!Woodsmen --- by Anna @ 2016 | edit 3/13/24 --- Chapter 3: Paradise city --- Before I turned twenty five, two men loved me and maybe two women. Mike I met at the Chester body shop in Lexington after he got back from Kuwait. He fixed Humvees and Bradley fighting vehicles while American bombs carpeted Saddam's retreating soldiers in the hot, dry distance. He smoked crack while oil wells burned. He replaced door panels, changed tires and oil, checked fluids, repacked wheel bearings, replaced cranks on windows, put in a few windshields, then he was back in Fayetteville where he briefly sat in the brig for posession. It was the second time he was busted for it. When his time was up, the discharge was honorable and he drove the little Nissan truck west over the mountains. He spent a night in the county jail, found a guy on Man O'War who fronted him two rocks on credit, and got a job working for Floyd at the body shop. Mike put the right front fender on my Tercel after the wreck. He was high when I met him, so he was charming as hell. I gave him my sister's number. We saw Skid Row and Guns 'N Roses at the arena. When Floyd fired Mike, the unemployment office found him work at the Okonite wire rope plant. I worked at the Minit Mart on 25 by the depot and lived with my sister til I moved in with him. He nursed me through an abortion, then for no real reason I ran from him to Memphis. I stole his Nissan pickup and our puppy. I was 24 years old and I'd never really done anything. Mike had been to a war, but for me war was at most just something to talk about, like weather. Mike loved me, but I'd never even loved anybody like I wanted to. From mountains I drove through hills, from hills through tobacco. Then I drove througn cotton. I'd never seen so much cotton! Pickle slept in the footwell, looked out the window, laid her head on my lap. Then I drove through houses with yards. Then I was in the city. Where did I think I was going? I looked for a cheap motel, with weekly rates. My first day working at the Huddle House, I found I was in a place where race was not a theoretical thing. I knew nothing about race relations. I don't know if I'd ever talked to a black person before. Teresa Hutchins, the other white server, decided to educate me. On break, eating a waffle and smoking, she said, The trouble with these people is you can't tell what they know. When they open their mouths up they're so fulla shit, but they're not dumb, you know. I didn't know what to say back. The more time I spent around black staff, black customers, the more I started to see white customers different. I saw the spider veins on their cheeks, liver spots on their arms, nose shapes, stuff I'd never paid attention to before. I didn't speak the thoughts slowly taking shape in my head over those first few weeks, but I started to feel protective, maybe even posessive of black people. I wanted to stick up for them when I heard white people be mean. I thought about what I'd say after the fact, on my way home or laying in the bed. The motel where I lived was full of alcoholics and day-laborers, as far as I could tell. Men smoked in their beds, smoked when they took a shit, left the TV on loud when they slept, grunted, groaned through the walls, farted, scratched, and watched me. I don't think other women lived there; they just came for short visits---ten minutes, an hour. One of the best things about it was they overlooked my dog. I'm sure they saw me walk Pickle at night out across Lamar avenue and down Kimball Road. I took her to the Nonconnah creek drainage canal and sat while she ran joyfully off-leash til I called her back with a treat. I met Ronald at the Huddle House. Over his breakfast he discovered I was new in town, asked what I knew about Memphis soul music in the '60s. He took me to the Stax soul museum, loaned me tapes to listen to, and badgered me until I got a library card. He came in late mornings after he got off work for his coffee and big boy breakfast with country ham and the eggs over easy and me. He wanted me to tell him about what I'd read. You turning him into a regular, Shonda said one morning. He tip good? I started reading autobiographies to learn about people, especially women, who'd done something. I read on break, read in my motel room, and most of all read on the concrete bank of the Nonconnah while Pickle ran. I needed to keep up my tempo so I'd always have something new to tell Ronald. I set my pad on the table, slid into the booth, and treated him to a tidbit about Tammy Faye Bakker's childhood, or the Staple Sisters' days of singing gospel in church. When he saw how much I liked autobiographies, he encouraged me to read Malcolm X's. Ronald invited me dancing. I wanted to, but the relative emptiness of my daily life---a server job and a dog to walk---got in the way. I was honored. I was anxious. I didn't want him to see where I lived. Would it be a black club? I had to get some clothes. What vibe? I went to the Whitehaven Mall. The second time we went dancing at Budgie's, I drove the pickup and met him there. I was the only white person in the club but who cared? Ronald was a good dancer. I was smiling, glowing. It was cold outside. I was comfortable, in no hurry. Coming out of a toilet stall, upbeat DJ Squeeky mix muffled by the door, a woman slammed my back against the bathroom wall. She knocked the breath out of me, grabbed a handful of my hair, slapped and hit my face. My cheek was scratched. My nose dripped blood. She did it quiet. I was quiet too, the only sounds thumps and thuds, slap, grunt, cough. Bewildered, I tried to catch the dripping