Chapter 5
Frankie
waited until he could get a few thoughts together before he moved around too
much. His eyes told him he was not at home, he had peed in his pants, and that
overall things weren’t good at all. His eyes told him the jail was not a real
good home away from home and that he needed to think of something quick. They
needed to get out of there, all of them.
Frankie
guessed it was early morning, but who could tell when locked up like an animal.
He certainly didn’t deserve to be treated like this. No way.
Think
back, think.
Bill
had something to do with this. He hung up on him, Frankie remembered that, but
why was he over at the house running around outside? Frankie couldn’t remember
that part. He had been mowing, had a few drinks, even mowed the other people’s
yards in good faith. Sure he had nicked that old car, but it was nothing worth
getting upset about. You’d think the woman would be happy somebody was trying
to help her out, what with all those kids she had and that husband who was
always away at work. Oh and then the cops came. He remembered that now that he
thought about it. Frankie guessed Bill must have told the woman to call them on
him and then he must have still been mowing outside.
Bastard.
Frankie
started hearing other noises. There were lights being switched on, could smell
coffee a brewing, and heard voices. He heard them talking about a bad wreck
just outside of town, towards Fort Worth, where some guy had caused a whole
cattle truck to run off the road. The cows had to be shot right there on the
spot because they were in such bad shape. The driver survived, but those poor
damn cows didn’t stand a chance. They probably couldn’t even use them for meat
given the circumstances.
He
remembered his Daddy’s cows. He took better care of them than he did his boys.
At least those cows ate every day. That certainly couldn’t be said for his
daddy’s family. They starved themselves almost to death, waiting for a break,
waiting for some money, waiting for a meal that didn’t ooze itself out of a can
with ‘beans’ printed on the label. He wanted meat, gravy, bread. He wanted
something to fill him up.
His
momma worked at the motel during the day, washing people’s sheets and cleaning
their rooms, so when she got home, she was tired. His daddy messed with the
cows, repaired fences, put out salt blocks but didn’t really take an interest
in the kids or their needs. He grew his hay, bailed it with the help of some
workers living close by, people worse off than them, and then let the money
slide. He let it go. He put every last penny he could jingle out of the grocery
bill, the insurance company, the welfare, whoever, he used it all to feed the
cows. It was always about the heifers, the bull, the fence, the damn feed
pellets and how much per bag they cost and how many he needed to keep the herd
alive. And his daddy certainly didn’t over spend. Those poor cows under his
care looked about as bad off as he did. Frankie’s pants were never too tight,
that was for sure, and the cow’s bellies were never too full. He had everyone
on the verge of starvation, lest they forget where they came from.
One
day, when Frankie’s tummy was growling more than usual, he watched his daddy
dump a big bag of feed blocks out onto the lot with cows chasing him from
behind like he was the most fantastic human specimen around, and he was,
because they hadn’t seen any other people with feed. Frankie really, really
watched him, and saw his daddy’s joy. His Daddy loved those dumb ass cows,
loved to watch them hustle and bustle around. He watched his comfort with them
eating up every bit of spare cash his family had and it made Frankie so mad.
How could his daddy not get it? Here they were heating up cans of pork-n-beans
on the pot burner at home when these cows were eating feed cubes like treats
and loving it? Frankie wondered how good those pellets were. If his teeth were
any stronger, he’d gnaw on one and see just what the cows were enjoying. They
were bound to better than a can of ranch style beans.
Frankie’s
stomach growled. Damn he was hungry and these jailers probably didn’t have
nothing to eat except for day old biscuits and such, probably just as hard as
those pellets his daddy fed the cows in the winter.
And
man, those winters were cold growing up. The house they lived in didn’t have
any central heat or air so in the winter they froze to death and in the summer
they sweated to death. It was never comfortable. They were either standing by
the wood burning stove or airing out on the porch. His momma did what she could
to make them comfortable like laying their clothes out by the heater during the
winter so that when they got out of bed, they could crawl into warm clothes
before their walk to school. In the summer she would sometimes hook a sprinkler
to the hose and let them run through it with their boxer shorts on. Then she’d
get out a frozen treat from the freezer. She’d kiss Frankie and his brother and
tell them she loved them and that she was sorry.
