Read The Ice Age Online

Authors: Kirsten Reed

Tags: #FIC000000, #FIC019000, #JUV000000

The Ice Age (12 page)

‘You're young,' he said. ‘So young,' and all the old tenderness flooded back into his face. ‘You have a lot to express.'

The waitress came over and started fussing over my napkin sketch. I'd done a drawing of the resident dog, who was curled up by the register. I said she could have it. She was positively swooning. I don't think they get many interesting visitors through here. Or health inspectors.

She wandered off waving the picture at the dog, saying, ‘Oh, Pinchy, look! It's you!' Mostly I just draw to pass the time. I usually leave them behind; after all, they are napkins. So it wasn't a big deal, giving her that one.

Not going to bother describing her. Stock standard waitress. Gunther hasn't appeared to flirt with her. Maybe he's over that phase. Or maybe he's just too ill. God, he did order a doughnut. And ate it, no less.

I took another napkin out of the dispenser and drew a cartoon of Gunther's stomach barring a doughnut's admission. It was basically just a coil of intestines, with a speech bubble saying, ‘I'm sorry, you have the wrong stomach.'

‘Jeez, Gunther, I'm surprised your stomach doesn't have a Do Not Enter sign for food like that.'

He grinned.

‘You're such a fussy little eater.' I giggled.

I'd gone back to the typewriter by now. Gunther picked the tummy cartoon out of a little pile.

‘May I?' he asked.

‘Yeah, 'course,' I said. He folded it into his breast pocket.

No one wants me. They only want the
little
pieces.

When we hit the road again Gunther headed off in an entirely different direction. We had been going east. We were now going south. Southwest, if anything. Within two hours, we were pulling up to a shack, situated in the middle of an expanse of barren grasslands. It looked like a military testing site. Barely fit for human habitation. But then, it seemed to suit the inhabitant. And there is something strangely calming about environments that sparse. And something clearly maddening…

Her name's Delilah. She has dozens of wind chimes hanging from the roof of her seriously basic wooden cabin, encasing the front porch. I can't imagine them ever chiming here. The wind doesn't seem to ever blow. The sound of flies buzzing is the most prominent sound out here. The occasional plane flies overhead. And jets, too, to complete the military outpost feel. It is dreamily fucking boring here. After one glass of her Kentucky bourbon I felt like running around the porch yelling and smacking wind chimes, like a hyperactive three-year-old banging pots and pans. Environments that calm are anything but, in my book. Gunther says I have an active brain that requires stimulus.

Delilah was as drunk as a sailor's whore when we got here, and insisted we reach the same state, A.S.A.P. She fixed Gunther up with a bourbon on the rocks, and when she pushed one on me, I glanced at Gunther. He gave me a pointed but reassuring ‘where are your manners' nod. I guess this was one of those ‘when in Rome' situations. Alcohol is probably Gunther's least favorite intoxicant. He considers it poison, and generally doesn't encourage me to partake in it. But that doesn't stop him, on occasion.

Delilah was damn glad to see Gunther, but she was also so drunk the impact of the occasion seemed lost on her. She was acting like he just wandered over from next door or something. Like she saw him every day. But liked him a lot nonetheless. Thought he was a good sort.

‘So, little kitten,' she slumped toward me. She was seated in a big wicker extravaganza. She gripped the arm of my rocking chair. I had to brace my feet on the floor to keep from toppling backward. ‘Gunther usually travels alone.'

That hung in the air for a while. Then I said, ‘Yeah, well, he's giving me a ride.'

‘Tha's nice,' she slurred. About thirty seconds later she blurted joyfully, ‘I'll bet he is!'

Gunther and I both looked at her in reproachful silence.

She retreated with, ‘Naw, no. Gunther's a perfect gentleman.' She paused another thirty seconds or so and exclaimed, ‘Nowadays! Ah, Gunther!' She winked, lurched over and slapped him on the arm as she said this. There was another reproachful (but bemused) silence from Gunther and me.

She retracted this statement, too. ‘No, no, you were always the gentleman…Gunther, Gunther, Gunther.'

Now let me describe her. Lots of jangly jewelry, and wild fluffy hennaed hair. Borderline chubby. She has on overalls, with daisy buttons. She looks like someone inflated a toddler. But then her face, under all those browny-red curls, is weathered and creased. There's a black and white photo of her inside, from her flower child hey-day. She looks like a million bucks.

