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"What's that?" I said.
"How should I know?" she said. "Squash, maybe. I don't have a clue."
"Hey, Fran," I said. "Take it easy."
She didn't say anything. She drew in her lower lip and let it go. She turned off the radio as we got close to the house.
A baby's swing-set stood in the front yard and some toys lay on the porch. I pulled up in front and stopped the car. It was then that we heard this awful squall. There was a baby in the house, right, but this cry was too loud for a baby.
"What's that sound?" Fran said.
Then something as big as a vulture flapped heavily down from one of the trees and landed just in front of the car. It shook itself. It turned its long neck toward the car, raised its head, and regarded us.
"G.o.dd.a.m.n it," I said. I sat there with my hands on the wheel and stared at the thing.
"Can you believe it?" Fran said. "I never saw a real one before."
We both knew it was a peac.o.c.k, sure, but we didn't say the word out loud. We just watched it. The bird turned its head up in the air and made this harsh cry again. It had fluffed itself out and looked about twice the size it'd been when it landed.
"G.o.dd.a.m.n," I said again. We stayed where we were in the front seat.
The bird moved forward a little. Then it turned its head to the side and braced itself. It kept its bright, wild eye right on us. Its tail was raised, and it was like a big fan folding in and out. There was every color in the rainbow s.h.i.+ning from that tail.
"My G.o.d," Fran said quietly. She moved her hand over to my knee.
"G.o.dd.a.m.n," I said. There was nothing else to say.
The bird made this strange wailing sound once more. "May-awe, may-awe!" it went. If it'd been something I was hearing late at night and for the first time, I'd have thought it was somebody dying, or else something wild and dangerous.
The front door opened and Budcame out on the porch. He was b.u.t.toning his s.h.i.+rt. His hair was wet. It looked like he'd just come from the shower.
"Shut yourself up, Joey!" he said to the peac.o.c.k. He clapped his hands at the bird, and the thing moved back a little. "That's enough now.
That's right, shut up! You shut up, you old devil!" Bud came down the steps. He tucked in his s.h.i.+rt as he came over to the car. He was wearing what he always wore to work-blue jeans and a denim s.h.i.+rt. I had on my slacks and a short-sleeved sport s.h.i.+rt. My good loafers. When I saw what Bud was wearing, I didn't like it that I was dressed up.
"Glad you could make it," Bud said as he came over beside the car. "Come on inside."
"Hey, Bud," I said.
Fran and I got out of the car. The peac.o.c.k stood off a little to one side, dodging its mean-looking head this way and that. We were careful to keep some distance between it and us.
"Any trouble finding the place?" Bud said to me. He hadn't looked at Fran. He was waiting to be introduced.
"Good directions," I said. "Hey, Bud, this is Fran. Fran, Bud. She's got the word on you, Bud."
He laughed and they shook hands. Fran was taller than Bud. Bud had to look up.
"He talks about you," Fran said. She took her hand back. "Bud this, Bud that. You're about the only person down there he talks about. I feel like I know you." She was keeping an eye on the peac.o.c.k. It had moved over near the porch.
"This here's my friend," Bud said. "He ought to talk about me." Bud said this and then he grinned and gave me a little punch on the arm.
Fran went on holding her loaf of bread. She didn't know what to do with it. She gave it to Bud. "We brought you something."
Bud took the loaf. He turned it over and looked at it as if it was the first loaf of bread he'd ever seen.
"This is real nice of you." He brought the loaf up to his face and sniffed it.
"Fran baked that bread," I told Bud.
Bud nodded. Then he said, "Let's go inside and meet the wife and mother."
He was talking about Olla, sure. Olla was the only mother around. Bud had told me his own mother was dead and that his dad had pulled out when Bud was a kid.
The peac.o.c.k scuttled ahead of us, then hopped onto the porch when Bud opened the door. It was trying to get inside the house.
"Oh," said Fran as the peac.o.c.k pressed itself against her leg.
"Joey, G.o.dd.a.m.n it," Bud said. He thumped the bird on the top of its head. The peac.o.c.k backed up on the porch and shook itself. The quillsin its train rattled as it shook. Bud made as if to kick it, and the peac.o.c.k backed up some more. Then Bud held the door for us. "She lets the G.o.dd.a.m.n thing in the house. Before long, it'll be wanting to eat at the G.o.dd.a.m.n table and sleep in the G.o.dd.a.m.n bed."
Fran stopped just inside the door. She looked back at the cornfield. "You have a nice place," she said.
