Part 13 (1/2)
”Mother's Milk at ten tonight.”
”Mother's Milk?”
He repeated, ”Mother's Milk,” and hung up.
chapter eighteen.
Mother's Milk was a cinder-block edifice deposited on a stretch of stunted timberland north of Apalachicola. A mercury light hanging from a tall creosote post cast an ugly bluish illumination across the parking lot where, days before, Joey had relieved Hayc.o.c.k and his accomplice of the tools of their trade. Halfway down the light post, the proprietor had suspended a Coca-Cola signa”the kind country stores get for freea”with the bar's name painted in green across a lighted white panel. I pulled into the lot and found a place among the pickups, Z-28's, and Firebirds.
As I clicked off the headlights on my newly rented Bonneville, Joey startled me by tapping loudly on the pa.s.senger window. I jumped hard enough to bang my knee on the steering wheel.
I popped the locks, and Joey climbed into the pa.s.senger seat. He said, ”You're early.” ”Wasn't sure I'd be able to find it.” Joey nodded at Mother's Milk. ”Pretty, isn't it?” The rusted metal roof drooped, and once-white paint had flaked off the concrete exterior in irregular patches, revealing a soiled pea-soup color. In addition to the lighted Cola-Cola sign hanging from the light post, the bar's name had been painted in red script across the front wall, which bore the pockmarks of a hundred rifle and pistol shots fired over the years from pa.s.sing cars.
I said, ”It looks like a good place to get killed.”
Joey looked thoughtful. ”I don't guess we'd be the first.”
”You think that's a possibility?”
”h.e.l.l, it's always a possibility. It's a possibility you're gonna get creamed crossing the road. It's a possibility you're gonna catch a cramp one of these days while you're out swimming in Mobile Bay.”
”Yeah.” I said, ”That's just what I wanted. I wasn't worried about somebody sticking a knife in me tonight. I wanted to have a philosophical discussion about life's inherent uncertainties.”
”Just trying to put things in perspective.” He looked over at me. ”You ready to go?”
”Yeah. But, before we go in, mind if I ask why you chose this particular establishment?”
”I didn't. The snitcha”Squirley McCalla”he picked it.”
I smiled. ”Squirley?”
”And Detective Coosa says it fits him like his momma knew he was gonna grow up to be a snitch. Anyway, he wanted to meet here. I guess it's his usual watering hole.”
”So I guess he'll have some buddies around in case something goes wrong.”
Joey shook his head. ”Snitching ain't a team sport. Boy's taking his life in his hands every time he sells some information. So I don't think we gotta worry about him having backup. He probably just wants lots of people around.” Joey reached over and put his hand on his door release. ”You ready?”
I stepped out onto the dirt parking lot. Joey led the way as we mounted the small porch and walked in through the open front door.
At six foot six and two hundred forty pounds, Joey is used to other men getting out of his way, and that's what they did as we entered the bar. Unfortunately, I'm not quite so intimidating a presence. And, as I stepped inside, a patron with a black, mountain-man beard, a yellow Caterpillar cap, and rolls of cellulite hanging from his exposed underarms put a hand across the little entry hall, blocking my way.
”You haven't paid the cover charge.”
I looked at him. ”My friend didn't pay either. Neither did the two people ahead of us.”
The cellulite mountain man smiled and looked around to make sure his buddies were watching. ”s.h.i.+t. I guess they snuck in when I wasn't looking.” He tried to mock my voice. ”Let's see that's two people ahead of you, your friend, and you.” He cut his eyes back to check out the appreciative laughter of his friends. ”I guess you're gonna have to pay for all of 'em. Let's see. It's a ten-dollar cover. Ain't that right, Louis?”
One of his buddies laughed and said, ”h.e.l.l, Jimbo, I believe it was twenty.”
Jimbo said, ”Naw. That'd be greedy. Tell you what. You just make it a even twenty for you and your boyfriend there.”
I could see Joey over Jimbo's shoulder. He caught my eye, and I shook my head. I said, ”Excuse me,” and pushed Jimbo's arm out of the way.
Jimbo didn't know when to quit. He grabbed the front of my s.h.i.+rt and said, ”G.o.dd.a.m.nit, boy. Don't put your f.u.c.king hands on me.”
I brought my right hand up fast, clamped his trachea between my thumb and fingers, and shoved him hard into the wall. Jimbo hit with a thud and lost balance. I pinned him to the wall by jamming my fingers into his chubby neck and squeezing hard enough to make him wheeze and squeak trying to breathe. I heard cussing and caught movement out of the corner of my eye as his friends started to move forward.
Joey stepped in front of them, and cussing turned to mumbling.
I looked into Jimbo's eyes. He let go of my s.h.i.+rt and aimed his right fist at my head. I blocked the punch by spearing his forearm with my left elbow and slapped him hard across his ear in the same motion. A high-pitched squeal came through his pinched throat.
I said, ”You want some more of this?”
He shook his head, and I let go. Jimbo staggered out onto the small porch holding his throat. I stepped outside and spoke quietly to him, then came inside and walked with Joey to a small table covered in plastic with wood grain printed on it.
When we were seated, Joey said, ”What'd you tell him outside?”
”That he asked for it, and embarra.s.sed is better than dead.”
”You be a dangerous man, huh?”
”Actually, I'm pretty much full of s.h.i.+t. But Jimbo doesn't know it. Or, at least, I don't think he doesa”choking makes you feel pretty helpless. Anyway, I was just trying to keep him from waiting for me out in the parking lot with a gun.”
”He may do it anyhow.”
I said, ”Yeah, well, you can get killed crossing the street.”
”Wish I'd said that.” Joey said, ”You know why he messed with you, don't you?”
”Yeah.”
”You got on a diving watch costs more than most of these boys make in a month. Polo s.h.i.+rt and L. L. Bean khakis. You were asking for it.”
”I believe I told you that I knew why he did it.”
”Just making sure.”
We were sitting in the back right corner, well away from the plywood bar that ran half the length of the wall on the left side of the room. A spring training game out of South Florida flickered bright green across the televison behind the bartender. Next to the TV, a Playboy centerfold that someone had blown up into a poster stretched four feet across the pressed-paneling wall. As our eyes adjusted, we could see a sampling of thirty or forty other centerfolds from the past thirty years taped to the walls, and, on the backs of the draft beer taps, the owner had glued a series of life-sized plastic b.r.e.a.s.t.s.
I pointed at the plastic b.o.o.bs and said, ”Mother's Milk.”
Joey said, ”Lot of thought went into that.”
I nodded.
Joey looked around the room. ”Something else I was thinking about. There aren't a h.e.l.l of a lot of bars where you can half choke a man to death at the front door and n.o.body seems to notice.”