Reluctantly, Borchard said, “Agreed.”
“Well, I believe that about takes care of things, then.” Jimmy pointed off to the side of the lodge. “Can I get to the path through there? Wouldn't wanna disrupt your meeting.”
“You're welcome to attend.”
“Naw . . . Y'know how it is. I gotta go polish my toothbrush.”
“I understand,” Borchard said smoothly, coldly. “You can only put some things off for so long.”
Jimmy threaded his way through bushes to the front of the lodge, stopped to brush off flecks of leaf that had caught on his shirt and trousers. Despite his ridicule of Borchard, he'd had a whistling-past-the-graveyard type of feeling when he turned his back on the man, and he wasn't easy with being alone in the middle of the White Paradise with disciples inside ready to heed their master's call. As he started down the path, passing beyond the light shining from the windows, into the shadow of the old-growth fir, he heard the major shout, “What is the name?”
“Bob Champion!” answered a ragged chorus.
“Who is the enemy?” shouted the major.
A long gust of wind shook loose a groaning vowel from the assembly of boughs, outvoicing the response; a night bird sounded a loopy, flutelike cry, and visible through a cut in the treeline, the sickle moon sailed free of the mist and stood on its point directly between two mountains in the west.
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To honor the sabbath, the gun show did not open its doors until noon on Sunday. Rita and Jimmy stayed in bed late, watching HBO, breakfasting on cold pizza and diet Sprites from the vending machine next to the office. The carpet strewn with crumpled cans, clothing, take-out cartons, receipt books, magazines, candy wrappers, sections of newspaper that had been stepped on by shower-wet feet and gotten stuck and had to be kicked off. Rita had removed a dresser drawer, placed it by the bed, and was using it to hold a bag of ice. Potato chips floated in the melt at the bottom of the drawer.
They were watching a movie called
The Education of Little Tree
. The TV Guide billed it as “an evocative tale of an eight-year-old Cherokee orphan who has come to live with his Native American grandmother and white grandfather.” Rita thought it was for shit. The Cherokee orphan was played by an Indian boy who resembled a cute white kid, and the grandmother was the stereotypical wise old woman in touch with the nature of corn and the Buffalo Spiritâa repository for the secret wisdom of an ancient race. When she used traditional herbs to draw rattlesnake poison from her husband's hand, which was swollen up like a Mickey Mouse hand, and started talking to the cute kid about his warrior heritage, Rita lost patience.
“See if something else is on,” she said to Jimmy, who had gained possession of the remote.
“Ain't nothing else but preachers and infomercials,” he said grumpily.
“Try the preachers. They're funny sometimes.”
“How come you never complain when it's some dumbass movie about white people?”
“This
is
about white people, Jimmy.”
“It's got Graham Green in it. You like Graham Green.”
“Gimme the damn remote!” She reached beneath the covers, hand-fought him for control. Her fingers brushed his dick, felt it twitch. She fisted it, squeezed. “Give it to me.”
He grinned. “Keep that up, I'll give you something.”
She loosened her grasp, stroked him gently. When he was ready, she came astride his hips and fitted him to her. With her knees high, she sank down, slid forward, rocked up, then sank down again . . . a luxuriant rhythm that triggered a jab of pleasure with each repetition. Her thoughts circled with the languid regularity of her movements, passing from momentary observation to momentary oblivion and back. The way he looked. Sleepy but rapt. Like a boy doing his best to stay awake to watch the end of his favorite show. His fingers gouged her ass, pulling her down harder, sending a hot charge into her belly. She grabbed the headboard, kept it from banging the wall, and let him guide her. Behind her shut-tight lids, a thin strip of light traced a curved horizon, the sun in eclipse. Something shifted inside her, a switch clicked, a relay engaged, something . . . and a passway opened, allowing the charge in her belly to spread throughout and build into a wave. Distantly, she heard the chuffing of Jimmy's breath and herself saying love words. She tossed back her head and caught a glimpse of gray Sunday through the cracked drapes. The wave was still inside her, but it had grown taller than her, wider, as if the real Rita was a tiny creature living deep in her flesh, in the shadow of the wave, and when it broke she seemed to be lifted and tumbled and almost killed. All but a flicker of her flame extinguished. Waking to the world again, she felt ungainly, out of her medium, a beached mermaid straddling a man who pumped furiously into her, his head raised, face flushed, going at it like a cocaine monkey. She rolled her hips to bring him off. His fingers hooked her waist, grinding her against him until he went rigid and said, “Oh, shit . . . Jesus!” She unstuck strands of hair from her sweaty face, worked her hips some more as he softened, then collapsed half-atop him. He made a contented noise in his throat, ran a hand along her flank.
