Tapping the Source (19 page)

Read Tapping the Source Online

Authors: Kem Nunn

BOOK: Tapping the Source
8.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Curl was a crusty-looking old building with peeling paint, bordered on both sides by vacant lots. It ran surf films nearly every week. This week it had one called
Standing Room Only
. He stood for a while examining the posters before deciding they should go. Then he walked down to the Del Taco, where Michelle worked, to get a Coke.

She seemed surprised to see him. He’d never been there when she was working. She was wearing an orange and brown uniform with a little white name tag pinned over her breast. He hung around the counter for a while, sipping his Coke from a straw and talking to her. When he told her about the movie, she said, “Far out.”

All the time he was talking to her, he kept noticing this other girl, about Michelle’s age, staring at him. She was working the drive-thru window, but she kept looking over at Ike, staring at him like she was trying to decide if she knew him or not. Ike had never seen her before in his life. He met her stare a couple of times and each time she looked away. He would have hung around awhile longer. It was pleasant enough to stand there, talking to Michelle, the wind at his back, but finally some people started to line up behind him and so he said good-bye. “I’ll see you tonight,” she told him. “It will be fun.” Ike walked down the steps to the sidewalk and then turned to look back. Michelle smiled at him through the glass. Behind her, he could see that the girl at the drive-thru was looking at him again.

•   •   •

He made two stops on his way back up Main Street. He stopped first at the travel agency and picked up some maps of Mexico. He wanted to see if he could remember the names and trace out the same lines that Hound Adams had drawn the night before. And then he went on to the Main Street Surf Shop.

He did not see Hound Adams. In fact he did not see anyone and the shop, as it had been on his first visit, was empty and quiet. He pushed his fingers into the pockets of his jeans and walked inside. He was not really certain what he had come to see. He supposed it had something to do with what Barbara had told him, that the shop had once belonged to Preston.

In tennis shoes, he moved silently across the dark rectangle of carpet in the showroom and onto the concrete. It was odd, the silence in the shop, giving him the sensation that any loud noises would be out of place. That feeling was enhanced, he guessed, by the memorabilia on the walls, the trophies and old posters, the faded photographs, some of which had writing across the bottoms of the mattings in which they were framed. He paid closer attention to what was around him now than he had on his first visit and he noticed one thing right away, was surprised in fact that he had not remembered it from his first visit. On the deck of one of the old balsa wood boards that hung suspended from the ceiling, he saw a decal. The ceiling in the shop was high, as if the room had once served another purpose, but he could easily make out the shape of the decal: a flaming wave within a circle. He began to study some of the photographs and he saw that there were other boards in the photographs with the same decal, the logo repeated perhaps a dozen times throughout the pictures.

The shop consisted of two rooms. There was the large room with the carpet and the raised ceiling in front and another smaller room in back where the used boards and wet suits were kept. Ike walked into the back portion of the shop. He smelled the distinctive rubbery odor of the new wet suits, the sharp, rather sweet scent of fresh resin. It was on the wall above the wet suits at the east end of the small room that he found what was to him the most remarkable of the photographs. It was an enlargement done on what looked to be a cheap paper, for the picture had once been in color but was now faded and full of light. The sky was the palest of blues and the color was completely gone from the faces of the people: a middle-aged man, two younger men, and a girl. It took Ike a moment or two to be certain, but certain he was, even before finding the very thin, spidery handwriting that traveled along the photo’s bottom edge: the two young men were Hound Adams and Preston Marsh. They both had short haircuts, were dressed in swimsuits and matching sweat shirts. They stood propped against an old Ford station wagon with wood on the sides and surfboards protruding from the back. The girl was between them, standing on the running board, one arm over Hound’s shoulders, the other over Preston’s. She was a very good-looking girl with fine curved brows, a straight nose, and even teeth, a face that might have been in the movies, and she was smiling, laughing almost. Preston and Hound were smiling.

The middle-aged man did not seem to fit with the others somehow. He was dressed in slacks and a T-shirt. A sport coat hung draped over one arm. His hair was very short and dark, combed straight back, and he wore a pair of small round shades. His mouth was thin, straight, turned up at the corners in what might have been a smile. The writing across the bottom said:
Mexico, Labor Day, 1965. Hound, Preston, Janet, Milo
.

The shop was still and quiet and Ike stood before the picture for a long time. It was surprising how much alike Hound and Preston seemed then. Preston was nearly a head taller, a bit wider and thicker through the shoulders, but with a leaner look than he had now, built more like Hound. His nose was straighter then too, and with the similar haircuts, the matching sweat shirts, the similarity was striking. But there was something else that kept him before the picture. What was there about it? Perhaps the girl, something about the way she laughed, her hair caught in the wind. For some reason, he imagined the picture had been taken at the end of the day, but not just any day, it had been a good one, and it was the kind of picture that made you wish the people in it were your friends, and having to settle for just looking at it made you feel left out of something and lonesome. That was what he was thinking when a voice jerked him around, asking him if he needed help. The voice came from behind him, and when he turned, he saw that it was the same blond-haired man he had seen Preston talking to in the alley, whom he had noticed that night he followed Hound and Terry, the man he had so far taken to be Frank Baker—though of this he was still not certain.

The man’s words were loud in the silence of the shop and Ike was a moment in replying. “No. No, thanks,” Ike said, “just looking around.”

The man walked into the room and stood just a few steps behind Ike, his arms folded across his chest. He seemed to be looking at the picture as well. Ike spent a few moments pretending to examine the wet suits that hung beneath the photographs, made a remark about the need to save bread, then left the shop. He left the young blond-haired man still standing before the picture.