She tottered into the kitchen and started clanging pots around. She was making a pretty good stab at cooking us a big pasta dinner, given her state. Gunther and I gave her a hand. The resulting meal was a modestly good group effort. I was so damn hungry anyway, a hearty pasta went down a treat. Those two had red wine with theirs. Despite drinking hers with rapidity, Delilah appeared to sober up a tad during the course of the meal.

Turns out she's a writer. A journalist, no less. Has assignments here, there, and everywhere. Manages to make a decent living out of freelance stuff. I can't imagine her overheads being very high, living out here on the plateau…She'd been out to Chicago to interview homeless people. Then over to the neighboring county, to cover the trapping of a puma.

She had another crack at the subject of Gunther and me toward the tail end of dinner. We weren't giving anything away. She asked if I had a boyfriend anywhere, and I said no. She asked me a few more questions in this vein, which I answered gruffly and noncommittally. I guess my moody indifference toward the subject of all things romantic spurred her on even more, because she leaned over my plate and said, ‘Sweet stuff ?'

‘Yeah?' I ventured.

‘If I looked like you, I'd be giving it to everyone!' She threw her head back and cackled joyously. She righted her head, and took a healthy swig of wine.

It was earlier than it seemed. The sun was still up. I was tired, but we headed into town. Delilah was insistent we experience the local nightlife, which was in surprisingly close proximity to her large patch of dirt and sparse grasses.

There was a crazy energy to this puny town. A few dozen drunken paces from Delilah's, and we were in the thick of it. Main Street was bright and positively raucous. It was the old boredom + alcohol combo. These people knew how to whoop it up.

Gunther said, ‘Jack lives here, all right.'

We always laugh at those goddamn try-hard ads.

Delilah said, ‘You got that right, hot lips.'

That started a wave of giggles.

‘Gunther!' I said, ‘did you roll us a joint?'

‘Why yes I did, sweet buns,' he drawled.

I was laughing proper by now.

Delilah said, ‘I
knew
you guys had something.'

Gunther fired up the joint and handed it to me as we strolled along.

‘Hey, put that thing out!' Delilah belted. ‘You wanna get the sheriff 's department down on us?'

‘Cops?' Gunther sounded amused. ‘Here? So… public drinking, fornicating, and maiming, all OK, just don't try and smoke here. Is that what you're saying?'

‘Yes, that is what I'm saying.'

I put the joint out on my belt buckle. I handed it to Gunther, who put it back in his tin.

‘Thanks, honey tits.'

‘Shut
up
!' I snapped.

Delilah muttered, ‘Knew it all along.'

We walked three abreast through the wide entrance of a crowded bar, which was noisy of course. It seemed somehow quieter than it was out on the street. Maybe it was the music (Guns N' Roses), acting as white noise. Underage drinking seemed to be the norm here. I saw an androgynous kid who looked about twelve slumped on the step, cradling a beer. I did what any teenager worth a dime would do: fronted up to the bar and ordered myself a drink.

Delilah and Gunther were down the bar a little ways. I was savoring my independence, probably more than my beer, which tasted kind of bitter. An affable redneck appeared at the bar beside me and ordered himself the same swill I was drinking. They had it on tap there. He looked youngish, with dark red hair and big fuzzy flaming sideburns.

He asked me where I'm from, and a few other small-talky questions. He seemed genuinely curious. I don't think he was trying to score or anything. He nodded to those two down the bar, and asked if I was with them. I said, ‘yeah'. He said he thought he saw us come in together.

Then he gave a curt nod in Gunther's direction and said, ‘That guy looks at you with fuckin' love in his face, man.'

I said, ‘We're just friends.'

‘Just friends?' he snorted. ‘Not likely.'

‘Go ahead and ask him. He's not into anything with me.'

He snorted again. ‘That's the oldest trick in the book, missy. Treat 'em mean, keep 'em keen.'

I pondered this. I've always found that saying idiotic. He added, ‘You chicks dig a challenge.' His goofy smirk was widening between those huge sideburns. ‘I'm telling you: love in his face.'

I looked over at Gunther. He wasn't looking at me. He was talking to Delilah. It did seem like a long shot, but then I guess you believe what you want to believe. I shouldn't have, maybe, but I gave the Treat 'em Mean Theory my full consideration. It gained more plausibility as the night wore on. Each beer added more weight to the subject, like little devils lining up on my shoulder, whispering in my ear, telling me it all made sense now.

