All except one.
Yellowed and brittled with age, a flyer with the little boy’s picture was still taped to the window of Teeve’s Place.
H
is early morning flight from Los Angeles had been delayed for nearly two hours because of fog. Plenty of time for him to back out, just let it all go. Once he even grabbed his bag and left the terminal, but he changed his mind. Again.
After boarding, he found himself seated next to an elderly woman who was weeping quietly. She was still crying when, twenty minutes later, she offered a whispered apology, but he pretended sleep. Whatever her problem was, he didn’t want to hear it. He had no interest in hearing people whine.
When she left her seat to go to the lavatory, he slipped from the first-class cabin and found an empty row near the back of the plane.
For a while he tried to read but gave it up when he felt a headache coming on. He hadn’t slept at all the night before, hadn’t even gone to bed. Instead, he’d spent the hours sitting on his balcony, trying to persuade himself not to make this trip.
Then, just before five that morning, he’d phoned to make his flight reservation, left a vague message on his receptionist’s answering machine and pulled a suitcase from his closet.
Now, with his stomach churning from too much airport coffee, his knees wedged against the seat in front of him, his body heavy with fatigue, he decided that when the plane landed, he’d give this up. Take the next available flight back to L.A.
But he didn’t.
After he picked up his rental, a Mitsubishi Eclipse, and a map at Tulsa International Airport, he headed east.
The Avis blue-chip car, the only convertible available, wouldn’t have been his first choice; he drove a Jaguar XK8 in L.A. But even before he drove out of the city, he realized he’d underestimated the Oklahoma heat, well over a hundred, with humidity so high that his shirt was plastered to his back despite the hot wind.
The two-hour drive took him through mostly empty country, the highway skirting towns called Coweta, Tullahassee, Oktaha—names that conjured scenes of Gene Autry movies.
He arrived in DeClare before dark, then checked into the Riverfront Motel, which looked just a little more inviting than the White Buffalo Inn at the edge of town or a decrepit hotel called the Saddletree a few blocks away.
His room was about what he expected. Drab and cramped, smaller even than the dorm room he’d lived in at Tufts for five years. Behind the drapes he found sliding glass doors leading to a balcony that overlooked a river backed by woods of towering pines.
He didn’t bother to unpack, but he hadn’t brought much anyway. He wasn’t planning to stick around long.
The motel restaurant was crowded, according to his waitress, because it was Thursday.
“Catfish night,” she explained, managing to turn “night” into a three-syllable word. “All you can eat for six ninety-five.”
“Is it baked?” he asked, a question she thought was hilarious.
“You’re not an Okie, are you? Only one way to fix catfish, and that’s to fry it. You want baked fish, be here for the Sunday buffet. We have baked cod then. But come before noon, ’cause when the churches let out, this place is packed.”
“I’ll be gone before Sunday.”
“Not staying long, huh?”
Though he’d already framed the lie, he hesitated. Another chance to back out.
“I’m here to look up some old friends of my parents.”
“Who’s that?”
He felt his heart quicken, his breath come short. But he was in it now.
“A family named Harjo.”
“Which one? We got Harjos scattered all over this part of the country. They’re all related, one way or another. Ben was the oldest, I think.”
“Where can I find him?”
“He’s dead, but his wife, Enid, lives way the hell out in the boonies. Can’t tell you how to get there. Your best bet is Teeve. She was married to a Harjo. He took off years ago, but she’s still close to the family. She runs the pool hall on Main Street.”
After his dinner, and with enough fat in his system to grease axle rods, he walked to the center of town. Four depressing blocks scarred by struggle and failure. Buildings of crumbling native stone, many of them empty; a boarded-up movie theater, its marquee advertising a citywide garage sale; a bank wearing a new facade, the centerpiece a massive clock running an hour late.
Business owners battling the Wal-Mart east of town had tried to lure customers back by installing canvas awnings, camouflaging peeling paint with cheap brick veneer, placing wrought-iron benches on the corner of every block. But the awnings were tattered and fading, the veneer was flaking paint and the benches were covered with pigeon droppings.
The pool hall, closed by the time he got there, didn’t look as if it were faring any better than other businesses he’d passed along the way. The sign reading
TEEVE’S PLACE
hung crookedly over the door, and the plate glass window fronting the building bore a foot-long crack patched with caulk and masking tape.