Bud was still holding the door. "Don't they, Jack?"
"You bet," I said. I was surprised to hear her say it.
"A place like this is not all it's cracked up to be," Bud said, still holding the door. He made a threatening move toward the peac.o.c.k. "Keeps you going. Never a dull moment." Then he said, "Step on inside, folks."
I said, "Hey, Bud, what's that growing there?"
"Them's tomatoes," Bud said.
"Some farmer I got," Fran said, and shook her head.
Bud laughed. We went inside. This plump little woman with her hair done up in a bun was waiting for us in the living room. She had her hands rolled up in her ap.r.o.n. The cheeks of her face were bright red. I thought at first she might be out of breath, or else mad at something. She gave me the once-over, and then her eyes went to Fran. Not unfriendly, just looking. She stared at Fran and continued to blush.
Bud said, "Olla, this is Fran. And this is my friend Jack. You know all about Jack. Folks, this is Olla."
He handed Olla the bread.
"What's this?" she said. "Oh, it's homemade bread. Well, thanks. Sit down anywhere. Make yourselves at home. Bud, why don't you ask them what they'd like to drink. I've got something on the stove." Olla said that and went back into the kitchen with the bread.
"Have a seat," Bud said. Fran and I plunked ourselves down on the sofa. I reached for my cigarettes.
Bud said, "Here's an ashtray." He picked up something heavy from the top of the TV. "Use this," he said, and he put the thing down on the coffee table in front of me. It was one of those gla.s.s ashtrays made to look like a swan. I lit up and dropped the match into the opening in the swan's back. I watched a little wisp of smoke drift out of the swan.
The color TV was going, so we looked at that for a minute. On the screen, stock cars were tearing around a track. The announcer talked in a grave voice. But it was like he was holding back some excitement, too. "We're still waiting to have official confirmation," the announcer said.
"You want to watch this?" Bud said. He was still standing.
I said I didn't care. And I didn't. Fran shrugged. What difference could it make to her? she seemed to say. The day was shot anyway.
"There's only about twenty laps left," Bud said. "It's close now. There was a big pile-up earlier. Knocked out half-a-dozen cars. Some drivers got hurt. They haven't said yet how bad."
"Leave it on," I said. "Let's watch it."
"Maybe one of those d.a.m.n cars will explode right in front of us," Fran said. "Or else maybe one'll run up into the grandstand and smash the guy selling the crummy hot dogs." She took a strand of hair between her fingers and kept her eyes fixed on the TV.
Bud looked at Fran to see if she was kidding. "That other business, that pile-up, was something. One thing led to another. Cars, parts of cars, people all over the place. Well, what can I get you? We have ale, and there's a bottle of Old Crow."
"What are you drinking?" I said to Bud.
"Ale," Bud said. "It's good and cold."
"I'll have ale," I said.
"I'll have some of that Old Crow and a little water," Fran said. "In a tall gla.s.s, please. With some ice.
Thank you, Bud."
"Can do," Bud said. He threw another look at the TV and moved off to the kitchen.
Fran nudged me and nodded in the direction of the TV. "Look up on top," she whispered. "Do you see what I see?" I looked at where she was looking. There was a slender red vase into which somebody had stuck a few garden daisies. Next to the vase, on the doily, sat an old plaster-of-Paris cast of the most crooked, jaggedy teeth in the world.
There were no lips to the awful-looking thing, and no jaw either, just these old plaster teeth packed into something that resembled thick yellow gums.
Just then Olla came back with a can of mixed nuts and a bottle of root beer. She had her ap.r.o.n off now.
She put the can of nuts onto the coffee table next to the swan. She said, "Help yourselves. Bud's getting your drinks." Olla's face came on red again as she said this. She sat down in an old cane rocking chair and set it in motion. She drank from her root beer and looked at the TV. Bud came back carrying a little wooden tray with Fran's gla.s.s of whiskey and water and my bottle of ale. He had a bottle of ale on the tray for himself.
"You want a gla.s.s?" he asked me.
I shook my head. He tapped me on the knee and turned to Fran.
She took her gla.s.s from Bud and said, "Thanks." Her eyes went to the teeth again. Bud saw where she was looking. The cars screamed around the track. I took the ale and gave my attention to the screen. The teeth were none of my business. "Them's what Olla's teeth looked like before she had her braces put on,"
Bud said to Fran. "I've got used to them. But I guess they look funny up there. For the life of me, I don't know why she keeps them around." He looked over at Olla. Then he looked at me and winked. He sat down in his La-Z-Boy and crossed one leg over the other. He drank from his ale and gazed at Olla.
