Chapter 18
“Scars have the strange power to remind us that our past is real.”- Cormac McCarthy
Blacksburg is nestled in the Blue Ridge and Alleghany Mountains in the New River Valley and blissfully far off the grid. Main Street, which has numerous bars, restaurants, and shops, seems to be hopping tonight with college students. It makes my chest tighten at all the things she should have had. All the normal experiences that somehow, simply by knowing me, have been taken away from her. Maybe she took online classes this last year or maybe she attended an actual school in Arkansas somewhere. I hope she did.
“The main drag is only about six blocks long, so it makes for an easy stroll if you want to check it out,” she says, eyes sparkling vibrantly. It’s hard not to feel what she feels when she's animated like this.
“You really like it here, don’t you?”
“Yeah,” she shrugs.
“When were you here?”
“Oh, after.” She pauses. “I got my tattoo here. There actually.” She points across the street to Bloodlines Tattoo Parlor. It’s five p.m. and it already looks like they’ve closed up for the day. Her eyes are warm and a contented grin plays on her face. “It’s too bad they’re closed. I’d like to meet the dude who did your piece.”
“It wasn’t a dude!” she laughs.
“Oh?”
“Geez, Cane, you make it sound like girls can’t be good at much,” she teases, raising an eyebrow at me. I sigh and scratch my head because let’s face it, no reply will be the right one at this point. Silence is golden.
“So what did you want to do tonight?” I hurry to change the subject.
“Well...” she says sheepishly. “I might have already planned our evening.” She clasps her hands together with excitement.
“Lay it on me,” I chuckle. She was always taking control of our social life before so this show of her Type A personality doesn't surprise me.
“Okay, so there is this ice cream shop down the street and we are definitely hitting that up, and then I thought we could grab a drink at the bar I visited while I was here before going to the Starlite. It’s a drive-in!!” she gushes. Her eyes are bright and her movements are animated. It’s as if she feels at home here. It’s a hell of a lot better than the guarded, hard version of herself that’s been rearing its ugly head.
“Where to first, then?” I ask.
“Uhh, ice cream of course!” she squeaks. I can’t stop the smile that creeps up my face. She’s so damned adorable. We walk hand in hand to The Parlor. It’s set up to look like it’s straight out the fifties. A retro wet dream. It’s definitely not my bag of chips but she seems to be in heaven right now. The bell chimes as we walk through the door into retroland. She tugs me towards an open booth near the front window.
She tosses me a menu from behind the napkin stand and immediately opens hers without hesitation. Dessert. Gets her every time. Her nose wrinkles up as she looks over certain items. I can almost predict which ones those are, too. She hates fruit in her dessert. She says that if she wanted fruit she would eat it, but dessert is supposed to be gluttonous. Nuts are the number two offender. She doesn't like nuts in her desserts. That one I don’t understand, never have.
“You two kids have an idea of what you want?” A tall lanky guy who is definitely not older than us holds his pad waiting to take our order. Johnny, according the name tag, looks like a rockabilly punk, complete with checkered skinny pants, a chain hanging from one pocket to his belt loop and slicked back hair like a greaser.
“Well?” he prompts again.
“Uh, we need a couple, I guess,” I answer for us. He cocks his head to the side and raises his eyebrows at Mags.
“Yeah, he needs a minute, I guess.”
“Your gal here knows what she wants. You sure you wanna keep her waiting?” he smirks.
“Go ahead, Mags, I'll figure something out on the fly,” I answer, feeling pressured by this punk.
“I'll have the Hunk-a-chunka PB Fudge sundae with extra peanut butter sauce,” Mags says proudly, beaming at the guy.
“Excellent combination of flavors, Cat,” Johnny winks. Cat?
“Am I missing something here?” I interject. I swear they are communicating on some level I’m not privy too.
“No need to get frosted, Daddy-O. You’re gal here is one fine ice cream sundae creator.” Daddy-O? Sundae creator? What the hell is he talking about? Magnolia beams but her shoulders give her away. She shakes gently, eyes sparkling with challenge and humor.