Inside, a fluorescent bulb blinked in a tin ceiling pitted with rust. The long, narrow room was crowded with a makeshift counter, pool tables from another era, video games, vending machines and a game table with four mismatched chairs.
As he turned and started back toward the motel, a mud-splattered pickup drove by, a rifle mounted in the back window, a Confederate flag strapped across the grille, two pit bull pups chained in the truck bed.
If he’d been back home just then, he might have been cussing the traffic clogging the 405 or complaining of the heavy brown air dimming the sun or fighting the panic he felt when a tremor hit.
But at that moment, Los Angeles seemed like paradise.
T
eeve Harjo unlocked the front door of the pool hall while balancing four pie boxes against her chest. As soon as she took those back to the lunchroom, she returned to her car for the others.
Ordinarily, she baked only four and always sold out by two o’clock, her peanut-butter pies still the best dessert in town and the recipe still a secret. But Hap Duchamp had phoned yesterday to order three, as he and Matthew Donaldson were having weekend guests.
Always an early riser, Teeve liked to have her pies in the oven by six, then sit on her patio drinking coffee while she watched the birds at the feeders in her backyard. But her morning routine had changed since her daughter, Ivy, had come home.
She’d just flipped on the lights in the lunchroom when she heard the screen door out front slam shut, a signal that the “domino boys” had arrived.
The oldest of this foursome was Ron John O’Reily, who at eighty-two was developing Alzheimer’s; the grumpiest but undisputed leader of the pack was Lonnie Cruddup, who in temperament was much like his deceased sibling, Raymond. Johnny and Jackson Standingdeer, Cherokee brothers in their late fifties, rounded out the group.
Because they’d always considered the pool hall to be a man’s refuge, they had pouted when Navy took off and Teeve took over. Then, when she’d stopped booking bets and quit selling beer, they’d fumed. But when she’d added the lunchroom and changed the sign out front to
TEEVE’S POOL HALL AND TEA ROOM
, they’d jumped ship.
Luring them back had not been easy, but Teeve was both inventive and determined. Not because of the few dollars she collected from their games, but because dominoes was an institution in Oklahoma pool halls and she’d be damned if she’d let four old coots depart from history.
So she had delivered a freshly baked peanut-butter pie to Lonnie Cruddup along with the promise of a new domino table to replace the shaky one he’d complained about for almost thirty years. But Lonnie was not appeased. He said his gang would be the butt of jokes for the rest of their lives—which, given their advancing years, was likely not a long time—if they were seen going into a tearoom.
After an hour of nearly failed negotiations, a compromise was reached, and a week later, Lonnie had led his boys back into the pool hall, passing beneath a newly painted sign that read, quite simply,
TEEVE’S PLACE.
Lige Haney was the first in for lunch, as he was every Friday, the day he delivered his column to the newspaper office.
“You give those Republicans what-for this week, Lige?”
“It was both my duty and my pleasure to do so, Teeve,” he said as Phantom led him to his table. “Did you by any chance watch the news last night? Channel twelve?”
“I was beat. Went to bed before nine.”
“Oh, you missed an insightful interview with our esteemed senator Jackson Langley, who spoke eloquently and with perfect balance—an amazing achievement given the difficulty of standing on one foot while the other was crammed toe-to-heel in his mouth. But this phenomenon is not uncommon among the ranks of the GOP. One does not have to be blind to see that.
“Anyway, he was asked to comment on the efforts of animal rights activists to outlaw cockfighting in our fair state. Langley, vigorously indignant, said the first thing Communists do when they take over a country is to outlaw cockfighting.”
“Well, everyone knows those damned Commies are just faunching at the bit to invade Oklahoma,” Teeve said.
“I laughed so hard, Phantom got out of bed to check on me.”
Phantom, on hearing her name, raised her head from her paws for a few seconds, then, assured she was not being summoned, settled once again beneath the table.
“Morning, Teeve. Lige.”
“Hey, Hap.”
Hap Duchamp had given up Versace suits and Armani ties the day he walked away from the bank, preferring instead jeans from Kmart, shirts from Sears and shoes from Payless. He got bad eight-dollar haircuts at the Corner Barbershop, still drove his ten-year-old Chrysler and seemed entirely comfortable with who he was.
