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Authors: John Brandon

BOOK: Further Joy
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On Thursday, Garner frittered a midday hour away making small talk with his mother's friends while they constructed a quilt and monitored a tropical storm that was making its way up through the Caribbean. He listened to reports on all the women's children, one a kid named Lucas, now a
guy
named Lucas, whom Garner had been buddies with when they were younger. Lucas's mother had taken them to Atlanta once when they were little. They'd gone to the Coca-Cola Museum, the Professional Wrestling Museum. Lucas was around, his mother told Garner. She knew he'd love to get together. He was a tutor over at the college. They gave Lucas the important cases, the athletes and the exchange students. Lucas knew a little bit about everything, his mother said.

“Yeah, hopefully we'll get a chance to catch up,” Garner told her, knowing he'd make no effort to make that happen. He really didn't care to be engaged in tales from the old days, or to hear about Lucas's band or whatever. He had a date that night to see Ainsley Thomas, and she was the only memory lane he wanted to walk down.

Garner accepted compliments from his mother's friends about his making time to come home for a nice long stay, endured their declarations that he was a fine young man. We know the area isn't real exciting for young folks, they told him. He managed to smile, though his face was hot and he was sweating under his clothes.

After a while he excused himself and retreated to his room. He put a decent shirt on and drove his mother's car downtown to a dim bistro that, as far as he knew, was the nicest restaurant in town. He was early. He picked through the car's consoles and compartments looking for gum or a
mint, then gave up. He stayed in the car until he saw her walking toward the restaurant, and then hopped out to meet her before she went inside.

Ainsley Thomas. She and Garner had dated off and on through high school, and had somehow never had a bad breakup. When Garner had left to go to Atlanta, Ainsley insisted he do it a free man. She didn't want to hold him back, didn't want him to resent her, didn't want calling her to become a chore for him. And Garner hadn't put up much of a fight about parting ways. He'd wanted a clean break from the coast, from everything he knew.

Ainsley was wearing a simple sundress and flip-flops. Parts of her looked the same as ever. Her ankles. Her pointy chin that always made it seem like she knew more than she was saying. She looked clean somehow. She was a nurse now, Garner knew. She was divorced.

They sat at a small table next to a window. It was between mealtimes and the place was empty. They ordered croissants and some shrimp and Ainsley got a glass of wine and Garner a beer.

“You drink now?” Ainsley said. She was smirking at him, or at least it seemed like she was, because of her pinched little chin.

“Sure,” Garner said.

“You never used to. In high school. You used to walk into parties with coffee. People thought you were weird.”

“I'm still weird,” Garner said.

“You were always lousy at vices.”

“Self-destruction isn't my strong suit, I guess.”

“Lousy at getting attached,” Ainsley said.

She hid her face behind the bowl of her wine glass. She seemed calmer than before, either comfortable or resigned. Garner didn't want to have to talk about himself, didn't want to lie to Ainsley's face, so he asked her questions. He already knew most of what she told him, from second- and third-hand accounts his mother had provided. She'd gone to Coastal and held out as long as she could in graphic design before switching to nursing. She'd started dating a guy from one of the other marsh towns who played football at Coastal, a reserve linebacker. “He was slow,” Ainsley said, “but
nobody ever broke a tackle on him.” After graduation she took a job at a rehab hospital a ways inland while the linebacker started a mortgage company. They'd gotten along well, had done small kind deeds for each other, had gotten married. For a time, the mortgage money had been rolling in. Then it stopped rolling.


You
broke a tackle on him,” said Garner. “He had you and you slipped away.”

Ainsley shrugged. “The short version is he couldn't stomach living off my income. ‘Being kept,' he always said. I had no problem with it.”

“You can't blame him for that,” said Garner. “That's how they raise them around here. To make an honest living and support their women.”

“Well, that wasn't the only problem. It's always more complicated than you can explain. Close to the end, we just quit trying. We'd hollered enough for a lifetime, so we just quit.”

Ainsley swirled the last splash of her wine vacantly. She told Garner she'd been renting the third story of a house right out on the channel. In the mornings she watched the charters putter out toward the open water, or if she got up late, the real fishing boats coming back in.

The waiter came over offering more wine, which Ainsley accepted. Garner could see the wine was already getting to her; her neck and ears were flushed.

“And how's the nursing racket?” Garner asked her.

“I like the patients. My coworkers, not so much.” Ainsley made a little sandwich out of a shrimp and a piece of croissant and bit it in half.

“Any interesting cases?”

“Interesting?” she said. “Let me see. A couple months ago we had a guy who fell out of a helicopter. Fell into water, so it wasn't as bad as it could've been. We had a lady who was delusional from dehydration. She kept calling me Delia and she thought we were in Texas. Never did figure out who Delia was. What else? A Coastal player got brought in this afternoon, if that's considered interesting. A fullback, I think they said.” Ainsley stopped chewing and glanced behind her. “We're not supposed to tell people this stuff. HIPPA.”

“What's HIPPA?”

“It's the rules. You can't go around talking about people you're treating. Everybody does, though.”

Garner sipped his beer. It wasn't cold anymore. “What's wrong with the fullback?”

“Took too many pain pills and fell asleep in a drive-through. They started giving them to him last season because something was wrong with his shoulder. I guess he got a taste for them. We're going to hold him for a few days. The coaches are keeping it hush-hush. I don't know how they kept the cops from giving him a DUI, but they did. Oh, and down the hall from him we got this guy on vacation from Africa. Something's wrong with his stomach. He says he's a prince in his nation and women aren't permitted to look upon him disrobed. I guess it's not the dullest job, at least.”

“Number 41? That's the fullback?”

“I don't know his number. Regular-looking white kid, except he has a mohawk.”

“Huh,” said Garner.

