Dancing on a Stump. By Karin Fuller

Similar documents
BEFORE. Saturday Night. August. Emily

I remember the night they burned Ms. Dixie s place. The newspapers

Satan s Niece. Chapter 1. Suzanne watched, her eyes widening as Alana s fingers. danced along the top of the microphone. The woman on stage

Bleeds. Linda L. Richards. if it bleeds. A Nicole Charles Mystery. Richards has a winning way with character. richards

Sarah Smelly Boots By Kathy Warnes

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Video I-18. Yellow Bird and Me. By Joyce Hansen. Chapter 3 PLANS (Part One)

good for you be here again down at work have been good with his cat

written by Patricia G. Penny

Fires of Eden. Caleb Ellenburg

I-70 West: Mile Marker Miles to Zanesville

ALL DORA JUDD EVER TOLD ANYONE ABOUT THAT NIGHT THREE

Buy The Complete Version of This Book at Booklocker.com:

Title: The Back Room Dialogue: To avoid criticism, say nothing, do nothing, be nothing. The Back Room words, excluding title

Tag! You re Hit! By Michael Stahl

WHAT DO YOU DO WITH THE LEFTOVER HOLES AFTER YOU EAT THE BAGELS? 1

Weekly Test Lesson 8. Mei s Canvas. 1 Grade 4. Read the passage. Then answer the questions.

By Alice Gay Eby December 23, 1950 to July 4, 1951 For Miss Leola Murphy 7 th grade English

Crafts and Design 1O K-Design

Heat Camera Comparing Versions 1, 2 and 4. Joshua Gutwill. April 2004

Under Pressure?: The Sewing Machine Story

Sandwich Money. I flip grilled cheese sandwiches for a living.

Andrea had always loved seeing his wife wearing stockings, silky lingerie but one day, some time ago, he had decided to explore for himself the deligh

It was yet another night of feigning interest. Not for. Alan, of course, he was at home in this hip tribe. We d been

Family becomes nudists

10 Ransoming Victory

Leo the LEPRECHAUN ST.PATRICK S DAY

============================================================================

What Happened, the Winter You Found the Deer. Genevieve Valentine

Jesse s Gift An Organ Donation Story

The Shirt (G. Soto): All sentences

38 Minutes by Ava Gharib. "I could do it," piped Leo. His blonde curls bounced as he jumped up.

VIKKI No, I m fine. Seriously. I just need a minute. Vikki races out of the kitchen. The three look at each other. What the fuck was that about?

Even the box they shipped in was beautiful, bejeweled.

Sophie's Adventure. An Honors Thesis (HONRS 499) Kelly E. Ward. Thesis Advisor Dr. Laurie Lindberg. Ball State University Muncie, Indiana

FRIDAY, 6 MAY AM AM

A Gift of Love. Ice crackled in two plastic cups as David poured tea in them. He stole a glance at his

My sister ROSE lives on the mantelpiece. Well,

PROLOGUE. field below her window. For the first time in her life, she had something someone to

Suddenly, I tripped over a huge rock and the next thing I knew I was falling into a deep, deep, deep hole. The ground had crumbled.

[half title graphics t/c]

THE BEST ESCAPE TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Carolyn West

Want some more café? My Mother the Slave CHAPTER 1

VALLEY OF KINGS MICHAEL NORTHROP SCHOLASTIC INC.

M AKE A M OVIE BEHIND YOUR E YELIDS

anyway. That was Larkspur House for you, changing with no warning, and always trying to trip you up. There was no getting used to this nightmare.

Break Up, Break Down, and Break Face - Paul Blake

STOLEN If the world was in peace, if he wasn t taken, if we were only together as one, we could get through this as a family. But that is the exact

This video installation Boundary is a metaphor for how it felt to be raised in a

READ WRITE THINK CONNECT SHORT FICTION. How much change can one. Freddie. By Pam Muñoz Ryan. to read this story.

The Old Knife. by Sharon Fear illustrated by Ron Himler SAMPLE LLI GOLD SYSTEM BOOK

Title: The Human Right; North Korea. Category: Flash Fiction. Author: Ariele Lee. Church: Calvary Christian Church.

Lone Wolf. Crush Publishing, Inc Sunland, CA 91040

Roses are red, Violets are blue. Don t let Sister Anne get any black on you.

Desquamation. By Mister Scream Bloody Murder

Characters Narrator. Mr. Twee Emperor

The Wallet By Andrew McCuaig

The 8 Types of Shoes a Black Man Needs. Shoes. Kicks. What are you wearing? What do you rock? Here s a secret:

A Beginners Guide to Capulanas

Marie. by Emily Saso

Instructional Tools for Revising and Editing

In Another Country. Ernest Hemingway

Step by step instructions for specific techniques About this book: ISBN , Published June, 2009

Chapter. Where am I?