“Can I have the remote now?” she asked.
“I love you,” he said groggily.
The words made her heart fail, so it had to jump back into rhythm. Whenever that happened, she always wondered if it was love or some associated terror that caused it.
“I love you,” she said, kissed him, and searched around under the covers for the remote, found it down beside his knee.
He closed his eyes, breathed deeply. “Don't put on no preacher, okay?”
She sat up in bed, channel-surfed until she hit a Bugs Bunny cartoon. Bugs was on the battlement of a frontier fort, firing a cannon at Yosemite Sam. She watched a few minutes, then took to surfing again. Channel 13 was showing an X-Files episode, but it was almost over. Jimmy murmured something, then he said, “Aaron . . .”
She cut the sound on the TV so she could hear. “What's that?”
“I have to write Susan,” he said
“Jimmy, you awake?”
He didn't answer at first. Finally he said, “Naw . . . not really.”
“Who's Aaron?”
He blinked at her. “The hero.”
“In your story? You didn't tell me about him.”
“Later,” he said. “Okay?”
She gave his shoulder a shake. “C'mon, Jimmy! Don't hold out on me!”
He licked his lips, blinked, and wiped his mouth with the back of a hand. Sleepily, speaking in phrases at first, but then with greater energy, curving the sentences into fancy shapes, he told her a little about Aaron, then returned to an earlier portion of the narrative that concerned Susan's intensifiying involvement with Luis and her increasing frustration with the colonel. Rita thought how strange it was that Jimmy's daddy had been able to pound dents into his brain in just such a way so as to cause him to go groping around in life most of the timeâbusiness-sharp, but otherwise dim as a firefly, except when it came to making his stories. They arose from a place inside him she couldn't see or touch, and it was this mystery, she believed, its resonance with her and not the stories themselves, that inspired the parts she sometimes played and let her become her own incarnation, a story unto herself. She pictured a waterfall in his head, splashing down onto rocks amid a pine forest, amazing creatures materializing from the roiled-up water and vanishing, silver wolves and cave men and private eyes and flashily dressed women. . . . and she felt the story of Colonel Rutherford's Colt charging a battery inside her, sending forth a voltage that was disintegrating the drab curtain of ordinary concerns that muffled her spirit, liberating it to act. She had a premonition that this story might take them both right to the edge.
Jimmy's voice trailed off and he turned his head away. His breathing grew slow and regular. Rita watched a commercial for an Internet service that featured groups of shiny young folk, one of every race except her own, all made ecstatic by their access to endless quantities of porn and merchandise. Then she settled on her side next to Jimmy. His eyelids were fluttery with dreams. She touched her lips to his cheek, and he whispered too low to hear. Probably dreaming about the story. Often when he fucked her she wasn't sure whether he'd gotten lost in a story and was doing someone named Charlotte or Marie . . . or Susan. She wondered what it was like, having stories in your head. It was hard enough pretending to be yourself, sifting through all the garbage floating in your mind and finding the thoughts that mattered, that streamed up pure from the place you streamed up from. She leaned over him, kissed his mouth. Inhaled his sweet warm smell. An easy stirring in her gut caused her to think about waking him. She recalled a time in Oregon City when she climbed on board the Jimmy train an hour before opening and hadn't jumped off until half past six. She just couldn't get enough of the crazy bastard. And when he was working on a story, he couldn't get enough of her. Like his dick was connected to the part of his brain did the telling. It would be fun, she thought. If the Colt was going to sell, they didn't need a good day. But she let the notion slide. She dug the remote from a fold in the blanket, aimed it at the TV, and changed channels.
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Sunday afternoon was slow for everyone. The big spenders generally waited until the last day to buy, and most of the sensible shoppers had come and gone, leaving gawkers and curiosity seekers and shoplifters to turtle along the aisles, causing the dealers to view with suspicion every roomy jacket and purse. No one ever tried to steal from the Guy Guns tables, because the weapons were under lock and key; but Rita liked spying out shoplifters at the adjacent tables, so Jimmy let her handle the business and sat off to the side of things. Most times he enjoyed doing the shows, but today it unnerved him. Lights were too harsh, chatter troubled his ears. And the smell . . . It was as if cleaning agents and neat's-foot oil and people and freshly dried T-shirts and corn dogs and everything else had canceled each other out, and what remained was a faint oily residue of deadness left by the passage of thousands of rounds through the barrel of an enormous gun.
