Security
By HarryC
- 1767 reads
We moved around lots when I was a kid.
It was pop's job.
He'd turn from the window to me and mom
- the matchstick switching in his teeth.
'Time to relocate,' he'd say.
Hambone, Tennessee... Pickweed,
Arkansas... Scufflebutt, Alabama...
He'd go out early, come home late.
'What does pop do, mom?' I asked her
once.
She grinned down at me - snapping her
gum.
'Yo' poppa's a ve'y impowtan' main,
honey. He's a See-cure-ity Assessah.'
We lived in rooms with fold-down beds.
Iceboxes and TVs. Showers. Sometimes, a bath.
Mom and pop had lots of maps. They sat
up late, circling names.
Grinder, Mississippi... Wartnipple,
Louisiana... Bugsights, Kansas...
Pop had a big car. A Chevy Impala.
Impaler, he'd say. He loved it. He'd stand at the window for
hours, looking out there.
Some nights, he'd drive us out to eat.
Steaks with fries. Ribs. Soda floats. Pop paid from his roll of
bills. He'd wink at me, squeezing my shoulder.
'Y'all needs good food to build up them
muscles, bwoy. Liken your poppa's.'
He had a tattoo on the top of his arm.
A heart with a dagger through it, blood dripping.
Poncelette, Illinois... Chase City,
Oklahoma... Dedler, Missouri...
I loved his smile, and his big voice.
Hers, too. We were a happy family. I'd heard about rich people, and
thought that's what we were. Mom with her leather jacket and
bobby-sox. Pop with his big hat and shiny matchstick teeth.
He had gleaming eyes. They darted
everywhere, watching people. They smiled when they saw me, though.
And mom. He was older than she was. 23. After he taught me, I'd
count up to it. It seemed like a great age to be. I couldn't
imagine being it myself.
Forkeye, Colorado... Credence,
Arizona... Faithless, New Mexico...
A desert road. Buildings ahead.
He looked at me over his shoulder as he
drove the 'Impaler' - mom at his side. He winked a big one.
'Where are we going this time, pop?'
'Somewheres good, don't you worry
none.'
He pulled up by a drug store.
'Poppa's got some work to do
first.'
I stood up - my left hand on his
shoulder, my right on hers.
'See-cure-ity Assessah-in' work,
pop?'
He tweaked my nose. His eyes and smile
filled me.
'You got it, junior. Won't be two
swings of a mule's tail-bone.'
He leaned over and kissed mom. Then he
got out and went into the store. The engine was running. Mom
shifted over to his seat.
'Is pop good at his job, mom?'
She took a drink from her tin bottle
and lit a cigarette.
'He's the best they is, Jimmy. Don't
never ferget.'
She tapped her fingers on the wheel.
Ash dropped on her jeans.
We both sat there, watching for him.
Ketchum, Texas.
We jumped at the gunshots. She
screamed his name.
I sat there, frozen in the heat.
The day I became the man he needed me
to be.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Hi Harry
I love stories about the south and this kind of grabs the atmosphere. The fact that this brought images of the final moments of Lewellyn Moss confirms the atmospheric nature of this piece.
I have a friend who moved to North Carolina after years of living in New York (after moving from the UK) He told me it took several weeks to stop himself looking around to see who else was with him when locals greeted him, "Hi Y'all."
I didn't know you entered the 2013 Pentathlon. I put some in, it was a good exercise. I can't say I was very successsful.
- Log in to post comments
It's a work of genius,
strange thing is, the brothers were not happy with it and it didn't do very well in 1998.
Definitely a film I can never get bored with
- Log in to post comments
I think I also entered that
I think I also entered that pentathlon, like Ed I also don't remember doing very well. I'm sure I voted for Security at the time if I'm thinking of the right pentathlon - I've definitely read it before and it's such a great story and packs so much in.
- Log in to post comments
Congratulations, this is our
Congratulations, this is our Facebook/Twitter pick of the day. Please like and share so others can enjoy it.
- Log in to post comments
Loved the dilougue here,
Loved the dilougue here, Harry C. Wondrful story. Had a 65 Chevy Impala when I was 16. Oved that car. Cheers.
Rich
- Log in to post comments