by Edward Lee
“Oh, yes.”
“These slaves—what were they accused of?”
“Some sexual crime, almost exclusively. If a white woman willingly had sexual congress with a slave—the slave was guilty of rape. If a slave put his hands on a white woman, or even looked at her salaciously…same thing. A number of these accusations were made by none other than Penelope Gast herself. There were even some accounts of slaves rebuffing her advances, which infuriated her to the point that she’d swear the man either raped her or molested her. Instant execution. And of course we know that she had many, many willing liaisons with slaves, a few of which no doubt resulted in very unwanted pregnancies. The entire ordeal was ghastly. I doubt that any of the slaves killed were guilty of forcible rape—ever.”
Collier’s eyes narrowed. “If they weren’t hanged, how were these men executed?”
“They were dragged to death by horses, or sometimes butchered in place. And then they were beheaded while all of the other slaves were forced to watch. Harwood Gast very much believed in the principles of deterrence. The severed heads were mounted on stakes and simply left there, so to be visible, and some remained erected for years.”
Collier’s brow jumped. “Well, now I can see why superstitious people would believe the land was cursed.”
Sute’s martini was being drained in quick increments. “No, the beheadings weren’t the highlight. After the unfortunate slave was decapitated, his body was crushed by sledgehammers, minced by axes, and then hoed into the soil. How’s that for a ‘haunted field’ story?”
Collier’s stomach turned sour. Jesus. Gast was pureass psycho. He could make Genghis Khan look like Mickey Mouse. “Now I know why the locals call Gast the most evil man the town’s ever seen.”
“Essentially, everything Harwood Gast ever did was in some way motivated by evil.”
“Just building the railroad itself,” Collier added. “Solely to transport captured northern civilians to concentration camps—that kind of takes the cake, too.”
Sute popped a brow at what Collier had said.
Almost as if to reserve an additional comment.
Collier noticed that, too. That and the man’s distress—from some “personal quagmire”—made Collier think: I’d love to know what’s REALLY going on in this guy’s noggin…
“They say evil is relative,” Sute picked up when his next drink was done, “but I really don’t know.”
“Gast was insane.”
“I hope so. As for his wife, I’m not sure that she was really insane—just a sociopathic sex maniac is probably more like it.”
Collier laughed.
Over the course of their talk, Sute’s face looked as if it had aged ten years. Bags under his eyes dropped, while his lids were getting redder.
“Mr. Sute, are you sure you’re all right?”
He gulped, and repatted the handkerchief to his forehead. “I suppose I’m really not, Mr. Collier. I’m not feeling well. It’s been wonderful having lunch with you, but I’m afraid I must excuse myself.”
“Go home and get some rest,” Collier advised. And don’t drink a SHITLOAD of martinis next time. “I’m sure you’ll feel better soon.”
“Thank you.” Sute rose, wobbly. He shook Collier’s hand. “And I hope my accounts of the town’s strange history entertained you.”
“Very much so.”
Quite suddenly, a sixtyish man probably even heavier than Sute wended around the table: balding, white beard, big jolly Santa Claus face. “J.G.!” the man greeted with a stout voice. “Going so soon? Stay and have a drink!”
“Oh, no, Hank, I’ve had too much already—”
The hugely grinning man turned to Collier.
“And Mr. Justin Collier! Word travels fast when a celebrity comes to town, and I’m always the first to get the news.” He pumped Collier’s hand like a car jack. “I’m Hank Snodden, and I must say it’s a pleasure to meet you! I love your show, by the way. I can’t wait for next season!”
Sorry, buddy, but you WILL wait for next season, Collier thought. “Thanks for the kind words, Mr. Snodden.”
“Hank is the mayor of our humble little town,” Sute informed.
The ebullient man slapped Collier on the back. “And I’m also the county clerk, the town license inspector, and the recorder of deeds.” A hokey elbow to Collier’s ribs. “I also own the car lot on the corner. Come on in and I’ll give you a really good deal!”
Collier faked a chuckle. “I love your town, Mr. Snodden.”
The bubbly man turned back to Sute, then frowned. “J.G., you don’t look well.”
