Part 13 (2/2)
He stands up, and for a minute my head is perfectly quiet inside. I make myself look, like self-inflicted torture, as he takes me in.
”Stuart here went to school over at the University of Alabama,” William says, adding, ”Roll Tide.”
”Nice to meet you.” Stuart flips me a brief smile. Then he takes a long slurp of his drink until I hear the ice clink against his teeth. ”So where we off to?” he asks William.
We take William's Oldsmobile to the Robert E. Lee Hotel. Stuart opens my door and sits beside me in the back, but then leans over the seat talking to William about deer season the rest of the ride.
At the table, he pulls out my chair for me and I sit, smile, say thank you.
”You want a drink?” he asks me, not looking my way.
”No, thanks. Just water, please.”
He turns to the waiter and says, ”Double Old Kentucky straight with a water back.”
I guess it's some time after his fifth bourbon, I say, ”So Hilly tells me you're in the oil business. That must be interesting.”
”The money's good. If that's what you really want to know.”
”Oh, I didn't . . .” But I stop because he's craning his neck at something. I look up and see he's staring at a woman who's at the door, a busty blonde with red lipstick and a tight green dress.
William turns to see what Stuart's looking at, but he swings back around quickly. He shakes his head no, very slightly, at Stuart and I see, heading out the door, it's Hilly's old boyfriend, Johnny Foote, with his new wife, Celia. They leave and William and I glance at each other, sharing our relief that Hilly didn't see them.
”Lord, that girl's hot as Tunica blacktop,” Stuart says under his breath and I suppose that's when I just stop caring what happens.
At some point, Hilly looks at me to see what's going on. I smile like everything's fine and she smiles back, happy to see it's all working out. ”William! The lieutenant governor just walked in. Let's go speak before he sits down.”
They go off together, leaving us, the two lovebirds sitting on the same side of the table, staring at all the happy couples in the room.
”So,” he says, hardly turning his head. ”You ever go to any of the Alabama football games?”
I never even made it to Colonel Field and that was five thousand yards from my bed. ”No, I'm not really a football fan.” I look at my watch. It's hardly seven fifteen.
”That so.” He eyes the drink the waiter has handed him like he'd really enjoy downing it. ”Well, what do you do with your time?”
”I write a . . . domestic maintenance column for the Jackson Journal. Jackson Journal.”
He wrinkles his brow, then laughs. ”Domestic maintenance. You mean . . . housekeeping?”
I nod.
”Jesus.” He stirs his drink. ”I can't think of anything worse than reading a column on how to clean house,” he says, and I notice that his front tooth is the slightest bit crooked. I long to point this imperfection out to him, but he finishes his thought with, ”Except maybe writing it.”
I just stare at him.
”Sounds like a ploy to me, to find a husband. Becoming an expert on keeping house.”
”Well, you must be a genius. You've figured out my whole scheme.”
”Isn't that what you women from Ole Miss major in? Professional husband hunting?”
I watch him, dumbfounded. I may not've had a date in umpteen years, but who does he think he is?
”I'm sorry, but were you dropped on your head as an infant?”
He blinks at me, then laughs for the first time all night.
”Not that it's any of your business,” I say, ”but I had to start somewhere if I plan on being a journalist.” I think I've actually impressed him. But then he throws back the drink and the look is gone.
We eat dinner, and from his profile I can see his nose is a little pointy. His eyebrows are too thick, and his light brown hair too coa.r.s.e. We say little else, to each other at least. Hilly chats, throwing things our way like, ”Stuart, Skeeter here lives on a plantation just north of town. Didn't the senator grow up on a peanut farm?”
Stuart orders yet another drink.
When Hilly and I go to the bathroom, she gives me a hopeful smile. ”What do you think?”
”He's . . . tall,” I say, surprised she hasn't noticed that not only is my date inexplicably rude, but drop-dead drunk.
The end of the meal finally comes and he and William split the check. Stuart stands up and helps me with my jacket. At least he has nice manners.
”Jesus, I've never met a woman with such long arms,” he says.
”Well, I've never met anybody with such a drinking problem.”
”Your coat smells like--” He leans down and sniffs it, grimacing. ”Fertilizer.”
He strides off to the men's room and I wish I could disappear.
The car ride, all three minutes of it, is impossibly silent. And long.
We go back inside Hilly's house. Yule May comes out in her white uniform, says, ”They all fine, went to bed good,” and she slips out through the kitchen door. I excuse myself to the bathroom.
”Skeeter, why don't you drive Stuart home?” William says when I come out. ”I'm bushed, aren't you, Hilly?”
Hilly's looking at me like she's trying to figure out what I want to do. I thought I'd made it obvious when I stayed in the bathroom for ten minutes.
”Your . . . car's not here?” I ask the air in front of Stuart.
”I don't believe my cousin's in a position to drive.” William laughs. Everyone's quiet again.
”I came in a truck,” I say. ”I'd hate for you to . . .”
”Shoot,” William says, slapping Stuart on the back. ”Stuart doesn't mind riding in a truck, do you, buddy?”
”William,” Hilly says, ”why don't you drive and, Skeeter, you can ride along.”
”Not me, I'm too boozed up myself,” William says even though he just drove us home.
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