Olla turned red once more. She was holding her bottle of root beer. She took a drink of it. Then she said, "They're to remind me how much I owe Bud."
"What was that?" Fran said. She was picking through the can of nuts, helping herself to the cashews.
Fran stopped what she was doing and looked at Olla. "Sorry, but I missed that." Fran stared at the woman and waited for whatever thing it was she'd say next.
Olla's face turned red again. "I've got lots of things to be thankful for," she said. "That's one of the things I'm thankful for. I keep them around to remind me how much I owe Bud." She drank from her root beer.
Then she lowered the bottle and said, "You've got pretty teeth, Fran. I noticed right away. But these teeth of mine, they came in crooked when I was a kid." With her fingernail, she tapped a couple of her front teeth. She said, "My folks couldn't afford to fix teeth. These teeth of mine came in just any which way.
My first husband didn't care what I looked like. No, he didn't! He didn't care about anything except where his next drink was coming from. He had one friend only in this world, and that was his bottle."
She shook her head. "Then Bud come along and got me out of that mess. After we were together, the first thing Bud said was, 'We're going to have them teeth fixed.' That mold was made right after Bud and I met, on the occasion of my second visit to the orthodontist. Right before the braces went on."
Olla's face stayed red. She looked at the picture on the screen. She drank from her root beer and didn't seem to have any more to say.
"That orthodontist must have been a whiz," Fran said. She looked back at the horror-show teeth on top of the TV.
"He was great," Olla said. She turned in her chair and said, "See?" She opened her mouth and showed us her teeth once more, not a bit shy now.
Bud had gone to the TV and picked up the teeth. He walked over to Olla and held them up against Olla's cheek. "Before and after," Bud said.
Olla reached up and took the mold from Bud. "You know something? That orthodontist wanted to keep this." She was holding it in her lap while she talked. "I said nothing doing. I pointed out to him they were my teeth. So he took pictures of the mold instead. He told me he was going to put the pictures in a magazine."
Bud said, "Imagine what kind of magazine that'd be. Not much call for that kind of publication, I don't think," he said, and we all laughed.
"After I got the braces off, I kept putting my hand up to my mouth when I laughed. Like this," she said.
"Sometimes I still do it. Habit. One day Bud said, 'You can stop doing that anytime, Olla. You don't have to hide teeth as pretty as that. You have nice teeth now.'" Olla looked over at Bud. Bud winked at her. She grinned and lowered her eyes.
Fran drank from her gla.s.s. I took some of my ale. I didn't know what to say to this. Neither did Fran. But I knew Fran would have plenty to say about it later.
I said, "Olla, I called here once. You answered the phone. But I hung up. I don't know why I hung up." I said that and then sipped my ale. I didn't know why I'd brought it up now.
"I don't remember," Olla said. "When was that?"
"A while back."
"I don't remember," she said and shook her head. She fingered the plaster teeth in her lap. She looked at the race and went back to rocking.
Fran turned her eyes to me. She drew her lip under. But she didn't say anything.
Bud said, "Well, what else is new?"
"Have some more nuts," Olla said. "Supper'll be ready in a little while."
There was a cry from a room in the back of the house.
"Not him," Olla said to Bud, and made a face.
"Old Junior boy," Bud said. He leaned back in his chair, and we watched the rest of the race, three or four laps, no sound.
Once or twice we heard the baby again, little fretful cries coming from the room in the back of the house.
"I don't know," Olla said. She got up from her chair. "Everything's about ready for us to sit down. I just have to take up the gravy. But I'd better look in on him first. Why don't you folks go out and sit down at the table? I'll just be a minute."
"I'd like to see the baby," Fran said.
Olla was still holding the teeth. She went over and put them back on top of the TV. "It might upset him just now," she said. "He's not used to strangers. Wait and see if I can get him back to sleep. Then you can peek in. While he's asleep." She said this and then she went down the hall to a room, where she opened a door. She eased in and shut the door behind her. The baby stopped crying.
Bud had killed the picture and we went in to sit at the table. Bud and I talked about things at work. Fran listened. Now and then she even asked a question. But I could tell she was bored, and maybe feeling put out with Olla for not letting her see the baby. She looked around Olla's kitchen. She wrapped a strand of hair around her fingers and checked out Olla's things.