Hot Springs (19 page)

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Authors: Geoffrey Becker

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BOOK: Hot Springs
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“It stinks,” said Emily. She wore a new outfit Bernice had purchased for her this morning on sale at the mall in Towson after driving around the parking garage for so long they’d both felt ill. Looking at her, Bernice wasn’t sure anymore. The shorts seemed too large, and the shirt—white with pink trim—seemed too small. She hadn’t known what size to get, and Emily had been no help at all.
“That’s the smell of beer,” she told her. “Stale beer.” She peered around for any sign of a human being. “I promise we won’t stay long.”
The door opened and a short guy with a shaved head came in, carrying a guitar case and a colorful cloth bag. “Hey,” he said. He seemed a few years younger than she was—maybe twenty-three or so—and had a hint of a harelip.
“Hey, yourself,” said Bernice.
“I’m Max.”
She nodded. “Good for you.”
“Max Lucca.”
“I suppose you play that thing?” She gestured toward the case.
He grinned, his lip lifting awkwardly over his small teeth. “That’s what I’m here about.” He looked around, saw that they were alone, then looked over at Emily, who was on a bar stool, watching a videogame screen.
“Well, go on then, play us a song.”
“OK,” he said. He looked around again. “Where do you want me?”
“Any place you feel like.” She pointed to a stool by the front window. “There.”
Max Lucca opened his case and took out an acoustic guitar. From his bag, he brought out an aluminum contraption, which he hung around his neck. He inserted a harmonica into this, then adjusted a couple of wing nuts, bringing the instrument into position a few
inches from his lips. He put a purple strap onto the guitar and slung it around his neck. “You got any requests?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “What are my choices?” She noticed that at least one of the games Emily was looking at the previews for was pornographic. She considered pulling her away from the screen, but thought perhaps it could be considered educational.
“I’ve got blues. I’ve got originals.”
“How about original blues?”
“I can do that, too.”
“Max,” she said. “Max.”
“What?”
“Before you even start, let me give you some advice. You do not want to do original blues. No one wants to hear your white-boy original blues. Original blues is
such
a bad idea.”
Max checked the tuning on his guitar. The sound was sour and flat in the big room. “Are you the manager?” he asked. “They told me the manager would be here this afternoon.”
“Does that matter, Max? I’m trying to help you here. You are not Blind Lemon Lucca. You are just Max, from—wherever you’re from. Glen Burnie? Harford County? Dundalk? Now let’s hear some music, OK? Why don’t you just pick something. Impress us.”
Max Lucca began strumming minor chords, his eyes closed, his head lowered toward the body of his guitar as if he were communicating with it in some way besides the tactile and the auditory. Bernice was reminded of the attitude of Mary in certain Renaissance annunciations. He began singing, and she thought she recognized the song, but she couldn’t be sure, because in addition to being quiet, he mumbled.
“Max, Max,” she said. “Hold it.”
Max stopped and looked up.
“You’re mumbling.”
“That’s my style,” he said.
“Was that ‘Light My Fire’?”
He grinned again. “Yeah.”
“The Doors, or José Feliciano?”
“José who?”
“Or Brasil ’66? Max! Was that Brasil ’66?”
But Max Lucca wasn’t looking at her anymore, he was looking past her, over her right shoulder, and when she turned she saw CC Devereaux holding an enormous burlap sack.
“Damn,” he said, “I thought I locked that door.”
“We didn’t steal anything,” said Bernice. “I promise. We didn’t even drink anything. Max here was just auditioning.”
“‘Light My Fire,’” said Max.
“Well,” said CC, putting down the sack, recognition dawning on his face. “Whoa.” He looked over at Emily, who had given up on the video game and was now trying to make animals out of plastic straws. “Sorry, I didn’t see her.”
“Oh, she’s heard worse.”
“Yours?”
“Can’t you tell? Emily, this is CC.” Bernice watched Emily’s liquid eyes acknowledge him momentarily, then return to the straws. Nothing. She was doing pretty well, all things considered. New places and people every day. The kid had inner reserves.
“Should I keep going?” asked Max.
“Should he?”