He tried to climb back into his story, but couldn't find an opening. A sun-drenched linoleum floor sprang to mind. Dirty; with pieces of lettuce mired in a gravy film; the whole thing iridescent with grease. Under the scum lay a pattern of weird abstract shapes. Once when he was fifteen he'd dropped some acid and spent all day tracing the shapes on flimsy, opaque paper. Cowboys, Indians, devils hiding in clouds, winged monstersâdozens of images surfacing from the family filth as if he had unearthed their true genealogy, their spiritual history. The sheets of paper adhered to the floor, ripping when he tried to peel them off. A total mess. He didn't feel like cleaning it, so he went out to the barn and sat watching swallows fall like tiny desperate angels born from the holy radiance pouring through a loft window, their flurried wingbeats chasing the stillness. Whitish gold bars of light crumbled between long gaps in the boards. You could see anything within them. You could almost go inside them, visit the incandescent country they bordered. Moldy hay and ripe horseshit thick in his nostrils. The little stallion whuffling in his stall below. Hours like that. The light gapping the boards burned orange. The swallows nested. Then he heard his father scream his name. Nobody screamed like his old man. “Jimmaaaaay!” Spoken that way, it had the weight of a deadly Arabic curse, a word that meant “kill” or “die.” It hadn't scared him that day. It seemed part of nature. An eagle sighting its violated nest would sound so. Such strength and fury, its red-hot edge had sliced a smile onto his face . . .
Rita was talking to a customer, a shrunken old man sporting a VFW pin on his baggy sports jacket. She stood one-footed, her left knee on a folding chair. Her ass shifted when she gestured, jeans clinging to every curve, and that got him remembering the morning. Who'd think you could fit so much meanness and so much sweetness into the same woman? She'd snap your dick off with a stare, then go soft and take your breath away. Between those contrary states, her arrow usually swung into the mean, but that was just her survival posture. Didn't bother him any. The old man wobbled off and she caught Jimmy staring. She tried to hide a smile, lost the battle, and sat down. She glanced over her shoulder at him, still smiling, her hair flipping away from her faceâhe saw her younger, how she must have looked before bad love walked in and money luck ran out. She didn't let that pretty girl loose too often. Jimmy remembered the days when she hadn't ever let her loose. She'd glared at everyone with hateful intensity. Their first conversation, she was working this armpit club in Billings on a slow Wednesday night, sitting on a barstool in a tight one-piece black dress that showed off her legs, tits, and shoulders. She'd priced herself at two hundred dollars. He said he didn't have that much, but he would tell her a story. A real story, not some bullshit. A genuine just-for-her work of the imagination. Whatever kind she wanted. A unique creation with hearts and lives on the line.
“What do I have to do?” she asked.
“Stick around for the telling is all,” he replied. “Sometimes it takes a while.”
He kicked out his legs, crossed them at the ankles. Still thinking about Rita, he relaxed, checked out the passing parade. He idly followed the progress of a skinny black guy who must have gone six-ten easy, heavy on the jewelry, expensively dressed. Jimmy was wondering if the guy might be one of the Sonics, when the image of the sabal palm flew into his mind, and along with it, like a shadow on the sun, Colonel Rutherford's bland, meticulous personality. He had arrived home after midnight, without announcing his presence to Susan, and now at nearly five in the morningâdressed in trousers, undershirt, and bracesâwas sitting in a wooden chair that he had set beneath the stairway in the corridor leading to Mariana's quarters (he had sent the housekeeper off to pass the evening with her sister in Varadero Beach). Now and then he leaned forward and looked off along the corridor and out the open door toward the little palm tree, isolate against the dark-green backdrop of the grounds. He was nervous, his palms clammy, his respiration shallow and uneven. He anticipated no logistical difficulties, but he had never before killed a man, and the concept of such an act excited and alarmed him. The colonel's aversion to violence, even violence of the staged variety such as fencing and boxing contests, had become something of a joke amongst his fellow cadets at the Academy, and had ensured him a career spent behind a desk. Yet in this instance, violence was the sole remedy that would secure a proper resolution and the respect of his brother officers. Though he remained confident that he would carry through with his intention, and that he would suffer no reprisals, official or otherwise, for having shot an intruder, he was concerned about the possible psychological consequencesâhe had known soldiers who, albeit justified in their actions, had been afflicted by severe mental trauma. The idea that Carrasquel might haunt him in death was intolerable. The man had violated his marriage and thus forfeited humane consideration. He deserved not merely to die, but to be erased from memory, consigned to oblivion. These stern thoughts heartened the colonel and convinced him both of his moral right and of the shield that righteousness would contrive against self-recrimination. When he confronted Carrasquel, he would not see a man, but a vile error, and he would expunge it.