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The one person Basil could demand a real Truth or Dare from was Hickory, the only one he hadn’t known for more than half his life. I listened to the howling rain while Jelly Roll Morton bopped on the ivories and Lucille tore open some Mexican candy bar I’d never seen, with a load of marshmallow and other shit that looked like blood. I thought how when it rained my old toad would tell me the undertaker’s wife was coming to take me away. He and moms had so many ways of expressing their love. Every time you sigh, moms used to say, you lose a drop of blood, and that just keeps bringing you closer to death. Then she’d sigh, and I would scream, O Mama, Mama, Mama! while she and my toad fell back laughing. I thought about all the creatures in this wintry world, out where the rocks lay cold and the mud ran thick and the trees and wind and clouds sputtered and racked and rolled, and Basil sat there before me with his impudence and his flaws and his knowledge of and persistence in them. He took great pleasure in these traits. They somehow gave him the sense he’d become indispensable to the people on whom he committed his tiny crimes, the way delusions become vital to the hypochondriac. His face was always glistening with that petty smirk of self-awareness. Even in his antagonism he’d become precious to those he knew — big, goofy, confident, fashionable, dear, droll Basil, the helpmeet fright wig, twentieth-century portrait of Juvenalian adage — two things only the people anxiously desire: bread and circuses. God, how I hated that I loved him. And then there was Hickory lounging in the smoke with her ink-black hair and creamy throat while upstairs Dinky wheezed among his dreams.

“I should ask her,” Basil said, as I had guessed, sneering Hickory’s way. The booger was still lodged in his hat. “But I won’t. You, doofus,” he said to me, “Truth or Dare. And don’t give us another one of your boring-ass stories we’ve all heard a jillion times.”

Across the room our bottles sang their nitwit song. I’d talked to them in the past, my bottles, and held them close. “Sweet, sweet booze,” I’d say, “please don’t ever leave me.” I crawled to the table and stuck one in my mouth.

“Truth,” I said.

“We want to hear more about your fucked up family.”

“Yeah,” Lucille said. “Tell us more about your Hare Krishna dad.”

I smiled my smile of the hero, the general at his table of defeat, surrendering up his troops.

“I ever tell you my old toad was a paperboy?”

“Every kid was a paperboy,” Lucille said.

“I mean when he was forty-two.”

I told them how after he’d quit the Hare Krishna’s, no place would hire him, no place real. He still had that bald head with the queue down his back. Who was going to hire a guy that looked like soap-on-a-rope? He delivered those worthless inserts with the advertisements in them, I explained, the ones with the Round Table Pizza coupons and Thrifty’s discount ads and such.

But what I did not tell them was how my whole life it seemed I had to watch my ass, waiting for that fuck to sneak up and holler: Andrew Jackson!

What I did not tell them was how he would jump, and I’d run, and bit by bit the time would pass until he caught me with his paddle.

What I did not tell them was how from the shadows my mother would always laugh. Yes, she’d say, yes…

And for absolutely positively certain what I did not tell them was every time he saw me my grandfather said how he and dear ma had spoiled my mother past sense. They may’ve had to scratch it out, but that never kept them from giving her love. He gave her love sure, he’d say, especially him, more than she could use. Their lives, he said, were each other. On their wedding day, when they and theirs and all theirs too came dusting through the gates to the fields trying to swallow up the house for the last hundred years, the place was a vision or mirage. They spat from barrels and slapped on legs and pebbled the hens and drank from a bottomless jug. And the goods, he said, did they ever have them: black-eyed peas, corn bread and greens, pickled peaches, and okra, and ham. Greasy fingers ran through tri-tip and pone, gravy and spuds and coleslaw, too, and laughing mouths scarfed cookies and apple pie. If the men weren’t eating or drinking in tens, and the women weren’t doing the same, it’s because they were together. They hooted into that Texas night, he said, and no one cried unless for good. In the morning, for their honeymoon, they chugged on down to Austin. He spoke about those times like they’d just passed, my grandfather did, their five wild nights in the honkytonks and jukes and once a hall with its giant band, the champagne swilling and they screwing like bugs wherever they could — on the hay-riddled planks of the ’29 Ford, in the alleys with the tramps and garbage and toms, but mostly in their eight-bit bed — all this before returning to the dust of the fields and the everyday sun. Lucky for grandy she couldn’t make more after whelping out moms, my grandfather said. She all but dried up, like a row of set alfalfa. Of course the coot presumed he’d done what he could to make sure moms knew he loved her. He never could see how once she’d grown to bleed she didn’t want him anymore, he said, why she went away. And the day he himself went away, I drove off with my old toad and moms to gather what he’d left of grandy in Lamesa. Not so, however, the day my own toad croaked. The first thing I did was strip an ambulance clean and smash it all to bits. It was only later someone told me I’d done every crumb of dope I stole before they’d fed my toad to the grave, how everything stunk of ether and mints. Red rover, red rover, send happiness over—that’s what the voices said. And then it was them on the street, plotting my destruction, bearded women, first, then barkers and trolls, then geeks and elves and clowns would come to lay me siege. Robitussin low balls and speed-jacked marys made my fare. Sometimes I drank water, sometimes I even slept. We buddies went to jerks with names we didn’t know and watched films whose stories were an endless blur. And sometimes, like now, we journeyed on trips whose ends we’d never guess…

For a long while no one said a word. That stood to sense. The only thing we knew was how to keep on boozing. And my dear friends, I trusted, wouldn’t — couldn’t — ever feel the emptiness of that, leastwise not how I did. We couldn’t go forever. Sooner or later we’d have to lie down in darkness. Without the speed that had kept us hopping, I saw no other way. Any time now we’d collapse around the secrets of ourselves, the ones we knew and the ones we didn’t.

I was tired of believing a shroud could mute the sense that some dimly feared disaster might beset me in the night. Let it come. It couldn’t be more terrifying than sleep, with its dreams realer than our lives. The party was ending, that was sure. We’d torn our gifts open to find boxes inside boxes inside boxes, and nothing in the last. Good riddance, holidays—sayonara.

“I forgot Dinky’s tea,” Hickory said at last, and glided toward the kitchen. “I’ll just make him a cup of tea.”

“What’re you going to make it with, pine cones?”

Basil was right. Everything we had was on the table.

“Think I’ll go see what’s up with army boy myself,” I said.

“Check the phone while you’re at it,” Basil said. “Maybe it’s working now.”

But when still nothing but fuzz dribbled from the thing, Basil flung his hatchet at the stack of wood and cracked his knuckles like he did when he was tight, a tic I’d grown to hate across the years, not for its sound but what it foretold: my bosom pal was about to become a bigger asshole yet.