Sute reeled on his feet. “I’m a bit under the weather…”
“No, you’re drunk!” Snodden laughed. “Just like me! Go home and sleep it off—”
“Yes, I’m leaving now—”
“—but don’t forget chess club on Monday! I’ll be kicking your tail!”
Sute sidestepped away. “Thank you again, Mr. Collier. I hope we meet again.”
“’Bye…”
Sute finally made his exit, almost stumbling out the front door.
“He’s a character, all right, Mr. Collier,” the mayor piped. “I’ve known him thirty years and I don’t think I’ve ever seen him that stewed. And speaking of stewed, please let me buy you a drink.”
This guy’s a little too high-amp for me, Collier realized. Besides, those lagers had buzzed him up but good. “Thanks, sir, but I’ve got to be going myself.”
“Well, if there’s anything you need, you just call up the mayor’s office, tell them you’re a personal friend of mine, and I’ll get you fixed up in no time.”
“Thanks, sir.”
The big man’s eyes beamed. “And I guess J.G. was talking about his books.”
“Yes. I bought a few. But he mentioned that one of his books never—”
“—never got published because—well—he’s not a very good writer! So that’s what he was bending your ear about, Harwood Gast and his notorious railroad.”
“Yes, it’s pretty grim, but it’s also a fascinating story—”
Another elbow in the ribs. “And pure bullshit, Mr. Collier, but you know how these Southerners are. They love to spin a tale. Horrible Harwood and Mrs. Tinkle, they called them.”
Collier squinted. “Mrs. Twinkle?”
“Tinkle, Mr. Collier, Mrs. Tinkle—that was her nickname, among other things.”
“Why’d they call her that?”
“Oh, there’s my wife, Mr. Collier—I better go before she starts yelling at me—” He slipped a business card in Collier’s hand. “But it’s been a pleasure meeting you!”
“You, too, sir, but—wait—why did they call her—”
Snodden rushed away, to a sneering wife in a dress that looked like a pup tent with flowers on it.
Mrs. Tinkle? Collier paid the check, frowning. Here was something Sute had skirted in his indelicate description of Penelope Gast. It didn’t take Collier long to assume between the lines. Sex maniac, indeed. Water sports, he guessed. She was probably one of these kinky weirdos who likes guys to piss on her. It wasn’t all bonnets and mint juleps on the porch. Every age had its veneers.
He shook his head as he left the restaurant. A piss freak…But his guts sank when he reminded himself that he thought he’d smelled urine in his room.
The gorgeous day helped him get Sute’s dreadful story out of his head. However—
Maybe I’ll walk around town a bit, walk off this buzz. He knew he needed to be 100 percent sober when the time came for his dinner date with Dominique.
Wait a minute! he remembered now. She won’t want to eat at her own restaurant. I’ll have to take her someplace…Now a new kind of dread sank in his guts. I can’t take the woman of my dreams out in that lime on wheels! He looked around for a car rental but wasn’t surprised that a small town like this wouldn’t need one. Suddenly the problem felt like a crisis.
I should’ve asked Sute. He probably would’ve loaned me his Cad
dy. It would be his prize at the chess club: to brag about how the TV star had asked to borrow his car. But Sute was gone, and too mysteriously distressed to call now. Then Collier thought: Jiff! I’ll bet he’s got a car! I’m sure he’d loan it to me in a heartbeat…
Collier was about to head back to the inn but stopped in the street. Two blocks down, he was pretty sure he spotted Jiff walking into a store.
He followed the clean street down, ducking whenever it appeared he’d been recognized. This celebrity crap is getting on my nerves. I should’ve grown a beard… When he got closer to the store, he realized it wasn’t a store. It was that place he’d seen last night.
THE RAILROAD SPIKE, read the awning sign.
Just what I need, another bar…
A swing door with a circular window opened into murky darkness. Cigarette stench smacked him in the face, and the place smelled like stale Miller Lite. A long bar descended deep, with padded stools as though the place had once been a diner. Collier peered through murk but saw no sign of Jiff. A woman sat alone in a booth, applying lipstick, while several men eyed him from another booth. The bar itself stood tenantless.
What a dive, Collier thought.