“Long as you’re all set up, sure,” said CC. The impression he gave was still one of lean muscle and shady dealings. There was no gray in his hair and she wondered if he dyed it. He still had the soul patch he’d had when he lived with her mother, and he wore small, round glasses with silver frames. His T-shirt read
Natty Boh
in faded letters.
“What’s in the bag?” Bernice asked.
“Peanuts.”
Max began again, and they all listened politely. Bernice thought he was bad, but bad in a good enough way—she could imagine someone, somewhere, liking it.
“So?” he said, when he was done. “What do you think?”
“I don’t know,” said CC. “It’s not what we usually have in here.”
“What?” said Bernice. “Oh, come on. Give him a shot. How about tomorrow? Can you come in tomorrow? Around eight?”
“Seven,” said CC. “You can have the seven-to-ten slot. We’ll see what happens.”
“Seriously?” said Max.
“Woo-hoo!” said Bernice. “You go, man. You got a gig.”
“Any pay involved in this?” Max asked.
CC moved behind the bar and filled a cup with ice, then squirted soda into it and pushed it toward Emily. “Pay? You want to get paid?”
“I was hoping.”
“Ten percent of the bar while you’re on, plus whatever you pick up in tips.”
“That’s good, Max,” said Bernice. “You could make out.”
“Bring your friends. Bring your friends’ friends.”
CC chatted with him a bit and the two exchanged business cards, and then Max left, the heavy glass door sighing shut, and it was just the three of them.
“So, Bernice,” he said. “You look good.”
“I want a job.”
He leaned forward, his hands pressed palms down on the shiny bar top. “A job doing what?”
She shrugged. “Waitress? That’s my experience. But I could bartend, too.”
“Yeah? What’s in a martini?”
“Gin. And a little vermouth.”
“A Harvey Wallbanger?”
“Galliano.”
“A boxcar?”
“I don’t know. Rock and Rye?” She threw her hands up in defeat. “I don’t even know what Rock and Rye is. I’m good with rum drinks.”
“That’s OK, no one ever orders a boxcar. Or a Harvey Wallbanger, or a martini, for that matter. Well, maybe a martini. We might serve a couple of martinis a week. Basically, bartending here means selling beer and the occasional whiskey drink. Jack on the rocks, Jack and Coke, Jack and 7UP, etc.”
“Jack-in-the-box. Jack-in-the-pulpit. Jack up the price.”
He squinted. “What do you want, really?”
“I told you. Pearl and I are on the lam, hiding out from the law. I figured I could work here, off the books.”
“How’d you even find me?”
“Your name is in the paper. Don’t you read the paper? ‘Blues Jam night with CC Devereaux. Bring your ax.’ Anyone ever show up here with a real one?”
“What?”
“Ax. Or is that just not funny?”
“This place is going under. The owner didn’t pay his water bill for a year and a half because he broke up with his old lady and she didn’t forward the bills, and then the city took the building and sold it out from under him. He’s got a lawyer, but I don’t see how it can work out. Mike bought the bar for, like, fifty thousand. The new owners won’t sell it back to him for less than about three hundred. So, you see, we’re kind of in limbo here.”
She looked around. “What’s with the paint?”
“You don’t like black?”
“It’s what teenaged boys paint their bedroom. Pearl?” she said. “What do you think of the colors in here?”
Emily appraised the wall. “I think orange would be better.”
“Orange?” said CC. “That might work for a sports bar. You an Os fan?”
“She doesn’t follow baseball,” said Bernice. “She hates baseball.”
“I like the Rockies,” said Emily.
“National League?” he said. “You need to rethink your affiliation.”
Bernice pointed to the back wall, where there was an enormous, poorly painted mural of a drum set. “You’re not proud of that, are you?”
“No,” said CC. She saw there was a T-shirt with the same image hanging on the wall to the left of the cash register. A handwritten label pinned to it read $13.
“It’s pretty lame,” she said. “Actually, lame is being nice.”
“I can’t argue. Mike did it himself.”
“Do you think Emily and I could have some of those peanuts? We skipped lunch.”
He took a switchblade out of his pocket and sliced open the burlap. Bernice took a handful over to the bar and deposited them in front of Emily. “Throw your shells on the floor, sweetie.” She cracked one open herself. It was delicious and salty.
“I get ’em over by Lexington Market. Best peanuts anywhere.”
Bernice had another. “Mmm. That one tasted like wet dog.”