The jukebox cranked out a steady stream of loud, hard numbers. Not a single song you couldn't dance to. I danced with girls, I danced with guys. Mostly I just danced by myself, with my eyes half-closed, in a little corner of the dance floor. Someone put on ‘Venus'. I like that song. It's an oldie but a goodie. I glanced across at Gunther. For a second I thought I could see what Sideburns was talking about. It was one of those nights when I like being pretty, I like being alive.

We stumbled back out onto the street several hours later. There were only a few stragglers out now. You could hear the rural silence; feel its presence. We were laughing at I don't know what. Just laughing for the sake of laughing at this stage, I think. Gunther was in such good spirits I really felt I had nothing to lose.

Delilah snagged herself on the door beads on her way back into the shack. She'd left the front door open, but I reckon in this town, door beads make for pretty good security. A struggle ensued that sent several strands flying, scattering beads everywhere. And Gunther's and my attempts to free her nearly ensnared us both. She flailed around like an octopus caught in seaweed for a while, then finally broke free with one grand finale of a bead cascade.

Three drunks attempting to traverse a room with a floor covered in slippery beads turned into quite a spectacle. Gunther made it across OK, eventually. He has longer legs than us, so didn't have to risk as many teetering steps. Once he was on solid ground, he reached across to me. I fell on my ass in the first attempt to reach his hand. When I was at last dragged to safety we turned to Delilah, who was crawling on all fours. That proved effective; she made it across the last few feet relatively speedily, unassisted.

We regrouped by the couch. Delilah said, ‘Well, I'm gonna hit the hay.' Do people talk that way
just
because they live in the country? ‘Gunther, you can take the couch, and you'—nodding at me—‘can have the guest bed.' There was a cot set up in a room next to hers, the size of a closet. Then she added, chortling, ‘Unless you two lovebirds want to sleep together…'

She clumped heavily down the hall, slammed her door and, by the sound of things, collapsed onto the bed.

I turned to Gunther gleefully, grabbed his hand and spouted, ‘Why not?'

A mix of emotion danced briefly across his face. Then it was gone, and he said somberly, ‘Didn't I make myself clear?'

‘Yes you did.'

He gingerly handed me my hand back.

I fell into my cot and passed out pretty much straight away. I woke up to find I'd dribbled vomit on myself and onto the pillow. I crept out of my room and gave my shirt and the pillowcase a good scrubbing in the bathroom sink. I wadded them up with the intention of hanging them in my room, and scurried back down the hall. I didn't want Delilah to catch me; I wasn't up for the wisecracks she'd deliver. There wasn't much chance anyway; I could hear her snoring in her room. And I was in no mood to face Gunther, even though I could be sure he would be ingratiatingly helpful in regard to the task at hand.

Those two finally woke up, and Delilah and I sat on the front porch while she smoked a cigarette. Gunther was in the shower. I asked her if she truly thought Gunther and I were an item.

‘Heck no, kiddo!' she burst forth, good-naturedly. ‘I'm just cranking his shaft. Well, mostly.'

She took a pointed drag on her cigarette and added, ‘Old Gunther's about the only guy alive who could travel around with a pretty little thing like you and not try anything on.'

‘Hmmm.' I meant this to sound contemplative, not dejected, and I'm quite sure I failed.

‘Nowadays…he's like one of those Buddhist monks who tries not to step on anything…bugs. Doesn't like to stir a thing. Good old Gunther.'

I thought about this. As it happened, an ant was making its way across the porch, inching along, toward my legs. Saving this ant from being crushed under someone's big foot does seem like an act of mercy. Steadfastly refusing to return someone's love for you; I just can't see the mercy in that. Surrendering to the force of our unquenchable feelings seems more graceful, humbly respectful to the will of the universe.

But I'm reasonably certain Gunther doesn't see it that way. I guess Gunther has done a lot of touching in his time, and now he doesn't want to touch anything else. Or anything else to touch him.

Other books

The Michael Eric Dyson Reader by Michael Eric Dyson
Abominations by P. S. Power
Guilty by Hindle, Joy
Reclaiming History by Vincent Bugliosi
Miss Jane by Brad Watson
Let Me Alone by Anna Kavan
Never the Bride by Rene Gutteridge
A Certain Age by Tama Janowitz


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024