blood, keep it off my new clothes. Bent over, I dripped through my fingers on the floor. She spoke low and quiet and serious as what she just did. He's *free*. He's smart, he's good. He's *alive*. You don't just get to kill them, incarcerate them, take them into your bed. He's *ours*, not yours, bitch. Remember that. Then coughing, I cried, dripping blood from my nose, alone. Two women came in laughing, reversed back out. I caught my breath, found toilet paper for my nose, sat on the toilet, waited til I was ready to go. I stood, exited the stall again, splashed water on my face. He was waiting outside the bathroom door among the beat, lights, bodies. Kangol hat, pretty shoes, concern. He didn't want me to brush him aside and ditch him like I was doing. He said, Baby. Other words and gestures of concern and care swam out of his portion of this place I shouldn't be. Even outside where cold bit, he was in my vicinity as I crunched my heels through the snow that was not there, outside my door as I pulled out. He spoke in a way that should have comforted me. No snow fell, it was just cold and windy, but I felt like snow carpeted everything quicker than made sense. I didn't know how to drive on it. Slow, flashers on, I let the two wheel drive pull itself. No cop stopped me for driving so stupidly. Buttcheeks squeezed the whole way, I was terrified imagined snow'd throw me sliding, crumpled steel and crushed glass. I got home at almost three AM. I breathed through my mouth so I wouldn't blow out the clots, tromped in heels through the cold to the covered concrete steps to the second floor. I put on shoes and a jacket, walked Pickle to the Nonconnah, sat shivering while Pickle ran a linear track back and forth, rambunctious, til she finally peed. I sat in my motel room with ice on my face and half a leftover pizza on the bedside table. *The Autobiography of Malcolm X* lay on my bedsheets. Pickle lay curled in my armpit. Snow lay outside deep enough to stop the city. On the TV, between storm stories, a grim reporter said Dr. David Gunn was shot in the back outside his abortion clinic in Pensacola, Florida. The shooter told the police, We need an ambulance. A pastor from Operation Rescue said a murderer was stopped that day; with one killing the shooter'd stopped hundreds. The shooter walked in cuffs and looked at the camera so peaceful, so resolute. Then he sat in the cruiser in the clip that played again and again. The Dow Jones was always up. Browns beat the Chargers. Police were after a drug dealer who was busted with two retarded women on disability chained in his basement. Snow might come west to Memphis, roads might be impassable all weekend. Stores might close, power go out, ambulances get snowed in. Further east, where heavy snow fell, people were dying from using charcoal grills indoors, a firefighter chief said. Grilling indoors can kill you with fire or carbon monoxide. In deep enough snow there's no one to save you. In the event of a severe weather emergency the city would open shelters. Keep watching for locations. In my dreams, Mike held me. I was his deer rifle. I ate a big buck, just took a bite out of its flank. The sky was full of angels. The angels weren't white. They had no race. They held beautiful babies. I ate one of them too. Mike put me in the cab of the Nissan pickup, put the buck and the angel baby in the bed. When I woke I walked Pickle, stomping through the snow, eye bruised and face scratched. I washed four pair of panties in the sink and hung them in the shower, called mom from the phone in my room. I didn't tell mom I'd been beat up. Pickle's getting big, I said. They still let you keep him there? They haven't said anything about her yet. I really don't think they care, mom. They have worse things than people with dogs to deal with. You find a vet yet? I had. Jake had proposed to Carley on a fishing boat on the reservoir and she'd said yes. We all went to school at Model together. Mom didn't know he'd once lit a cat on fire. I wouldn't be the one to tell. Mom asked if I was still seeing Ronald. She called him That Man. You still seeing that man, she asked. I hadn't told her his race. Didn't know if she'd care but I wasn't ready to find out. We went out Thursday night, I said. He's crazy about me. No man's ever made me feel so right. You hardly know him, Katharine. Don't invent a man. Just get to know him. He have cats? No, I said. Good, she said. He has me reading. I'm on my third book this month. He asks me about my reading and doesn't tell me what to think. He's a good dancer, mom. He's kind. What does he do, she asked. Garbageman, I said. That's a good job, she said. When was the last time you talked to Carley? It had been a while. Well she told me Mike got beat up pretty bad by that man he worked for at the body shop, hasn't been back to work since it happened. Your dad's home. I hung up and thought about what she'd said. I don't know why Mike got fired from the body shop. We got drunk the day they indicted the police who beat up Rodney King and we argued about it. When I saw him again he was sober, working at Okonite driving a forklift. He told me about his new job while he paid me for his rental of Total Recall. He leaned on the counter at the Minit Mart and asked if I'd come watch it with him. It played on his TV but I don't remember much. The oil wells were burning in Kuwait when I fell asleep in his arms. When I woke up he still held me, asleep. When his pickup transmission went out I drove him to work for a week and a half and stayed over every night. I liked the hardness of his body and the pleasure it