Hoofbeats in the Wind - Gini Roberge CHAPTER ONE

STILL LIFE. Ryan Lee

Sketch. Arrivederci. Linda M. Dengle. Volume 35, Number Article 2. Iowa State College

The Visit. by Jiordan Castle. There are never any white families. It s a medium security prison with some

THE LEOPARD MAN'S STORY

Pamela Srey/ Paradise 1 Book Two of the Bianca Grey Series Pamela Srey Bianca

Aimee DeLong. Copperhead

of Trisda, they would return some of the joy to her life, at least for a handful of days. Momentarily, Scarlett entertained the idea of experiencing

REVENGE. Gabrielle Lord

arranged in a square. So tell me this, Grandpa, I said. If these aliens who visit you are really your friends, then why do they make you keep

Stolen Moments. By Catherine Hokin

CMS.405 Media and Methods: Seeing and Expression

Sketch. The Stark Glass Jar. J. L. Hisel. Volume 64, Number Article 10. Iowa State University

The Forbidden Red Violin. By: Swetha Vishwanath Submitted to: Mr. Craven Course Code: Eng2D1-01 Date: Sept. 22 nd 2003

I ended up buying them both.

DARKER BLACK. Written by. James Renner

Aurora Pictures, David Dyck, Jamie Cameron Dyck

Michael Landy s Basel Moment

Frankie. the Makeup. Fairy

ESL Podcast 321 Buying a Jacket or Coat

Prologue What have I done? I dropped the test between my feet on the bath mat. It had been a whirlwind romance like you read about.

Deadlines. James Brandon. Name James Brandon

The Supermarket. Sm01. A story by Andrea and Stew in 14 parts

of her ancestors. Sometimes when she was by herself, she heard soft, otherworldly flute music. Other girls from the village wouldn t have gone to the

Emma Goedde. The White Oblivion

Baby Dragon Stories. Kate Wilhelm. An introduction by Kate Wilhelm

CHILD OF WAR HAL AMES

Can Archimedes find out how the goldsmith tricked the king?

Skin Deep. Roundtable

Monica s Story. My name is Monica. We had a roach infestation in our house. We ve had a few minor problems before, but nothing like this!

A is for Auschwitz. By Stephen Gauer

Matthea Harvey SELF-PORTRAITS. [After paintings by Max Beckmann] Double Portrait, Carnivaly 1925

Ishmael Beah FLYING WITH ONE WING

513 Lowell Street Andover, MA BEFORE OR AFTER by Christopher Lockheardt

For as long as she could remember, Frances s parents. Cottingley, Yorkshire, England

The Darkness Around Me by Michael Timothy Smith

Broken Collarbone? No Kit? No Problem for RAAM Racer Franz Preihs.

Transcription:

Dancing on a Stump By Karin Fuller I saw magic. It wasn t a parlor trick, either, but honest-to-god magic, right here in my bar. This place is just your average neighborhood watering hole. Gritty floor. Beer logo mirrors. Christmas decorations that tend to stay up year-round. It s a guy s place. I sell sandwiches bought from a deli and soup from a can. No one complains. Tate is something of a fixture here. When I get busy, he lumbers behind the counter to help. Instead of saying, What ll you have? he just jerks his head, and the customers say what they want. He s never been a talker I don t even know if Tate is his first name or his last but he s a good guy. Works hard. Minds his business. Just plants his linebacker-sized self at the end of the bar and listens as the rowdy conversations get going, especially later at night. He lives a few doors down, above his locksmith shop. I live above my bar. My place is small and dark, but I m long past bringing home women, so it works okay. Tate never stops working on his place. He s redone the whole building. Even put flowers in the old window boxes, making me wonder for a while if he wasn t a little light in those size 14 loafers. Then I hired Jenny, which soon put to rest any question about Tate twirling batons. I wasn t looking for help, but one day in walks this girl. Well, not really a girl. She s female all right, but so skinny and small she s more like a kid, although I expect she s pushing forty. So in she walks with a puffy split bottom lip, bruises under her eyes and a fierceness suggesting her lipsplitter likely looked worse. Tate wasn t around that night, and the bar was busier than it most ever is. The union drivers had won their softball finals and were in to celebrate. I was having trouble keeping track of their tab. Jenny stood near the door for a minute or two, and then stepped behind the counter, kicked her gym bag into an empty spot, and started fixing drinks like she s worked here forever. Quick-witted and sassy, she had the guys from the start. She s no beauty, but a woman behind the bar was a novelty. I sold more beer that night than any since I d opened. Can t say it was all her, but I can t say for sure that it wasn t. After the crowd left, Jenny pulled out her bag. That garage out back looks empty. Mostly is, I said. Need a place to store something? Need a place to live, Jenny said. I don t require much. I can use the washroom here, work for you weekends and evenings for the rent till I get my feet back under me good. It s nothing that ll suit you for long, I said. Just a garage, a narrow one at that. And I ve got a car in there. Good, cause I don t have a bed. 1/6

