Been here ever since, going on two years now.
Up close he’s not so intimidating—you see the pale flesh where his
pants sag a little off his hips, the small paunch that’s begun to
distend those abs, the flab that runs through the muscles in his
arms. If the wind is right, you catch a whiff of something strong
rising from him, tequila or whiskey, something pungent and tart
that makes you swoon in the desert heat. There is no “ma’am” or
“howdy” or shy, slow smile to brighten your day—most of the time he
doesn’t say two words from sun up to sundown, and in the early
morning he’s too hung-over to smile.
The cowboy hat, the boots, the lariat chain
around his neck, it’s all part of the image, the illusion, the same
way his “homegrown” tomatoes are bought at the farm four miles
away, or the flats of perennials purchased at the Wal-Mart in town.
It’s an act, a way to bring in customers and stay in business…he’s
a daydream out there in the sun, hose in hand, watering his plants
and I fell for it so hard, I’m still dusting off my knees.
Two years. And even now when I look out from
the main house, I can still see the man I thought he was, the
cowboy I want him to be.
* * * *
I bring him coffee, black, because that’s the
way he likes it. My own looks like hot cocoa, I use so much milk.
Two steaming mugs, one in each hand, and my fingers start to sweat
from the heat when I step out of the main house and head for the
market lot. It’s already close to seventy degrees outside and it’s
barely eight o’clock yet—by noon it’ll be almost unbearable for a
northern boy like me, and I’ll have to retreat beneath the tent
where I have a cashier’s table and a fan set up, and I’ll sit in
the shade and watch Kent move through his plants like a mirage in
the waves of heat that radiate from the desert sun. How he keeps
anything green in this arid clime, I’ll never know.
He’s watering now, like he always is when I
first come down. Setting my coffee on one of the veggie stands, I
sidle up behind him and snake an arm around his waist—his skin is
already damp with a fine sheen of sweat, I taste it when I kiss the
back of his neck, and a bitter smell rises from him, a mix of work
and alcohol and sex. “Hey babe,” I purr, resting my chin on his
shoulder. He’s a tall man, a head taller than me, and when I lean
on his shoulder, I fit perfectly beneath the brim of his cowboy
hat.
This close I can see his hair, dark and
plastered to his head under the hat, and he has a thin mustache
that makes him look older than his thirty-two years. It makes him
look more western somehow—I think of Dallasand Magnum
P.I.and all those old shows I used to watch as a kid, all
those shows that made me want a man like the one in my arms
now.
From here I can also see his unshaven cheeks,
the stubble laced with a gray fuzz that I won’t point out. Instead
I breathe in the whiskey that rises up from him like the sun off
the road and I hold out his coffee mug where he can see it. “For
you,” I tell him. By noon, it’ll hold more alcohol than java. He
thinks I don’t see when he spikes it.
Kent grunts, not quite the thanks I would
like, and then shrugs out of my embrace. “Don’t hang on me,
Marcus,” he says, his voice bleary and gruff. “It’s hot out
here.”
No shit,I think, but I hold my
tongue. I learned long ago that the best way to deal with a mood
like this is to just keep quiet and let it ride itself out. Once he
wakes up a bit more, shakes off the drink from last night, he’ll be
easier to deal with. He’ll smile for the customers, at least.
They’re the ones that matter.
“Your coffee,” I say, holding out the
mug like a peace offering. He frowns at it a moment, then takes it
and chugs half of it at once—good thing it wasn’t scalding. I doubt
he would’ve felt it, anyway. Shoving my hands into the pockets of
my jeans, I glare at the flowers he’s watering and tell him, “I
have that washtub out—”
“I’m going into town in the morning,”
he mutters. It’s his don’t nag metone of voice, one he’s
been using more and more around me. The showerhead’s been busted
for the past week and I’d swear he hasn’t bathed since then, that’s
the alcohol and sweat I smell on him.