A tall barkeep cruised slowly down to his spot. His apparel seemed off-the-wall and then some: a leather vest with no shirt beneath it, and he had a haircut that oddly reminded Collier of Frankenstein’s monster. He held a shot in his hand, slapped it down on the bar, and slid it to Collier.
“That’s a tin roof, just for you,” the guy said in a wrestler’s voice.
“A tin roof?” Collier questioned.
The keep rolled his eyes. “It’s on the house.”
“Uh, thanks,” Collier said, dismayed. Damn, I hate shots, and I don’t want to stay if Jiff’s not here. But he’d feel rude in declining. He sat down at the cigarette-burned bar top. Collier downed the shot. Not bad, even though I HATE shots. “Thanks. That was pretty good.”
“Glad you liked it, Mr. Collier, and like I said, that’s on the house. I heard you got to town yesterday. It’s damn exciting to have a TV star in my bar.”
It never ends, Collier’s mind droned.
“I love your show, and it’s good luck, you being a beer man and all.” The keep extended a huge hand behind him, to a row of beer taps. “We’re not some redneck dump here, Mr. Collier. We’ve got the good stuff here.”
Collier was almost visibly offended by the typical domestic beer taps. I wouldn’t drink that stuff if you had my head in a guillotine…“Uh, actually, I was just passing through—”
“Oh, Buster!” a tinny voice called out from one of the booths. “He doesn’t drink domestic beers! Give him a Heineken. On my tab.”
Collier quailed. “On, no, really, thanks but—”
The green bottle thunked before him. “That’s on Barry over there.”
Collier slumped. His raised the bottle to the guy in the booth—whom he could barely see—and nodded. “Thank you, Barry.” Damn…At least Heineken was a beer snob’s Bud, which could be drunk in a pinch. But Collier didn’t want to drink anymore. “Say,” he addressed the keep, “I’m looking for Jiff Butler. Could’ve sworn I saw him come in here.”
“Oh, that explains it now.” The keep seemed gratified.
“Explains what?”
“Why you’d be coming into a place like this. I got a pretty good eye, you know? I pegged you as straight.”
Collier blinked. “Huh?”
“But how can you be, if you come in here looking for Jiff?” The keep smiled and began polishing some highball glasses.
“Wait a minute, what do you mean?”
“This is a gay bar, and I didn’t make you as gay.”
Collier blinked again, hard. “I didn’t, uh, know this was a gay bar…”
Suddenly the keep’s friendly face turned belligerent. “What? You got a problem with gays?”
Jesus…“Look, man, I’m from California—I don’t care what people’s preferences are. But I’m not gay. I had no idea this was—” All at once, Collier considered the bar’s name, and felt asinine. “Ah. Now I get it.”
The keep looked quizzical. “And you’re here looking for Jiff?”
“Well, yeah. I’m staying at his mother’s inn. I wanted to see if I could borrow his car, but—”
“He’ll be out in a minute…Say, do you know Emeril?”
I sure know how to pick ’em, Collier thought.
He almost knocked his Heineken over when an arm went across his shoulder. A handsome man in a business suit cocked a smile. “You say you need a car, Justin? Wanna borrow my BMW?”
“Uh, uh—no. Thanks—”
A squeeze to the shoulder. “Love your show.” He shot a finger at the keep. “His next one’s on me.”
“Oh, thanks, but—”
“That Ken doll who just bought you the beer is Donny,” the keep told him. “Donny, leave Mr. Collier alone. He’s straight.”
“Oh…”
The man disappeared in murk.
Collier leaned forward and whispered, “Hey, tell me something. If this is a gay bar, why’s that woman sitting over there looking like she wants to get picked up?”
The keep chuckled. “That woman’s name is Mike. I’ll call him over if you want.”
“No, no, no, no, no, no, no, please. No.” Collier’s heart surged. “I was just curious.” He tried to clear his head. “Did I misunderstand you? Did you say Jiff was here?”
“Yeah, he’s in back. He won’t be long.”
“Oh, you mean he works here?”
The keep grinned, revealing a Letterman-type gap between his front teeth. “Sort of. And now that you mention it, he owes me some money…but that’s another story, Mr. Collier.”