They
would ask what she was sorry for.
And
she would tell them she was just sorry for everything.
She
would walk back into the house, rubbing her hands on her apron. Her eyes looked
far away when she got like that, like she wasn’t there at all.
Frankie’s
daddy would come home every evening and start drinking his beer. He would sit
at the kitchen table telling them all to keep it down so he could think. He
would get out his little notebook where he kept his notes.
His
cows were closely watched. By each of their names he would write where he found
them that day, if they were pregnant, when he thought they would give birth.
So
he had “Sofa”, “Chair”, and “Christmas” all named after what he planned to buy
for the family when he sold them. Each cow was marked for something bigger than
them, not that he ever had any intention of following through with his ideas.
He mainly just did it to get Frankie’s momma off his back. She never let him
just live. She was always there telling him why they needed to sell the
livestock, move into a house with central heat and air, and get a kitchen that
had more than a pot burner.
Always
nagging at him. It never stopped.
And
she smoked almost every day of her life. She worked at the motel for as long as
she could because she wanted her boys to have something more than empty
promises from cows. She wanted them to be able to eat 3 meals a day and have a
pair of shoes that fit, so she tried to keep things afloat. Frankie’s older
brother Bruce started working for the feed store as soon as he turned 16 but
that money mostly went back into feed for the cows. Frankie’s momma didn’t want
to think it, but she suspected not all of the bags were actually “purchased”
from the feed store but never said anything about it. With the government
grabbing what it wanted out of her paycheck, she almost felt like if Bruce and
his daddy could pull it off without getting caught, she could certainly look
the other way while they did it. What comes around goes around and that’s how the
world worked. Government stole from her, they could steal from the feed store.
Frankie
never really took much of an interest in the cows, or work for that matter.
When he
finally graduated from high school, Bruce helped him get on with the Deck Boat
plant in town. Thus his fiberglass career began, not a long career of course,
but he did work for a few years. His momma died that same year. He guessed she
felt like she could pass on now that her kids were on their own two feet.
Frankie’s daddy had a small service for her. He changed the name of the
Christmas cow to Funeral cow and sold her to pay for the burial. He was
officially on his own, and happy about it. No kids to feed, no wife to have to
listen to, just cows. He ran about 25 head up until the day he had an
unfortunate accident with the tractor. He had driven over that creek a million
times but on this particular day the rocks underneath moved, his tractor
shifted, he lost control and it fell on top of him. He drowned underneath a
load of steel, tires and rubber hoses.
By
the time Bruce found his daddy, the body had become pretty bloated and some of
his clothes had washed on down the creek. He went back to the house, called the
sheriff then waited on the porch for the authorities. He didn’t want to sit by
his dead daddy all by himself.
After
the second funeral in 6 months, Frankie and Bruce decided to sell all the cows,
the 4 room farm house they grew up in as well as the 50 acres it sat on. Bruce
wanted to take his momma’s car which was in pretty good shape since she just
went to the motel, the grocery store and home. That was fine with Frankie. He
wanted his daddy’s old blue truck and knew a lot about working on it. After
taxes, they each had a little money to put in the bank. Nothing to get excited
about but it was more than either one of them had ever had before.
Frankie
bought a trailer intending on staying in Maypearle but Bruce decided to leave
Texas. He drove off in his momma’s car and went straight to Las Vegas. He
played the slots until he decided the Craps table was really where the money
was made. And he did win for a while. He doubled, tripled his money. He sent
Frankie a couple of postcards he had made of himself in the casino. In both of
them, he had a good looking girl wrapped around him and piles of chips stacked
up at his place at the table. He had different girls of course in each picture,
but the same smile was on his face. He wrote “Frankie, I’m in paradise! Come
out here if you can. I can set you up in the hotel. Hell, I might even be able
to set you up with a girl too. They’re not that picky here! Later man, Bruce.”
