The scuffling quieted as the sound system began
playing a cut of Bela Fleck's new jazz-bluegrass fusion
CD, "Throwdown at the Hoedown." La Sardina's
owners had eclectic tastes in music, and so as a result
did the guys who tended to occupy their barstools.
Or most of them did. "Throwdown" cut off in the
middle of a banjo lick so breakneck, it had to be heard
to be believed, and the music switched to something
about how lonesome somebody was going to be tonight.
"He's in there," Ellie said quietly. "One thing he
hates is decent music. You wait, before the night's over,
Teddy'll have to toss him out of the place, and then
won't there be hell to pay?"
"Is there anything," I asked, "that Reuben doesn't
hate?"
"Money and misery," George replied, forking up
the last of his baked potato.
With his dark hair, milky-pale skin, and a bluish
black five-o'clock shadow darkening his small, neat
jawline, George looks as if he stepped out of the hills of
Appalachia about five minutes ago. His black gimme
cap, with GUPTILL'S EXCAVATING embroidered in orange
script on the front, sat on the table beside his plate.
"The one he tries getting from you and the other
he tries giving you, when he can. Which," George
added, "is pretty often."
"Well, what's the matter with him?" Sam asked.
"Is he sick? I mean, you know, disturbed?"
Sam's own disposition is so sunny that he has managed
to stay on good terms with both his father and
me, which as a feat is a little like being Switzerland
during WWII, only for longer and with more bombs. In
fact, it was mostly due to Sam's ongoing diplomatic
efforts that his father was with us that evening.
But as I watched Victor fidget, I thought he had
some other motive for coming, too, like maybe he
hadn't wanted to be alone for some reason.
Not that I cared much. Victor and I weren't having
a truce, exactly. More like a ceasefire.
George looked at Sam. "Reuben Tate's not sick.
He's broken. Like a dog you can't cure of being vicious.
Stay away from him, Sam. He's got more ways
to clean a guy's clock than you'll ever learn. And," he
emphasized seriously, "you don't want to."
Sam blinked. "Wow. Okay." For George to utter
so many words in a row was unusual. In the tone he'd
taken, it was stunning.
"Someone," Victor piped up from behind his fresh
martini--the drinks waitress had taken pity on him--
"ought to get rid of Reuben Tate once and for all."
As always, he resembled an ad out of Gentleman's
Quarterly: blue striped silk tie, charcoal slacks, tasteful
gold cufflinks. Even the hairs on the backs of his wrists
looked groomed. Only the look on his face conveyed a
sense of rumpled disnevelment, in part I supposed on
account of those martinis. But I remember thinking
again that something else was going on with him.
Wade put down his glass of O'Doul's. "Think so,
do you?" he commented mildly to Victor. "Someone
should get rid of him? Just take him out?"
"Yeah." Victor glowered. "As a matter of fact, I
do."
When Victor first moved here, I was concerned
that he would become a serious fly in my ointment, in
the romance department especially. Having your crazy
ex-husband living down the street from you might just
tend, as a for-instance, to discourage your boyfriend
from parking his pickup truck overnight right out in
your driveway where everybody can see it.
Lately, though, Victor hadn't bothered me quite so
much. It wasn't that he had gotten saner; maybe the
opposite. His personal idiosyncrasies--his obsession
over physical cleanliness, for example--seemed to have
gotten stronger. But here in Eastport everyone's a skinful
of quirks, so in a way Victor was just like the rest of
us. Also, Wade parked his pickup where he pleased, as
he always had.
None of this, however, made Victor a congenial
dining companion. Now his immaculate, close-clipped
fingernails tapped the table again, impatiently, as if he
couldn't just get up and leave on his own whenever he
wanted to.
"So, are you people finished or what?" he asked.
"Stop it," I hissed at him, and for a wonder he
subsided, though his gaze still strayed anxiously to the
bar area and then to the door, as if calculating some
daring exit strategy.
But I still didn't put two and two together.
Instead I turned back to Wade; the O'Doul's interested
me. Ordinarily, he enjoys breweries so micro that
they measure their ingredients out by the thimbleful.
But in reply to my silent inquiry he just lifted his
glass, and the suggestion his amused gray eyes conveyed
to me then was so personal--and so fully detailed,
right down to my keeping the dog not only off
the bed but actually out of the whole bedroom--that I
was struck speechless for a moment.