This was too weird. I’m sitting in a gay bar drinking mass-market beer, Collier realized. And another thing: Jiff’s obviously gay—why else would he “sort of” work here? No wonder the young man hadn’t been interested in the eye candy at Cusher’s last night. And Sute…Could he maybe be an ex-lover of Jiff’s? Sute had seemed distraught enough, but the rest didn’t add up. Jiff’s young and in good shape, Sute’s old and fat…Collier didn’t care—he just wanted to borrow Jiff’s car. He stood up and looked at his watch—one thirty. Still plenty of time to be ready for his date tonight. “Say, where’s the bathroom?” he asked the keep.
“You’re standing in it!” a voice called from the back booths. Laughter followed.
“Don’t listen to those queens, Mr. Collier.” The keep pointed. “Down that hall, last door on the left.”
Collier smiled uncomfortably when he passed the other booths. Men barely seen in the shadows all greeted him and complimented his show. The hallway was even murkier; he practically had to feel his way down. Did he say last door on the left, or right? Only a tiny yellow makeup bulb lit the entire hall. He saw a door on either side.
Then he heard, or thought he heard, the words: “Get it, come on.”
Collier slowed. That sounded like Jiff…But where was he? In the bathroom?
Dark light glowed in an inch-wide gap at the last door on the right. That’s not the bathroom, is it? There was no sign.
Then he heard: “Yeah…”
A man’s voice but definitely not Jiff’s. Collier peeked in the gap.
He didn’t know what he was seeing at first, just…two shapes in the murk. Only a distant wedge of light lit the room, which looked like a lounge of some kind. There were several ragged-out couches, a table, and some beanbag chairs. The shapes he’d seen were moving.
Jiff’s voice again: “Ya better get it soon, your thirty bucks are runnin’ out.”
Collier’s vision sharpened like a lapse dissolve in reverse. You’ve got to be shitting me!
Jiff was in there, all right, bent over like someone touching their toes. He was also naked. Another man stood behind him, buttocks pumping…
Then, “Yeah…”
The motion slowed, then stopped, and the shadows separated. The other man
, exhausted now, gushed, “Thanks, that was great.”
“Glad’ja had a good time,” Jiff’s voice etched from the dark. “So where’s that thirty?”
Collier pulled away and slipped into the bathroom opposite. Now I’ve seen everything. He backed against the bathroom wall, squinting from the sudden change of dim light to bright light. Jiff’s a male prostitute. He turns tricks, and J.G. Sute must be one of his clients. It was an age-old story that worked for gays and straights alike: the Fat Older Man falls in love with the Hot Younger Prostitute—then gets rebuffed. That must be why Sute was nearly in tears during lunch.
The bathroom was more like one in a gas station. Collier relieved himself, then washed his hands, thinking, I guess Jiff’s mother doesn’t pay him enough at the inn. He wasn’t as shocked as he would expect, but suddenly a curdling image assailed him. The scene he’d just witnessed in the little lounge room, only with J.G. Sute as Jiff’s customer…
He waded back through the darkness toward the bar.
“You don’t mind, do you, Mr. Collier?” the keep said, surprising him at the end of the hall.
“Whuh—”
The keep put his arm around his shoulder, then—
“Say cheese!”
snap!
Somebody took a picture of them. The sudden flash left Collier blind.
“Thanks, Mr. Collier,” he heard the keep say. A hand on his arm led him back to his bar stool.
“That’ll look great, framed behind the bar. Our first celebrity!”
Collier could barely see. I better get out of here and sober up before tonight. He reached for his wallet.
“Oh, you can’t leave yet, Mr. Collier. Frank and Bubba bought you beers, too.”
“No, really, I have to—”
“Aw, come on. It’s not every day we have a TV guy in here.”
I guess one more won’t kill me, Collier thought, but was still semishocked by the revelation of what Jiff’s “handyman” work really was.
He spent the next hour trading banter and TV stories with the keep and other patrons. The beers slid down fast, and God knew how many autographs he signed. “Oh, that’s right,” the keep eventually remembered, “you wanted to see Jiff. Mike, go back there and see what he’s up to, all right?”