“I’m not pregnant. I been careful about that.”
“So, you do have some common sense. Damn, girl. You don’t have to do this, live like trash.”
“You a social worker?”
“No. Unlike social workers, I really care.”
She took a long time to respond again. That was okay. I was getting used to it.
“Tanedrue, he said he was gonna quit dealing, soon as he got us a nest egg.”
“A rotten egg.”
“He meant it. He loves me.”
“You are young, aren’t you?”
“You don’t know everything.”
“I don’t know anything. Older I get, less I think I know. But I know this, and I’m going to be crude to make my point. What Tanedrue has is a dumb bitch he can screw and lie to and feed drugs to, and when he’s through with you, when you get so fucked up you can’t tell the difference between a fat mouse and a full-grown elephant, he’ll get rid of you, kid. You won’t be fresh meat to him no more. You won’t be pretty, and you won’t be nothing but a whining whore with a habit. Maybe just some dumb dead bitch in a ditch somewhere.”
“I ain’t no whore.”
“You will be. That’s how it’ll work. He’ll turn you out, baby. So he can make a few more bucks off his horse before it dies. He’ll tell you how you’re doin’ it for the two of you, and it don’t mean nothin’, not really—”
“Shut up! You don’t know everything.”
“You said that already, and I even agreed with you.”
Leonard opened the door, said, “Give me some gas money.”
“You pay”
“I haven’t got any money.”
I gave him some money, hesitated, said, “Let’s get some coffee. Gadget here, she might could eat something.”
“I’m not hungry,” she said.
“Then watch us drink coffee,” I said. “And if you run off, we’ll just chase you down. We don’t care how it looks or what anyone thinks. We are wild and crazy guys.”
“What if Tanedrue and the rest of them come and find you?” she said.
“That would be bad for them,” Leonard said. “Didn’t you just hear Hap say we were wild and crazy?”
10
I parked us near the garage between some yellow lines and under the overhang. The rain plunked on the aluminum above us like buckshot. The guy who had been reading Poontang Palace was still inside the garage, but now he was digging around in a toolbox, probably trying to find a big enough hammer to beat some sort of automotive problem into submission.
Inside the joint we got the same table as before and the guy who waited on us before came over, said, “You must like it here, back in the same day, and now with a friend.”
“We don’t like the fries, just want to go on record with that,” Leonard said. “But the hamburgers do the alligator rock. And she’s not a friend.”
“What?” the waiter said.
“He likes the hamburgers,” I said. “He doesn’t like the fries. The girl is not a friend. She’s a friend of a friend.”
The waiter didn’t look at me. He studied Leonard for a moment. Leonard smiled. There was always something about that smile. It was less like a smile and more like a snake trying to grin up a frog right before it struck and ate it.
The waiter looked away from Leonard, looked at me. “What happened to your face?”
I reached up and touched the scratches on my cheeks. “Briars.”
“You ought to see his ass,” Leonard said. “That’s where the real work was done.”
“That right?” the waiter said. “Sorry I asked. Here’s menus.”
When the waiter went away, I said, “What you going to have, Gadget?”
“I’m not hungry.”
“That crummy way you feel, that’s because you’re so hungry your belly thinks your throat’s cut. Have some soup. They got soup here. I don’t know how it is, but stay away from the French fries. Soup, any kind of soup, if it’s fresh, it’s pretty hard to mess up.”
She didn’t order anything, but when the waiter came back I ordered a cup of coffee and a bowl of chicken soup and Leonard ordered another hamburger, minus the fries, potato chips instead.
When the waiter was gone, I looked at Leonard, said, “You just ate couple hours ago. Maybe less. You want another hamburger?”
“Whipping the pure-dee-dog-doodie out of people makes me hungry. Don’t it you?”
“A little.”
The food came and I drank the coffee and pushed the soup over close to Gadget. I said, “I don’t want the soup after all. Why don’t you give it a taste? It smells pretty good.”
She shook her head. “I know what you’re doing.”
I nodded. “Suit yourself.”
Leonard dug into his hamburger. “Oh, Jesus, this is so good it makes you want to hold down a wild hog and fuck it in the ass.”
“That passes for manners at his house,” I said to Gadget.
“I’ve heard worse.”
I noticed she had picked up the spoon and was starting to stir the soup. I pushed the crackers over close to her. She opened one of the cracker packages and bit a corner off the cracker. She crumbled the rest in her soup. I turned at an angle so I wasn’t watching her. I got up and went over and ordered some pie and a glass of milk. When my pie and milk came, Leonard had to have the same, and now Gadget, finished with her soup, wanted some pie and milk too.
By this time she was starting to look better. I had a feeling it had been a long time since she’d eaten anything besides cheese crackers, potato chips, peanut butter and Cracker Jack. My guess was she was the neatnik who put the paper towels over the dog piles.
I paid the bill because Leonard didn’t have any money, or said he didn’t, and we drove out of there. The rain had died out and everything, even the crummy little town, looked better than before, spit-cleaned by nature. We hadn’t gone a mile before we looked back and saw Gadget had gone to sleep in the backseat, her belly full, and maybe, for a moment, satiated.
Of course, there was that hairy old cocaine monkey, and when she woke up, it was sure to chatter and show its ass.
I tried to tell myself we had done all we could do. What Marvin had asked. But somehow I didn’t feel satisfied that we could say “job well done.” I kept thinking about what Tanedrue had said, about what Gadget had said. About how we didn’t know what we had done and that hell was coming.
11
When we got back to LaBorde, Gadget was still sleeping. We drove through the wet town on out into the country where Marvin Hanson stayed. He lived there with his daughter and his wife. They had once been a very close family then Marvin’s pecker had gotten excited about a young woman; the same young woman I had liked. She was dead now, and Marvin had gone back to his family and I had gotten over my feelings of wanting to skin him and nail his hide to the side of a barn and throw knives at it. Got over it long ago. Me and him and Leonard had gone through a lot, and we were bonded, as they like to say.
Marvin and his wife, Rachel, had gotten back together, and they were doing all right. But during that time, their daughter, JoAnna, had gone through some stuff, and then she had a daughter of her own, Julie, aka Gadget, by the guy who had run off. I didn’t know that until Marvin told me. I knew I had never met him, but then again, much as Leonard and I liked Marvin, his family didn’t hang with us, didn’t even send us a Christmas card. They could have had three more kids, and close as the three of us were, we might not have known.
Now they all lived in a small two-bedroom house out in the country, trying to pull everything together and live happily ever after.
The house was off a rain-slick red clay road, and we started down it just as Gadget awakened and sat up in the backseat.
“If you hadn’t had such a bad day,” I said, “I’d have made you wear your seat belt, and I should have anyway.”
“You’re not my daddy,” she said.
“No,” Leonard said, “and from what I’ve heard, your daddy, whoever he is, isn’t claiming you either. You weren’t nothin’ to him but a hump and a squirt.”