“Lige, I see you’re cheating on Clara again, taking a younger girl to lunch.” Hap knelt to give Phantom a pat, then took a seat at Lige’s table.
“Well, this one’s not as pretty as Clara, but she treats me better.”
“Hap,” Teeve said, “you come to eat or to pick up your pies?”
“I couldn’t eat a bite, Teeve. I had half of a leftover pizza for breakfast.”
“Pizza for breakfast?”
“Matthew’s come up with the notion that gay men are supposed to cook like Julia Child. He made beef bourguignon for dinner last night, but it was a disaster, so I had pizza delivered. This morning he fixed quiche Lorraine. Another dismal failure. The fact is, the man can’t cook a lick, but he won’t admit it.”
“How’s your mother, Hap?” Lige asked.
“Oh, you know Martha Bernard. She thinks a day without drama is a wasted day. If her housekeeper’s not swiping the silver or her accountant isn’t siphoning off her money, then someone’s taking her mail or poisoning her azaleas. Last night, though, she got a little closer to the real thing.”
“How’s that?”
“Someone smashed a window, broke into the guesthouse. Took a couple of silver candlesticks, a deer rifle that hadn’t been fired since Dad died. An old black-and-white TV. Not much of a haul.”
“All the same,” Lige said, “Martha must have been pretty shook up.”
“Aw, she loved it. Police cars, sirens. She was pissed that O Boy doesn’t have a SWAT team, but all in all, she had a good night. Enough excitement that she downed a few more bedtime toddies than the one she admits to.”
While she was putting together Lige’s lunch, Teeve glanced into the pool hall, where she saw a man standing near the door, watching her.
He was young—thirtyish, she guessed, good-looking and dressed like money walking. Gold at his throat and wrist, linen slacks, Italian loafers and silk shirt, the left sleeve cuffed up to accommodate a thick bandage on his forearm.
She figured him for a salesman from Billiard Supply, though most of their sales reps didn’t look as prosperous as this one.
“Here you go, Lige,” she said as she placed his plate in front of him. “Sandwich at two o’clock, potato salad at nine.”
“Did you forget my dill pickle?”
“It’s straight up noon.”
“Thanks.”
Teeve marveled at the way Lige managed to eat without a mishap, never spilling his drink or knocking his fork off the table, no mustard smeared in the corners of his mouth, no food stuck to the front of his shirt. He was neater than most sighted people she served.
“Teeve, I’d better grab those pies and get out of here,” Hap said as he pulled bills from his wallet. “I’ve got to go by the IGA on my way home. Matthew’s fixing something called salicornia for dinner tonight.”
“That sounds like an eye disease.”
“Now you know why I’m going to the store. Lay in a supply of bologna and cheese just in case.”
Teeve had forgotten about the stranger in the pool hall until she saw him walk out just after Hap left. He seemed vaguely familiar to her, but she couldn’t recall seeing him before. Still, something about his eyes reminded her of someone she knew.
April 21, 1966
Dear Diary,
Today was the best birthday of my life because I am finally a teenager! My very best present was from Mom. A bra! I’ve been asking for one since Row got hers last summer but Mom said I didn’t need one. Guess she changed her mind when she saw that my breasts are getting bigger. Its a double A cup but after I put it on she said it was to big. I think it fits just fine.
My brother Navy sent me a Ship ’n Shore blouse with a Peter Pan collor but I think Mom bought it and put his name on the card because he’s on a ship in the Indian ocean. (Not our kind of Indian. The other kind.) James and Josie sent me a book
Where the Red Fern Grows.
They live in California and haven’t seen me since I was ten or eleven so I guess they think I’m still a little girl. Anyway, I already read it.
Row got me a music box with a teeny ballerina that turns when I open the lid. Martha Sue Crow whose in my Sunday school class gave me a bottle of Evening in Paris perfume. Martha Sues supposed to be my secret pal but she can’t keep anything secret. Mr. Duchamp whose Moms boss at the bank gave me some charcoal pencils for my drawings.
Daddy gave me a pair of school shoes. Their way to big but he says I’ll grow into them and no sence wasting money on shoes that will be to tight before I get any wear out of them. He calls them sensible. I call them ugly.
I bet I’ll outgrow my bra before I outgrow the shoes.
Spider Woman