Part 23 (1/2)

”Yes, you are.”

Shane pulled himself farther around. Owsley and I were directly behind his seat, so he had to twist his chins to peer at us. ”Maurey, stop your yammering and think about it.”

The back side of my brain knew Owsley was here for the duration, but the front side rebelled. I wasn't that much against having him, I just wanted some illusion of control over these changes. When things come at you like rockets the tendency is to cower down and refuse to be moved-but Shane was right. Freedom was an evil son of a b.i.t.c.h, and anyone we could save from his clutches had to be saved. He'd already traded his girlfriend's s.e.x for drugs; how long till he traded his son's?

I hated it when Shane was right.

Owsley broke the quiet. ”I'll get out and walk from here, just don't send me back to Dad.”

”That's all right,” I said. ”One more mouth to feed won't make much difference.”

Shane did a throat-clearing guttural sound. ”There's another reason Freedom won't be anxious to drag our band back to Comanche.”

I could see a red-brick farmhouse off through the trees. ”Where is Lloyd, anyway? Does he know we picked up an extra lost soul?”

Any silence in Moby d.i.c.k was eerie, but this silence out-eeried the norm. Andrew slept, Hugo Jr. nursed, everyone else feigned distraction.

Shane broke first. He never could deal with silence. ”You are to blame, Maurey. Normally, I'm not the type to say 'I told you so,' but in this case I will make an exception.”

”Where's Lloyd? Is he okay?”

Marcella switched t.i.ts. ”Lloyd took some beer off to trade for gasoline and food. I hope he comes back soon, before someone sees us and calls the police.”

I felt nauseous, like the post-nausea nausea you feel at the first inkling of pregnancy.

”Pa.s.s my creel back here,” I said.

”Freedom took your money,” Owsley said.

”Just hand me the d.a.m.n creel.”

”I was hiding in back and heard him. I couldn't have stopped him; if I'd tried, he would have the money and me.”

I stared into Dad's creel. Not only was the cash gone, but the jerk took my Ortho-Novum wheel. I spoke rashly. ”I'm stuck in G.o.dforsaken h.e.l.l with six people I don't like and a hundred cases of cow p.i.s.s.”

Hurt leapt into Marcella's eyes. Shane snapped, ”You like Lloyd, and it's only ninety-eight cases now.”

Screaming would not have accomplished anything. Instead, I descended into a great calm, the calm that comes between knowing something bad happened and believing it. Everything that could go wrong had, which meant I was in safe harbor. To a.n.a.lyze the deal to death, I was almost relieved. Freedom had given me an excuse to drink.

I popped open the side cargo doors. ”Time for me to take a walk.”

Shane lectured. ”Did I say you would lose the money? Did I say you are much too incompetent to be trusted?”

”f.u.c.k off, Shane,” I said quietly.

”Why is it whenever a woman makes a dreadful error her first reaction is to tell a man to f.u.c.k off?”

Outside Moby d.i.c.k, I turned right, instinctively heading for Wyoming. But Hugo Sr. lurked in that direction, watching over us like an Oldsmobile-shaped vulture. The man was getting on my nerves. Left led nowhere, which seemed appropriate at the time. I picked up a fairly big stick because Jackson Hole doesn't have rattlesnakes and I have an irrational fear of the b.u.g.g.e.rs. People who live in a town without grizzly bears develop an irrational fear of grizzly bears. It's part of Sam Callahan's displaced-persons theory.

When Sam and Lydia moved out from North Carolina they had no background for treeless vistas or seven months of snow or even horses. As a result, Sam used to make a major deal out of alienation. He wrote a story about a boy named Tippy who flew to the Land of Oz, and when the Munchkins asked what he wanted to eat, he said, ”Grits and eggs.” They brought him kitten heads on rice.

If you asked me, Sam leaned too heavily on Stranger-in-a-Strange-Land-used it as an excuse for weird behavior around women.

The one thing stranger than waking up in a strange land is waking up in a strange land without any money. Made me feel vulnerable. The stick didn't feel like any stick I'd ever felt, the pavement was made of s.h.i.+ny stuff I'd never seen in pavement, the humidity was suffocating. Back home we keep our air and water separate.

The question that reared above all others: Would this have happened if Frostbite hadn't killed Dad? Would I have taken to naming bottles or driven with my baby on the roof? Or say I had done that stuff, and Dothan had banished me from child and home, would I have gone to Dad for help? Would he have helped? He got really mad for a while when I was thirteen and pregnant, called me a wh.o.r.e, which is understandable considering the situation, but then he walked away from me until the day Shannon was born. Wouldn't the high-quality father have said ”You're a wh.o.r.e, Maurey, but I love you anyway. Come home and I'll take care of you”?

I'm not comfortable questioning Dad's perfection. In fact, deep questions in general make me nervous. My former true love, Park, used to go on long walks where he contemplated the universe and took stock in himself.

”The unexamined life is not worth living,” he said. Sam Callahan agreed, although he claimed Park stole the line. Personally, I think the line's a crock. People who spend all their time wondering how they're doing are like these tourist photographers who exert so much effort taking pictures they can't see what they're looking at.

Lloyd walked toward me carrying a red five-gallon can and a brown paper bag. The weight of the can had him leaned over to one side. His hair was mussed up, making him look for all the world like a scarecrow with an Adam's apple.

”Won't make Carolina on five gallons for two cases,” I said.

”This should carry us into Arkansas. Coors is worth more there.”

”It's also illegal. I don't do well in jails.”

”There's worse places.” Lloyd didn't elaborate, so I used my fertile imagination. The only place I could think of worse than jail would be jail in Arkansas. Or the drunk tank, which is a subspecies of jail. I've heard some grisly stories about life in the drunk tank.

Lloyd said, ”Farmer was milking or I'd never've got the gasoline. He said his wife would make him sleep in the barn if she caught him trading necessaries for beer. She wears a white feather on her Sunday dress to signify that alcohol has never crossed her lips.”

”Sounds like an unpleasant woman.”

As we walked back to Moby d.i.c.k he gave me the bag and s.h.i.+fted the gas can to his free hand. ”I wouldn't have lost Sharon if I wore the white feather.”

”You'd never have met her if you hadn't been drunk,” I pointed out.

Lloyd didn't disagree. He hardly ever disagreed with much of anything. He was like the Tar Baby in the Uncle Remus stories who sat there taking each punch until his attacker was absorbed and beaten.

”Lloyd, have you ever been without money before?”

He nodded. ”A few times. It's no big thing.”

”Dothan worries about money constantly, and Lord knows ranchers live one step ahead of or behind the bank, but that's for mortgages and truck payments and stuff. I've never been in a place where I had no money at all.”

”We're not going to starve.”

I stayed alert for rattlesnakes. ”How do you know?”

Lloyd rubbed his leg as he walked. ”Only free people in the country are the filthy rich and the filthy poor. Everyone else is in debt.”