaws. “Porous,” his father said, and took Gordon's finger and ran it over the top of the weld. “Incomplete fusion.”
“Passed it too quickly,” Gordon said.
“Could be.”
“Or the current was too low.”
“Exactly right.”
“But these look perfect.” Gordon ran his finger over the next two.
“Those are the worst,” his father said. “Because you can hardly see anything's wrong. It's cracked. Lengthwise.”
“And this one at the toe.”
“That's right.”
“This one has slag in it,” Gordon said. “And hereâyou can tell they weren't pushing it fast enough. Look at that long motion they must have been making. An inch even. Look how wide the bead is.”
“And this one?”
Gordon studied at it, and glanced up at his father. “Cracked?”
“You're guessing. Don't guess.”
“Sorry.”
“You're not operating from a belief system, Gordon,” he said. “You're working with successive approximations of facts. Work with what you know. And what you don't know, don't guess.”
“OK.”
“Don't tell yourself a story about it.”
“I wasn't.”
“Make your own observations. Don't take my word for itâor anybody else's.”
Gordon closed the shop door, his stomach clenched. It was wrong shutting the place up on a perfectly good workday. His eyes stung as he started up the truck. For the first time in his life, regret was alive in him, making his face very still, his movements wooden. He was a block past the only stop sign in town before he realized he'd driven straight through it. His thoughts went to Dex and the short baseball player, but he knew better than to assign them responsibility for the choice he'd made. Gordon had not been there for what might have been his father's last days in the shop. Days he could never have back.
He pulled over at the Lucy Graves. The lights were up and he could see May behind the counter, and Boyd, and a Âcustomerâtrucker traffic from off the highwayâperched on stools with small brown ceramic cups of coffee in their hands. May was frying up breakfasts as she prepped for the lunch hour. Four loaves of plastic-bagged white bread were out. Pink stacks of frozen ham, frozen salami, frozen bologna, filaments of waxed paper floating between each slice. A canister of mayo, an industrial-sized jar of bread-and-butter pickles, and ten pounds of frozen crinkle-cut french fries. On the stove behind her, several cans' worth of corned beef hash simmering in an oversized skillet. Dozens of her own hens' brown and white eggs lined up on blue dishrags beside the range.
“Gordon,” May said, when he came in and rang the bells on the glass door. She dried her hands on her apron and went to him and kissed his cheek, then set her hands on his shoulders, surveying his face. “Your dad hanging in there?”
Gordon hadn't slept; his eyes were ringed with shadow. “Don't really know.” He kept his gaze pointed at the floor as he spoke.
“Bad season,” Boyd said to no one in particular.
“Oh, sweetheart,” May said to Gordon, then furrowed her brows at Boyd to be quiet. She brought Gordon to the counter. “What can I get you guys?”
“Nothing that'll get cold, I guess,” Gordon said.
“Starts cold and stays cold,” she said, “coming right up.” She turned around and stooped into a cooler. “Your dad eating too?”
“Just me and mom.”
“You want an egg and toast while you wait?”
“No, I'm OK.”
“Nonsense, let me make you an egg and toast.”
“You should let her,” Boyd said, “she does it really good.”
She set a slice of bread over the butter and onions and cracked an egg open beside it. “Poor Georgie,” she said, then she sang it again a few times, like an old song everybody knew. In three minutes Gordon had a buttered, browned slice of toast topped with a thick slice of red tomato fried in bacon fat and an egg over easy, with a cup of black coffee. He thanked her. She glanced at the customer and then again at Boyd, both bent over dishes of peppered eggs.
“You boys set?”
“All set, ma'am,” the truck driver said.
Boyd winked at her, and May gave him a stern look, shifting her eyes quickly to Gordon. She set four slices of white bread on the stainless steel counter.
“Sorry about your dad, Gordon,” Boyd said.
“Thanks.”
“Hell of a good man. There's anything I can do you come ask me.”
“Thanks, Boyd.”
“Bologna?” May asked.
“Sure.”