The waiter was back again. He didn't have any other tables. He dropped off a couple more napkins. Once he was gone, Ainsley reached across the table and took Garner's hand.

“I didn't know I was missing you until I saw you,” she said, her voice placid but a touch raspy.

Garner's throat went dry. Sitting here with Ainsley was making him feel grateful, an unfamiliar feeling of late. He drank the better part of his beer and signaled for the bill. He made sure to put down the single credit card he had that wasn't maxed out. He could float this meal on credit and maybe a couple more, and then he'd be making a last stand with the cash he had left in the bank.

He and Ainsley left the bistro, pushing out into the salty, still air of the evening. He walked her to her car and she invited him to sit in the passenger seat. He started to say something and she interrupted him and said she just wanted to kiss him for a while, like back when kissing in a parked car was all they needed.

*
    
*
    
*

When Garner got home he went to his bedroom and shut his door and lay there in the dark, dozens of things wrestling in his head. He wondered, not for the first time, why he couldn't bring himself to come clean—why he couldn't sit his mother down and explain to her that he'd gone outside regulations to secure a big account and had gotten caught, that the rule he'd broken was one he'd broken a dozen times before, that everybody broke, but that this time the account had been lost and that this had caused problems. It wasn't a complicated story. There was the possibility that he wasn't really duping his mother at all, that his mother knew something was wrong and was giving him space to figure it out himself. He knew at least part of what was stopping him from telling the truth had nothing to do with her, anyway. It was the town—what this sincere, right-and-wrong hamlet thought of him. He couldn't tell whether he despised this place and couldn't stand the idea of being pitied by it, or whether he still needed the town to be proud of him. He thought of Ainsley, of course—her lips, her fingers in his hair. After all this time, she still wanted him. She'd wanted him back before his success. She'd wanted him, he knew, for his toughness. That he'd ever thought he was in her league to begin with, back when he was the scrawniest kid on the high school football team, said it all. He wasn't the type to give up, to be run off by long odds.

He was up from the bed and pacing now, arms crossed, pulling in whole breaths. There his suits were in the closet, dormant, dutiful. A fly was buzzing around over near the window, probably trapped behind the screen. What Ainsley had told Garner about the fullback was picking at him. It
was
number 41. He remembered the mohawk. He'd noticed the kid last Saturday, easily the best blocker on the team, one of those kids who had that innate knack for colliding squarely with another human. He was stout enough to lead inside and quick enough to pull wide on outside runs, and when the offense got stuck they'd sneak him out of the backfield and throw to him. Usually that type of offense didn't even use a fullback,
but this kid was always out there. Several times Garner had even seen him directing traffic before the snap.

Garner sat down on the bed and plucked his phone from the nightstand. He looked up the lines and found that Coastal was favored by nineteen points that Saturday. Almost three touchdowns. They were on the road, at North Florida. Three touchdowns on the road. Their star fullback wouldn't be playing and nobody knew it yet.

Garner reclined stiffly onto his back, the fly in the window quiet now, gone or else resigned to its fate. He stared into the dark and must've slept an hour here and there, and in time, as it had to, the sour bluish light rose up into the world. He showered and dressed and drove his mother's Honda directly west on Route 8 until he came to a town two counties in where no one knew him. He had to wait fifteen minutes for the bank to open, and then he went in and withdrew everything he could from his checking without having to close the account—a little over two grand. He didn't love the idea of using cash, of using a live bookie, but that last credit card didn't have nearly enough room on it, so here he was, doing this the old-fashioned way. This was the way desperate people bet and he was desperate.

The teller asked if he needed anything else and he said he did. Garner had an old money market he'd opened with the commission from his first big deal. He'd never touched it, had planned to leave it be until he was older, when he'd be able to tell people it was the first score he'd ever made. Then he'd do something magnanimous with it, maybe gift it to some ambitious young man he would have begun to mentor.

It hadn't had time to accrue much interest; it was still around five thousand. Garner drew a steadying breath and told the teller he wanted to close the money market.

On the drive back to the coast, he felt a pang of contrition over the fact that he'd gotten the information for the bet he was about to make from Ainsley, information she wasn't supposed to have shared with him, but he told himself he was being ridiculous. No one would find out why he'd made the bet, and no one was getting cheated except the bookie. He'd make
this one bet, and after he won he could figure out a better way to get some money coming in.

He pulled up behind Cuss Seafood, an ancient, tidy diner where everyone knew the owner took wagers. Garner had never been in the place. He poked his head into the storeroom and asked for Cuss and after a minute a wiry black man with one of his eyes askew walked out and accepted Garner's money like it was twenty bucks. Cuss reeked of harsh, outdated soap. It was hard to tell if he was looking at Garner or off into the live oaks. He peered at Garner's driver's license, scribbled in a little booklet, then slipped Garner's cash into a blue envelope stamped
LOWER COUNTRY ENTERTAINMENT
. “You sure this just for entertainment?” he said. “We a entertainment outfit.”

Saturday morning Garner's mother's hot water heater crapped out. He insisted to her that he'd take care of it, having no clue how much a hot water heater cost. He wasn't going to look into it until after the game. A hot water heater would be the least of his worries if he lost the bet. He'd get to find out what rock bottom felt like.

He skipped a cold shower. Down at the end of the block he puffed away at one of his Russian cigarettes and when he got back to the house his mother's friends were appearing. They were putting hors d'oeuvres together for the game. They liked to watch it here, on the big TV.

Garner said his hellos and returned each woman's hug. The big woman who tottered around in high heels, the skinny one who always wore a ball cap. Lucas's mother was there again. Lucas's band was rehearsing, she said, or he would've come over. They were getting ready to record a demo, so they had to practice every chance they got. They always received terrific reviews in the local papers, Lucas's mother told Garner. He should go listen to them sometime.

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