Wade is not the most verbal guy you will ever
meet. Once on a boat in a storm he lost, in short order,
his mast, his engine, and a sizable chunk of his left arm,
which later required twenty stitches, and I have it on
good authority that his only comment was "darn." But
when he wants to, he gets his message across.
And not only to me, I realized as Sam got up and
announced that he would be bunking at his dad's this
evening, so I should please not leave the back porch
light on for him or the neighbors would think he had
stayed out all night without permission.
"But me and Tom Daigle and some other guys are
watching the playoffs," he added, "so I might not get
in till past midnight."
The World Series, he meant; Sam and his young
buddies were slaves to the guy-stuff scene lately. But
that wasn't all of it. Victor peeked at me, figuring how
to play this: be-cool dad, or tough, stick-tothe-curfew
father?
The deciding factor being which might most irritate
me. Like I said, it was only a ceasefire.
But Sam picked up on that, too, cuffing his father
on the shoulder affectionately. "Chill out, Dad. It's Friday,
remember? See you later."
Wistfully I watched him pass by outside La
Sardina's window, its dark condensation blurring him
to a neon-lit smear. Once upon a time, I had been that
boy's whole world; now, he plotted so that Wade could
be alone with me.
And I wasn't at all sure I liked it.
Suddenly a shriek like a bird being torn wing from
wishbone came from the bar area. "My ear! That little
bastard bit my ear!"
Moments later a boy-sized man strutted from the
bar. In his forties, he wore tight black Levi's, a T-shirt
with rolled sleeves to show off his small, hard arm
muscles, and black leather boots with metal cleats on
the heels. He had blond eyelashes and hair so blond it
was almost white, combed in a ducktail, and a purple
birthmark shaped like a teardrop under his left eye.
It was Reuben Tate himself, and he was obviously
out of his skull: tequila, or some other high-proof engine
of destruction. His eyes were as bright as highway
flares. But he held it well in terms of motor skills; rumor
had it that Reuben could walk, talk, and perform
an astonishing variety of bad deeds while laboring under
a blood-alcohol level that would pickle a lab rat.
The cleats clicked purposefully across the floor and
stopped right beside my ex-husband, and all of a sudden
I knew why Victor had not wanted to leave without
us.
"Well, well," Reuben said smirkingly. "What have
we here?"
"Shut up, Reuben," Ellie said, startling me. "Leave
him alone or I'll knock your block off."
In a pink cashmere sweater, cream slacks, and a
sheen of pink-tinted lip gloss, with her red hair falling
in waves and her freckles like a sprinkling of gold dust,
Ellie looked just about as dangerous as your standard
lace-trimmed valentine.
Reuben ignored her. "My ear!" somebody moaned
from the bar. There was a smudge of blood on Reuben's
T-shirt.
"Why, it's the doctor," Reuben drawled, his bright
eyes surveying Victor's perfect grooming mockingly.
He kicked the leg of Victor's chair with the toe of his
black leather boot.
"Hey, doctor"
Here I suppose I should explain that Victor was, or
anyway had been until recently, an accomplished brain
surgeon. Back in the city, he was the guy you went to
after the other surgeons refused you, because if they
took you into surgery you would very likely die on the
table, ruining their operating-room statistics.
That, by the way, is why when a surgeon does
agree to operate, you will probably survive; surgeons
love their win/loss numbers more than they love their
own mothers. But I digress:
"Hey, Reuben. Cut it out." George ate the last bite
of his steak, washing it down with a final swallow of
Miller Lite.
Reuben kicked the leg of Victor's chair again,
harder. "Aww, what's the matter? Big-shot doctor, too
good to talk to me?"
"Reuben, do you remember that time in the playground?"
Ellie inquired sternly. "When I beat you
up?"
She sat up straight and gazed at at him without
fear. "Well, I'm about to do it again. I'm not scared to
get into it with you, Reuben. You know that. You
know that I am not."
"Ellie," I said quietly. I couldn't understand why
Wade and George weren't shushing her, too. She was
half out of her chair.
"Ellie," I repeated insistently. But she didn't look
at me.
"Reuben? Are you listening to me?"
There was a moment, then, when anything could
have happened. But at the end of it Reuben backed
down.
Sort of. "You'll talk to me," he told Victor, stepping
away. "Like before. Or you know," he added
menacingly, "what I'll do."
"Damn it, Reuben, I told you to get out of here,"
Ted Armstrong bellowed, charging from the bar ham
fisted and ready to thump someone. "I'll drop-kick