“I'll have a banana split,” I order. Johnny writes down my order and shoots Magnolia a shrug and a look of disappointment, like I’m a total square or something. When he’s a safe distance away her laughter bellows out of her and her forehead hits the table as she doubles over.
“What the hell was that?” I ask, slightly irritated at being picked on.
“OH MY SHIT! That was hilarious!” she laughs heartily.
“Really?” I squawk at her.
“Cane, seriously,” she snorts, and slaps a hand over her mouth and nose. “Yes. I mean, you were so out of your league. You should have let me order for you.”
“There is something very, very wrong with you dessert people.”
“Dessert people?” she says laughing even harder.”
“Yeah and don’t try to tell me that’s not a thing. You are one,” I accuse, smiling.
Johnny saunters up, tray in hand, and sets Magnolia's tall ice cream glass in front of her with a wink. He turns to me and sets down an oblong dish with a huge banana split mounded with whipped cream in front of me. “Sir,” he says dramatically. I roll my eyes as he leaves and shake my head at the monstrosity in front of me.
“Well, crap,” I mumble. Mags snickers and points the menu on the table. The Parlor’s Epic Banana Split is the ultimate dessert for the ice cream crowd. Serves 4-6. Of course I didn’t read the menu.
“Well, looks like I’m eating for four,” I quip over Magnolia’s moans of pleasure.
It took me a trip to the bathroom and a forty-five minute walk around town with Magnolia to shake off the effects of the Epic Banana Split, but hell, I’d finished the whole damn thing just to prove a point to the two twits named Johnny and Magnolia. The last two bites I was sure I was going to up chuck all over the table but I’d managed to keep it together until the bill came. I’d had to leave it with Mags so I could run to the bathroom. Johnny had patted me on the back as we headed out and Magnolia didn’t stop laughing for a solid twenty minutes. Not that I’m complaining. Her laugh could cure cancer, I’m sure of it.
The London Underground is a dark long narrow bar with hightop tables lining one wall and a strange menu, including things like Crawdad and Chips. We discussed trying it but both chickened out. The music is low like the lights and the bar is lined with patrons. Magnolia snagged us a table back near the restrooms where the only foot traffic is from the people needing the bathroom. It’s nice having a beer with her alone, just chatting about nothing and people watching.
“Truth or lie?” she asks randomly.
“Uh, I dunno. Lie,” I shrug going along with her game. I watch as she thinks of something, her expressions changing with her thoughts.
“Family,” she says finally.
“Okay, what am I supposed to do?”
“Well, you have a topic...I guess I should have given you the topic first and then let you pick truth or lie. Anyhow, now you have to tell the truth about it...you know like...sex! Sex lie would be that it’s all hot and sexy and whatever, but really its sticky and loud, or something like that. So tell me how family is - the lie version.” I instantly am over this game. Her version of family and mine were always one hundred and eighty degrees from each other. I sigh and massage my brow line.
“Family, okay...the lie. Family supports you and loves you no matter what. They are your life line, you can trust them with anything. They always come through for you and you’d be lucky to know them because they are all little pieces of you.” I can tell she doesn't like my answer, simply because her eyes get sad and her lips frown at me. It’s like she’s looking through me though, searching for something.
“Truth or lie, Mags.” I ask.
“Truth,” she answers.
“Life.”
“Life?” Her brow knits together at my suggestion.
“Yeah, we all know that the lie is that we go to school and work hard and will end up with good lives and jobs and live happily ever after...so what’s the truth?”
“Fine. Life. The truth is, life is hard. Life hurts. It’s a complete shit show.” Her tone is clipped and jaded and I can’t help but think that somehow it’s my fault she feels that way. She takes a long swig of her beer, finishing it off, and slides off her seat.
“I’m grabbing another, you need one?” She eyes my mug and looks up at me.