I reached under the bar for the keys, handed them over. There s cardboard on the workbench. You can cover the windows, give you some privacy. Jenny shrugged, like it didn t much matter one way or the other. *** When I came down the next day, she d already prepped. Glasses washed. Ashtrays empty. Pretzel bowls full. Like Tate, Jenny didn t say much, but she wore her past on her face. A lifetime spent wanting, not getting. I didn t think Tate saw her that way. From the beginning, he looked hypnotized. Some of the guys started to tease him. I shut them down. "Tate's a good-humored sort, slow to anger, but I'd still rather not see his buttons be pushed." I suspected Jenny was aware of his crush, but didn t know what to do. She d sometimes give him the wrong order on purpose to try to force him to talk, but he d just take it with this dopey expression on his face and never complain. Business at the bar picked up. The semi-regulars became regulars. The regulars damn near became tenants. Before, it was just a bar. A place to hang out or hide out or whatever. Maybe it had to do with things being cleaner or the smell of actual food cooking in the kitchen, but it became a place no one seemed willing to leave. Especially Tate. He came earlier, stayed later. Still hardly talked. It puzzled me that such a good-looking man, who could have his pick of the women, would be hung up on a stringy-haired, flat-chested waif, yet I d never seen a man so smitten before. The customers flirted and teased and made the usual lewd comments to her when Tate wasn t around, but none took it further. They didn t talk her up after hours or give her their number. Even the staggering drunks never pawed. As for me, I wanted to adopt her. My life had become so much better. Jenny being around meant I could yak with the boys while she tended bar. When she d get busy, Tate would step back to help, blushing and stumbling if she got too close. It didn t take long for me to move the car and fix the garage up proper, with curtains and a bed and the stuff to go on it. She wouldn t let me pay her said that wasn t our deal. Said she did fine on tips. But the night of the magic, there weren t any tips. Our perfect autumn ended with a day of hard rain and fast-dropping temperatures. Soon, everything was ice, then snow piled up heavy and fast. The weight toppled trees, knocked down power lines. Power was out everywhere. Jenny got a fire going in the old fireplace, and she and I were sitting there listening to my portable radio when in wandered Tate, carrying a long skinny bag. He stomped the snow off his boots, left his coat and bag on a stool, and then grabbed a beer and came over to join us. 2/6

For several days before this storm, I d been feeling Tate wanted to talk, but hadn t got up the nerve. Watching him work the label on his bottle with those sausage fingers of his, I sensed it again. I fiddled with the radio. The DJ was rattling off weather-related cancellations, including a much-hyped performance of some famous magician. Do you believe in magic? Tate asked quietly. Jenny shot me a Hey! He talks! look. Just smoke and mirrors, I said. I don t know, Jenny said. I like believing in unexplainable things, Tate smiled. I ve seen real magic, he said. And I can prove it. I leaned back in my chair till its legs left the floor. Rocked that way, waiting for Tate to begin. Jenny sat, legs crossed, one little foot wiggling away. Tate seemed lost, watching the fire. So are you gonna tell us or not? Jenny asked. Tate smiled shyly. He d probably already spoken a year s allotment of words, but he took a deep breath and began. Several years back, I was the parking lot attendant across from the courthouse. A do-nothing job. Just sit and take money. I d been there a few months when one day, I saw this woman come out of the courthouse. I couldn t stop looking at her. Weird thing was, she was old enough to be my mother, but there was something about her that was so... He paused, struggling to find the right words. I looked at the people beside her. It was like those people were in black and white, like an old movie, because this woman had so much more color than them. I glanced at Jenny, fully expecting to see her what bullshit expression, but she looked kind of dreamy. Entranced. After a break in traffic, she crossed toward a truck parked at a meter. Somehow, I hadn t noticed that truck until then, but man, what a beauty. A 1933 Ford BB pickup, painted a shade of red that... Tate looked around, like he was trying to find that same color. It was a color you don t see on ordinary things. On things that aren t, well... alive. So the truck was like her? It had more color, too? Jenny asked. Tate nodded. Right about then, I hear a dog barking. The truck opens and this Dalmatian jumps out, its tail whipping in crazy little circles. That dog had so many spots it looked kinda funny. Solid black ears, solid white tail, then a black dot of almost identical size about every three-quarter inches. Did he have more color, too? Jenny asked. Not exactly. Spot had more... something. Like he was shiny, not colorful. That make any sense? You wouldn t be able to not notice him, but I doubt you d know why. So were other people staring at this colorful woman with her living truck and shiny dog? I asked. I don t really know. Tate shrugged. It seemed people always wanted to be around her around Ruby. That was her name. They d hover, follow her outside talking. Most men seemed to notice Ruby right off, and then 3/6

