Black Cherry Blues (Dave Robicheaux 3) - Page 57

“Nothing important. What is it?”

“Are you always this happy in the morning?”

“What do you want, Dixie?”

“Nothing. I’m in the lounge over in that shopping center on Brooks. Come on over.”

“What for?”

“Talk. Relax. Listen to a few sounds. They got a piano in here.”

“You sound like your boat already left the dock.”

“So?”

“It’s nine o’clock in the morning.”

“Big deal. It’s twelve o’clock somewhere else. Come on over.”

“No thanks.”

“Darlene dumped me in here while she went running around t

own. I don’t want to sit in here by myself. It’s a drag, man. Get your butt over here.”

“I’ve got a few other things on my mind.”

“That’s what I want to talk with you about. Dave, you think you’re the only guy who understands your problem. Look, man, I pick cotton every day in that same patch.”

“What are you talking about?”

“Some people are born different. That’s just the way we are. You go against what you are, you’re gonna have a mess of grief. Like Hank Junior says, some people are born to boogie, son. They just got to be willing to pay the price.”

“I appreciate all this, but I’m going to sign off now.”

“Oh no you don’t. You listen to me, ’cause I been there in spades, right where you’re at now. When I got to Huntsville from the county jail, I hadn’t had a drink in six weeks. I felt like I had fire ants crawling on my brain. Except I learned you can get almost anything in the joint you can get outside. There was a Mexican cat who sold short-dogs of black cherry wine for five bucks a bottle. We’d mix it with syrup, water, and rubbing alcohol, and it’d fix you up just about like you stuck your head in a blast furnace.

“So one time we had a whole crock of this beautiful black cherry brew stashed in a tool shack, and one time while the boss man was working some guys farther on down the road, we set one guy out as a jigger and the rest of us crapped out in the shack and decided to coolerate our minds a little bit. Except about an hour later, when we’re juiced to the eyes, the guy outside comes running through the door, yelling, ‘Jigger, jigger.’

“The boss man was this big redneck character from Lufkin named Buster Higgins. He could pick up a bale of hay and fling it from behind the truck all the way to the cab. When he took a leak he made sure everybody saw the size of his dick. That’s no shit, man. The next thing I know, he’s standing there in the door of the toolshed, sweat running out of his hat, his face big as a pumpkin. Except this guy was not funny. He thought rock ’n’ roll was for niggers and Satan worshipers. He looks down at me and says, ‘Pugh, didn’t your parents have enough money?’

“I said, ‘What d’you mean, Mr. Higgins?’”

“He says, ‘For a better quality rubbers.’ Then he took his hat off and whipped the shit out of me with it. Next stop—one month in isolation, son. I’m talking about down there with the crazoids, the screamers, the guys who stink so bad the hacks have to wash them down with hoses. And I had delirium tremens for two fucking days. Weird sounds snapping in my head, rockets going off when I closed my eyes, a big hard-on and all kinds of real sick sexual thoughts. You know what I’m talking about, man. It must have been ninety degrees in the hole, and I was shaking so bad I couldn’t get a cup of water to my mouth.

“I got through two days and thought I was home free. But after a week I started to have all kinds of guilt feelings again. About the little boy in the accident in Fort Worth, about my own little boy dying in the fire. I couldn’t stand it, man. Just that small isolation cell and the light through the food slit and all them memories. I would have drunk gasoline if somebody would have give it to me. So you know what I done? I didn’t try to get the guilt out of my mind. I got high on it. I made myself so fucking miserable that I was drunk again. When I closed my eyes and swallowed, I could even taste that black cherry wine. I knew then it wasn’t never gonna be any different. I was always gonna be drunk, whether I was dry or out there juicing.

“So in my head I wrote a song about it. I could hear all the notes, the riffs, a stand-up bass backing me up. I worked out the lyrics for it, too—

You can toke, you can drop,

Drink or use.

It don’t matter, daddy,

’Cause you never gonna lose

Them mean ole jailhouse

Tags: James Lee Burke Dave Robicheaux Mystery
Source: readsnovelonline.net
readsnovelonline.net Copyright 2016 - 2024