“Naw. I’m good.” She saunters, glass in hand, up to the end of the bar, pushes up onto her toes and leans over the bar, wagging her glass to get the bartender’s attention. I watch as he notices her. He’s older and looks worn down, tired and disheveled. His face breaks into a wide grin and he pushes past a bar back to get down to her. They shake hands and exchange words that I can’t hear and it strikes me as odd. He nods seriously at something she says before taking her glass and replacing it with a fresh tall beer. She slides cash across the bar top to him and his hand covers hers with the money under it. The hair at the back of my neck prickles. Something is off. I watch as he half smiles and nods at something else before she turns, hair thrown over her shoulder and comes back to me.
“Truth or lie, Mags?” I ask.
“I just went,” she replies, looking at me quizzically.
“Truth or lie?” I push.
“Truth again,” she shrugs.
“How the hell did you pay for your beer?” She grimaces and looks sheepishly at me.
“I stole from you,” she admits with a little pout. Her bottom lip looks edible.
“When?”
“This morning when you were in the shower. I took a twenty outta your pants pocket. She’s being honest, I can see it written all over her face, but for some reason I still feel that something is seriously off about the situation.
“How do you know the bartender?” I venture. Her expression darkens and I’m not sure how to read it.
“I met him when I was here for my tattoo. I came here every night for the three or four nights I stayed in town. I drank a lot. He owns the bar,” she explains rather bluntly. It’s a likely story. It makes sense, adds up if you will, but it feels wrong. I can’t put my finger on it though so I leave it alone.
“Oh,” I answer indifferently.
“Cane,” she reaches out covering my hand with hers. “It was...I was, am, different. It all changed me. I’m sorry if you don’t want to acknowledge that but it’s the truth.”
“I know and I’m sorry.” Neither of us want to get any closer to the elephant in the room than we already have. Tomorrow all the fun ends. The trip ends. We head home together for the first time in almost two years. It’s a death sentence for her and a lifetime of torture for me. There is no way I will come away from this unscathed. I expect that, much like her, I will be changed. Hard and unyielding. Our happy mirage of love and life hangs by a thread, delicately holding on through our sick game of unwillingness to face the truth. I flip my hand palm-up under hers and grasp it roughly. I never want to let go. She squeezes back and drowns herself in the rest of her beer.
The Starlite Drive-in movie theatre was playing 2-Guns. We pulled in and set up shop. Mags begged me to get a large popcorn and a water and of course I’d caved. How could I not when she’d gushed that the whole drive in experience was ‘magical’. Neither of us had never been to a drive-in before and although it’s not stadium seating, reclining chairs and surround sound there was something awesome about watching a movie out under the stars with a crackling radio frequency blaring the audio. I spread out a spare blanket from the hotel room and we sat snuggled together. Every once in a while she’d readjust herself and nuzzle into me more and I’m not going to lie - I loved every second of it. Her smell, her feel, the way her long silky hair brushed against my skin. It was magical. It was the kind of date night, bar moment aside, that you never wanted to end. Almost six years after meeting, dating, living together and losing each other she still made me feel like home. I’d lied to her earlier about truth and family. She was my family. She did always support and love me and she always made me feel like I had a reason to be. It was only without her that my world disintegrated. She was my glue, my reason for staying good. My reason for constantly striving to be a better man, a decent man. When she vanished, so did my moral compass. I was truly lost without her.
She lets out a long yawn that reminds me of a sound a kitten would make and leans against me. “We’re almost back I think. Tired?” I ask quietly as I drive us back to the hotel.
“Yeah,” she breathes. Her hand slides up my shirt, her fingers grazing my skin gently. I don’t know how to make this moment last an eternity but I’d do anything asked of me to make it happen. I park in the lot and get her door for her. She smiles up at me, silently thanking me for thinking of her and takes my hand so I can lead us to our room for the night.
“I’m not too tired, you know,” she murmurs bumping my side playfully. I give her my best shocked expression as the key card slides into the slot and beeps our entrance. There is no way we will be just sleeping tonight.