they d look puzzled, like they weren t sure why they were looking. That truck always got attention. That sucker glowed. Ruby s husband, Ben, was just a regular little old man. Dressed like a farmer, except his overalls were always clean and he always wore an ironed-looking shirt. Anything peculiar about him? I asked. He shook his head. Just those crisp shirts. They made him look... dapper. Tate smiled. Ben was great. And boy, did he love his Ruby. Those two were something together. Anyway, it wasn t long before I was part of their routine. Ben would park by my booth about quarter to five and we d talk until Ruby came out. Once she stepped out that door, it was like I was no longer there. Ben would stop talking mid-sentence to watch her, this funny little smile on his face. He d extend his hand, like he was inviting her to dance, and she d curtsy and take it. He d take her in his arms and spin her around, maybe dip her, then open her door and help her in. Five days a week for almost two years, Ben and I talked while Spot sat by the truck, eyes trained on the door. Then one Monday, they weren t there. Next day either. Tuesday, I picked up a paper, flipped to the obits. There was Ruby. I almost didn t recognize her. She looked so different in... Black and white, Jenny said. Tate nodded. I was crushed, he said. She and I hardly talked, but I felt like I knew her. The stories Ben told, especially how they met. It was like something straight out of a movie. Jenny made a rolling gesture with her hand for Tate to continue. Ben had been on his way to California. Couple friends with him, and everything they owned. A few days into the trip, Ben drove past this tree stump with a girl dancing on it. Said he damn near wrecked. Couldn t get his eyes back on the road. He drove another six, seven miles, then did a U and headed back. His friends were fussing, but nothing could stop him. He was going back for her. But he d barely seen her, Jenny said. He d seen enough. Tate said. It doesn t take much to know. When they got back to the stump, she was gone. Ben stopped, got his suitcase, tossed the keys to his friends, then started down the gravel driveway next to that stump. His friends were yelling that he was crazy. What kind of lunatic would dance on a tree stump? But he kept walking, so they finally drove off. When he rang the doorbell at the end of that driveway, the dancing girl Ruby opened the door. She looked at Ben, sassily put her hands on her hips, and asked, What took you so long? Jenny laughed. I like that Ruby. You would have, Tate said. They were together from then on. Never spent a day apart. Well, not until... His voice trailed off. I bet he didn t handle it well, Jenny said. 4/6

That was the strangest thing, Tate said. The day after her funeral, come quarter to five, here comes Ben just like always, pulling into the lot with Spot in the cab. I started to walk over, but wasn t sure what to say. Maybe I d made a mistake, saw someone else s obit, you know? I was doubting myself, so I pretended to be busy and left him alone. By five after, Spot was about going nuts, pacing back and forth, then he suddenly relaxed. Ben started the engine and left. Next day, same thing. Ben pulled in. The dog paced. I pretended to be busy. But I d checked and rechecked the obit. It was her. So on Friday, when Ben pulled in, I went over and we talked. He said Spot couldn t handle the change in routine, so he d drive him down to sit for a while. Said he kinda liked it. That it made her feel close. That s when I noticed Ben s shirt wasn t crisp, and Spot wasn t so shiny. Even the truck seemed almost unremarkable. It was still spectacular, just nothing like before. The next week, they were back, only this time and I swear I m not making this up I noticed Spot wasn t just less shiny, but he was also less spotted. His dots were now about three or four inches apart. By the end of the next week, he was barely spotted at all. And the truck? I asked. It was fading, Tate said. First the glow, then the gloss, then the color. From deep red to orange-red to pale pink. Washing out. Ben, too? asked Jenny. From crisp to crumpled to threadbare to... gone. One day, they just weren t there anymore. Not like they didn t come I still heard the truck s engine rumble but like they weren t there. We sat quietly by the fire for a while after that. Finally, Tate stood and walked to the bar, retrieved his long bag, then came back and sat down. Any more to the story? I asked. Tate smiled. There s the magic. Jenny dropped to the floor, feet tucked underneath her. She looked pretty that way, backlit by the fire, head tilted. Ready for more. Not long after I met Ben, I mentioned Ruby s color, about how she looked different than other people. I suspected you saw it, Ben said. But he couldn t explain. Said it was magic. When I laughed, he said he could prove it. There was a rosebush nearby, so he broke off a flower. He d picked a sad-looking rose with limp, curling petals. When Ruby came over, Ben gave her that rose. When she touched it, the petals uncurled. It looked instantly fresh. Jenny sucked in her breath. Tears in her eyes. Magic, Tate said. He reached into his bag and pulled out a rose. Its petals, edged in brown, were starting to droop. 5/6

He gave it to Jenny. Smiling, she took it and asked, What took you so long? 6/6