“Jam?”
“Whatever you think best.”
“Good boy,” she said, opening a jar of her own chokecherry preserves.
“Tell you what, Gordon,” Boyd said, and pushed his plate back. “That story of the talents. You know it?”
May went for the relish. “Boyd just tried church in Burnsville.”
Gordon raised his eyebrows.
“Been a rough string of days for him.”
Boyd put his hands up. “I probably won't go back though.”
“Parable of the talents,” the truck driver said, lifting his coffee.
Boyd looked at him. “That's right,” he said, “the three talents.” He turned to Gordon and explained. “Three men get a little to go on, a little grease, right? First two guys take it and go out into the world and get busy. Work hard. Make a little more for the man who invested in them. Third man does nothing with his talent. Buries it right in his hometown, never leaves. Stays right there where all his family live and never makes any money or does anything with himself in the world.”
May snorted. “That story,” she said, and waved her butter knife, “is not about getting busy and making money.”
Boyd pointed at her. “You never been to church in your life, May Ransom.”
“Responsibility,” she said. “That's what it's about. You get a little grace in this life and you're responsible for it. You cultivate it. You keep it alive. No one else is going to do it for you.”
The trucker looked at her, squinted, and frowned. “Grace comes from God.”
She peeled two pink circles of meat off a stack wrapped in waxed paper. “Gordon knows what I mean,” she said. “You learn something in school, you don't close up your books for good. You open another book. Right?”
“Bunch of hooey,” the truck driver said, glancing up at Gordon and lifting his coffee mug. “Your buddy here is right. Don't get stuck in a dying town and run out of business like your garage here.” He wiped his plate with a corner of toast and nodded toward the street.
“Levon's garage went out of business?” Gordon asked.
Boyd nodded. “He's about to. Corporate's coming up from Denver to assess.” He made scare quotes with his fingers around the last word.
“Well, but the weld shop will never close,” May said, and closed one sandwich. “Business or no business. Walkers don't care.” She looked at Gordon. “Sorry Gordon.”
Gordon raised his palms. “Hey,” he said, and smiled, “true story.”
“Chips? Slaw?”
“Yes, please.”
“Hear that? Yes, please. Never hear that out of Leigh, do you?”
“Our Gordon,” Boyd turned to the trucker. “So smart. He could be a doctor. His father could've been one, too.”
The man looked at Gordon. “You want to be a doctor?”
Gordon shrugged.
“He's a welder,” May said.
“Bet Leigh wants him to be a doctor,” Boyd said.
“Good for you,” the trucker said to Gordon. “Welding's good work.”
“Gordon's not a welder,” Boyd said. “You don't want to be a welder.”
“Just don't get stuck here doing it,” the trucker said.
May pushed two white paper bags into a white plastic bag and knocked a row of glasses onto the floor. She put her head down and her fingers to her temples.
“Sorry,” she said. “Sorry. I'm off-kilter.”
Gordon walked behind the counter. “Here,” he said, and pulled out her chair. She sat as he put her coffee cup in her hand, then swept up the glass.
“I'll get out of your way,” the trucker said. “Liked the eggs, ma'am,” he called out in May's direction, and put a five-dollar bill, folded lengthwise, down on the counter. He put his ball cap on his head and nodded at Gordon, then Boyd. “You should go back,” he said.
“What, to church?”
“âThrough Him and for His name's sake, we receive grace to call people to the obedience that comes from faith.'” He tipped his hat at May, and the bells strung on the door jangled as he stepped out into the street.
“No need to go back Boyd, you just hang around the counter all day and you'll get church enough, trust me. Seems their belief grows in proportion to their disappointment. I will never understand it.”
Boyd wiped his mouth and set his paper napkin on his empty plate. “That's what people get for their high expectations.”
“Don't put your hand in the trash,” Gordon told May. “I put the glass in there.”
“I'll send Leigh over with something for dinner,” she told him. “Something hot. For you and your mother.”
But that was the last anyone saw of Gordon for six days.