It was on his way out of the small room that Ike noticed another photograph, one of the man he had just seen—the older dark-haired man. Ike recognized the same thin smile, the small shades. This time the man was alone on an empty stretch of beach. Ike did not take the time to look at the photograph for long, but before he left he was able to read the name written on the mat. The name was Milo Trax.

19

 

The wind stung his eyes, blowing them dry as he passed the Greyhound bus depot and headed north toward the Sea View apartments. He thought about the man he’d just seen in the photographs. And he thought of the small figure dressed in white that he’d glimpsed from the clearing above the point. The man with the bucks. And it might be interesting, he thought, to talk to Barbara again, to have a look at that scrapbook she had mentioned.

Michelle was waiting for him when he reached his apartment. She was sitting in front of her door, dressed in jeans and a T-shirt. She had brought him some food from work. He sat at the card table by a window and ate. Michelle watched.

“Where’s Jill?” he asked, looking for something to say, for a way to get his mind off the surf shop and the ranch.

“Getting her hair done. This girl we met is going to do it for her. Punk.”

He nodded, looking around the room. It was small and cluttered, like his own. The apartment consisted of one room together with a tiny kitchenette and a bathroom. The girls had rigged up a curtain to divide the main room. Jill apparently slept on a large, ragged couch, while Michelle had a mattress on the floor. Some pictures from pornographic magazines had been stuck to the wall over Michelle’s mattress. She noticed him looking at the pictures and smiled. She took a file from the windowsill and began to fiddle with her nails. He saw that her nails had been painted a bright red and all of a sudden she was beginning to seem more like the Michelle he had known before the party. He couldn’t think of a fucking thing to say. A long evening filled with awkward silences was beginning to yawn before him.

“Got any dope?” Michelle wanted to know.

Ike shook his head.

“I’m growing a plant. Want to see it?”

Ike said that he did. He finished eating and got up to rinse his hands at the sink.

Michelle led him past the curtain, to a windowsill near her mattress where several tiny marijuana plants grew in plastic cups. She touched one of the frail green leaves with her finger and laughed. Ike tried to look interested.

There was a rattling at the front door and Ike turned to see Jill walk into the room. She had gotten her hair done, all right. It was shorter than Ike’s. He suspected for a moment that she had driven to San Arco and let his grandmother do it. It looked shorter on one side than on the other and a patch of it had been bleached out to an ugly shade of orange. Michelle said it looked all right, though. The two girls stood in the bathroom inspecting it from all angles in the light of a naked bulb. Jill had heard about a party somewhere and she was hot to go try out her new haircut. “They’re gonna have a live band,” she told them, and Ike could see that Michelle wanted to go too. She looked at him, but he pretended not to notice. Finally she told Jill that they were going to a movie. Jill shrugged. “Suit yourself,” she said, but made it plain she considered it a very boring thing to do.

•   •   •

They left the apartments in silence and started for the theater. Ike had the feeling that Michelle was somewhat pissed about missing out on the party. They didn’t hold hands as they had done the night before and he felt slightly awkward walking beside her, unable to think of anything to say, beginning to wonder if she was the one who was different tonight or if it was him. Last night he had been half drunk, and stoned. Perhaps his judgment had been impaired. Or maybe it was like the line in that song—one of the many country songs he had been forced to listen to again and again in back of Gordon’s market—the part about how the girls all get prettier at closing time. It was a depressing thought.

“Marsha says she knows you from someplace,” Michelle said. They were about halfway between the Sea View apartments and the Curl Theater.

“Marsha?”

“She works with me. She was there today, when you came by. She says she’s seen you before.”

Ike thought now of the girl he had seen at the drive-thru window, the one who’d been staring. Somehow, going to the shop had made him forget about her. “I don’t see how,” he said. “Was she ever in San Arco?”

“I don’t know. I don’t think so. She thinks she knows you from around here.”

“Can’t be.”

“Then you look like somebody. She says she either knows you or you look like somebody.”

“Who?”

“She didn’t say.”

•   •   •

There was a small line at the Curl. Ike and Michelle waited, standing in silence once more. Ike thought about the girl at the taco stand. Michelle walked away from him to look over the posters for coming attractions posted behind the glass frames at the front of the building. Ike wished there were a way he could split right now, go see that girl again, ask her who it was he looked like. And he wanted to see Barbara, too. He began to get nervous standing there, like he was wasting time, like maybe he and Michelle did not belong together anyway and that asking her out had been a mistake.

The funny thing was, the film was so good that after it began he practically forgot about everything. He might have even forgotten he was with Michelle, except that she kept saying things out loud. It was a very annoying habit. In any other theater it would have been even worse, but the Curl was a fairly noisy place anyway, the crowd hooting and cheering for the more spectacular rides. Still, Ike found Michelle’s talking annoying. She acted as if no one had ever taken her to a damn theater before.

Ike didn’t say anything. He kept his mouth shut and watched the screen. He had never seen anything like some of the waves in the film. There was footage from all over the world, places like Australia, New Zealand, Bali. The waves were like those he had seen at the ranch, empty, perfect, and he thought back to that plugged-in feeling he had found there. He recalled the sight of Preston seated above a black sea, arm raised in greeting. A liquid barrel gone amber in the setting sun filled the screen, gone hollow and riderless, blowing spray thirty feet in the air. And there was no way to explain it to someone who didn’t know.

Other books

Eisenhower by Newton, Jim
Ivory and Bone by Julie Eshbaugh
The American by Martin Booth
Ten Days in the Hills by Jane Smiley
Hell's Legionnaire by L. Ron Hubbard
Haunting Desire by Erin Quinn