“Frankie,
this is a hell of a lot better than running cows or throwing around feed sacks.
These girls are hot and I am on fire! Cheers man!”
Frankie
thought about it too. Here Bruce was wheeling and a dealing in Vegas while
Frankie was on the fiberglass line building boats, not rolling in the dough.
But if he left the plant, that would be it. They wouldn’t hire him back and he
had pissed off several of the other establishments in town with his hell
raising. Nope. He just better find his entertainment down at the Happy Trails
Honky Tonk he frequented every Friday and Saturday night. He usually managed to
score a dance and every now and then, sometimes a little more than that. And he
had a paycheck. There’s a lot to be said for steadiness and 3 meals a day.
Vegas just didn’t seem like the place for him.
A
few months later, Bruce sent a letter instead of a postcard.
“Hey,
Frankie. I just wanted you to know things kind of took a turn for the worse.
Lady Luck decided to take a big shit on me so I’m going to give Reno a try. I
got a few people looking for me so I don’t have a phone number right now. I’ll
let you know where I’m staying when I think it’s safe. Stay in Maypearle. This may have not
been such a great idea but I’m going to give it one more try. If I can get a
couple of wins, I’ll be set and will quit while I’m ahead. If I don’t, I’m
screwed man, and I don’t mean by just a little bit either. But I can’t come back
with nothing. I just can’t. I’ll write you later with the good news. And I
don’t mean to be weird, but I love you brother. If something happens to me, I
want you to know you were always my favorite person out of our whole screwed up
family. Keep it clean brother, Bruce.”
Well,
that worried Frankie. So far he’d lost his momma, his daddy, not that that was
a huge loss, and now his brother was on the run. He knew those gambling bosses
could get pretty serious when they were collecting their money and he’d heard
in Vegas, one minute you’re up then the next you’re down and that’s just how it
goes there. And no one cares about the losers except the ones wanting them to
pay up. He couldn’t imagine being the only one out of his family still alive.
He didn’t see that coming at all.
He
went to work every day, thought about Bruce, what he must be going through. He
was probably driving at night, sleeping during the day, probably feeling
lonely. And Frankie really hated that. They had survived their childhood. Life
should be better for them now. Frankie came home every evening, went straight
to the mailbox, ate his frozen dinner and drank his beer wishing he had heard
something by now.
Two
and a half months since the first letter, the second arrived. Frankie pulled it
out of the box hopeful because that meant Bruce was still alive enough to put
words on paper. Frankie waited until he got inside and got his beer before he
ripped it open.
“Frankie,
it’s me. This is probably the last letter you’re going to get from me for a
while, a long while. I’ve got to go down to Mexico for a bit, let things cool
off here in Reno. I was winning again but then it happened. I lost, big time,
so I borrowed a little knowing I could pay it back just as soon as the tables
turned, but they didn’t and now I’ve pissed this guy off so bad he wants to
kill me and has even taken steps to ensure that happens and quick. I’m leaving
tonight in momma’s old car. Yeah, it’s still running as good as ever. I’m
taking my girlfriend Maria with me and I’m going to spend some time on the
beach drinking beer and margaritas. She’s got family there so I think we’ll be
fine. If we can make it across the border, we’ll be home free. I will call you
when I can. Don’t worry about us. Oh, and congratulations, you’re about to be
an uncle. Maria is 2 months along. I think it’s going to be a girl and she does
too. Things are going to work out, I just know it. Adios amigo, Bruce.”
Frankie
grabbed the envelope. It was post marked El Paso, Texas 3 days ago. Man, he
hoped they made it across. And he had gotten a girl pregnant. Frankie shook his
head. Bruce was living large, that was for sure.
As
Frankie slowly sat up on his jailhouse cot, he still wondered if Bruce made it
across and if the baby really was a girl and if he’d had any more kids with
Maria. He hoped to hell they hadn’t killed him. Bruce deserved a break since
he’d never gotten one growing up.