got from mine. I liked watching him eat. I liked driving fast on country roads with him listening to Motley Crue and Aerosmith and drinking beer by a bonfire and how he made me laugh. My sister asked me where his family was. She didn't like how he came out of nowhere but I did. She didn't know that he paid for the abortion and made me Campbells soup when we got back to his house. She didn't know how he made up stupid stories to take my mind off my desolation long enough for me to get up, get dressed, and go to work. She just saw me at work when the desolation came back. She leaned on the counter, chewing gum. Katharine, he's paranoid, she said. He's nuts. I don't know, I said. You don't know what, Katharine? You told me yourself what he said when Magic Johnson told everybody he has AIDS. It's not a big deal, I said. You look like you're the one who's dying, my sister said. Listen to me, Katharine. You don't know anything about him. He's secretive. He thinks the government's out to get us. He won't tell you anything about his family--- The Chesters are basically his family, I said. Right, she said. Basically his family. Floyd Chester's basically his dad. Floyd Chester who mysteriously fired him. Floyd Chester the outlaw bootlegger. They go hunting when it isn't hunting season, Katharine. I don't want to see you die. I wasn't dying. I was just sad. Sadness washed over me for weeks. I got most of my stuff from my sister's house. Did she think I had AIDS? Mike swore he never injected. I couldn't have it. Then I quit being sad, and my spunk or something got me quarrelsome. I fled Mike's place mid-argument. Carley met me at her door, looked at me. Clean out the tub after you shower, she said. There's still sheets on the couch. I'm going to bed. When the sun through the window in her door woke me up, I started coffee, found my toothbrush in the drawer under her sink, and looked at myself. I saw daddy's eyes, mama's smile, well-water teeth, pores I wish were smaller, hair I wished would stay put. I saw I was done grieving. I knitted together after the abortion into both a mother and not a mother, one possibility of another pair of my daddy's eyes in the world incinerated, but grieved. I saw I was going to steal Mike's pickup. I saw I'd go to Memphis, where I'd never been and knew no one. Halfway here Pickle threw up on the seat. I turned the TV on. The same news. Clinic shooting in Pensacola. Talking heads, bystander interviews. A reporter went to the house of the sister of the abortion doctor who was shot. Her husband met him at the door with a shotgun. The snow, white and heavy, might hit Memphis. Pickle whined. I slipped on wet shoes and walked her out into the cold again. Ronald, unflappable the intense month I'd known him, was mad I ditched him at Budgie's, mad I ignored my phone, mad I wasn't forthcoming about where I lived, mad because he was scared. Mad because he'd only known me a month. I was supposed to be a sweet breeze of someplace else, not another person his love and concern couldn't protect. Ronald remained decent, even mad. He couldn't reach me til my next Huddle House shift, but he could find things out. He found out the woman who beat me up in the bathroom was the sister of Theresa, the bartender. I think he felt hurt I didn't let him help, guilty he put me in danger, scared I disappered and there was nothing he could do. When he came in for his next big boy breakfast, he came late, and he didn't come alone. The bartender's sister walked in behind him, scowling. I didn't come around the counter and slide into the booth. From behind the counter I said, Ronald, ma'am, can I take y'alls orders? Ronald spoke. You know what I want. Get her a coffee to go. Now listen. He turned his eyes on the woman who didn't want to be there. What? she said. You know what. She looked at me. Katherine, I'm Angelique. My brother's in prison and he shouldn't be. I didn't know my dad. My husband was shot and killed last month when he walked out of work because the car looked like the one the people were looking for. Both my sons having trouble in school. My mother's father was one of the last men lynched in Tennessee. She looked back at Ronald. You aren't done, he said. She looked back at me, flashing anger, a challenge in her voice. Tell me about the men you know. The men in your family. Caught off guard, I started crying. Shonda on the register and Keith on the grill saw me cry. I wouldn't let this woman beat me twice, so I spoke. Yeah, yeah, okay ma'am. Okay. I don't have kids, I had an abortion. Would have been a son. My ex- boyfriend was beaten within an inch of his life a little over a month ago by a liquor bootlegger. My dad was hurt in Vietnam. He sits in his armchair on narcotic pills. That's what he's done my whole life. When he's bad he won't get up to go to the bathroom and we put diapers on him. The VA should be more help but we're grateful. My first boyfriend killed himself I guess. Mamaw's dad was a---I searched for words. A monster. Then there's Ronald. I just pray to God he's different. I've known him a month--- He's a good man, Angelique said, but she looked shocked, like I felt. I had to work. I checked my mascara in the bathroom, took an order at the next booth, saw her get up, go out to sit in Ronald's car. I passed omelets, country ham, pancakes, bacon, sausage patties, toast, refilled coffee and sugar shakers. I returned to Ronald's booth. Your ham good? I asked. Katherine, you broke my heart this weekend, he said. I'm sorry, I said. I appreciate that. ==================================================== STILL TYPING... --ANNA