“Mine tasted like clouds,” said Emily.
“No way,” said Bernice. She ate another. “That one tasted like England.”
CC got himself a glass of water. “Those there are American peanuts. You might find one that tastes like Cincinnati or something, I don’t know. But they shouldn’t taste like England.”
“We could paint the place for you,” said Bernice. “Help you get a bit more business. You pay us what’s fair.”
“Did you hear what I said? We’re on the downslide here. You don’t polish the silver on the Hindenburg. If you need money, you should look into other avenues. Get a real job someplace.”
“I just told you, I don’t want to be on the books.”
“Hell, I don’t know anyone who works on the books.” He took a long drink of water, stared at her with obvious interest, then put the glass down gently on the polished bar. “Anyway, I’d have to check with the boss.”
“I just saw you hire someone. Seems like you could do the same for me.”
“There a father?”
“CC. What kind of question is that?”
“You know what I mean. In the picture. I don’t see you wearing a ring.”
“You interested in applying for the position?” CC was probably closing in on fifty. Landis was forty-two. The bastard. Last night she’d had a dream in which they were making love and he wouldn’t look at her but instead kept his eyes closed.
Hey!
she’d shouted at him as he thrust away, imagining God-knows-what, or who.
Hey!
“Probably not.”
“It comes with benefits,” she said. “You should consider it. Anyway, what about me? Can I work here?”
“Let me think about it,” he said.
“You mean no. ‘Let me think about it,’ means ‘Go away, and once you’re gone, I’ll forget you came by and I won’t feel too bad about never calling you back.’ If you mean no, say no, but don’t wimp out with that ‘Let me think about it’ crap.”
“All right, then. Yes.”
“Really?” She was surprised he’d been this easy to turn, and she wondered if he weren’t perhaps smarter than she’d been giving him credit for.
“Yes,” he said. “I don’t know about the wall part. I’ll have to check. You can start tomorrow. Jimmy’s on, and he can show you the ropes. After that, I’ll see what the schedule looks like. We had one bartender quit last week, as it happens. Everyone knows what’s coming, so everyone’s looking for work. Also, they opened a Red, White, and Blues three blocks from here, and it’s a lot more tourist-friendly. Clean bathrooms and all.”
The peanuts were making her hungry, and she’d promised Emily pizza. “We gotta go,” she said. “What time tomorrow?”
“Seven?”
“All right. Seven.”
“What are you going to do with her?” He nodded toward Emily.
“Don’t you think that’s my business? Come on,” she said, holding out her hand. Together, they left the bar and headed out into the bright, muggy day.
At a parlor nearby, they each had a slice of plain pizza, Emily eating only half of hers. Then Bernice told her to use the bathroom, even though Emily claimed she didn’t need to, and as she waited by the door, Bernice looked past the customers chewing away to the street. A kid was riding a unicycle on the cobblestones. She’d held it together pretty well, she thought, but now she suddenly felt as if she were going to burst into tears, and it was only by biting her teeth that she was able not to.
FOURTEEN
L
andis had been on the front porch for about an hour when he heard the voice. He had fallen asleep with his head against the brick footing of one of the columns that held up the porch roof, and he was dreaming about fishing. Someplace in western Maryland he’d picked up a radio program on the subject, and now, in the thick afternoon, speckled trout leapt about the dark streams of his subconscious.
He opened his eyes to a female police officer standing a few feet below him at the bottom of the steps. “Excuse me?” she said. “Hello?”
“Yeah?” Still groggy, he saw the glint of sunlight off her badge and thought again of his dream fish. The river in his dream had been in Colorado, out near Divide. He was not himself much of a fisherman, but once a few years ago he’d gone with another guy who worked for Cecil Wormsley. He sat up, tried to get himself in order. Her police cruiser was double-parked a few yards away, lights flashing.
“Is this your house?”
“No.”
“Then can I ask you what you’re doing sitting on the porch?”
“I’m waiting for someone.”
“Who are you waiting for?”
He didn’t want to say Bernice’s name. He wasn’t sure how dangerous this conversation was, but it struck him as meaningful that police seemed to latch on to him these days like dogs on to a bad smell. “Is it illegal now to sit on someone’s porch and wait for them?” he said.

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