Sherman Chevalley, âI got to talk to you. Iâll buy you a beer when I get back.â
âBuy me one now so Iâll stay.â
âGreg,â I called, âA beer for my cousin, please.â
Instead of saying thank you to me, Sherman looked Donny in the face and said, âPussy.â
âWhat did you say?â asked Donny.
âPussy. Takinâ all that crap.â
I got quickly between them and said, âBack off, Sherman.â
My cousin, a man of few words, immediately threw a punch, which I slipped while managing to kick his feet out from under him. He landed on his back with a crash that shook the building and laughed. âYou see that, Greg? The kidâs growing up.â
Knowing Sherman too well, I was backing away as fast as I could, though not fast enough. Sherman sprang quick as a cobra, wasting a mere giga-second to pick up a bar stool to swing at my head. But if Sherman was a cobra, Wide Greg was a broad-shouldered barrel-chested mongoose. If you were to gather a hundred warring Hells Angels, Pagans, Mongols, and Devils Disciples in a parking lot, the rivals would all agree on one thing: Wide Greg was the fastest biker-bar proprietor on the planet.
His sawed off baseball bat materialized in his hand. Before Sherman could hit me with the stool, he went down for the second time in two breaths, popped hard, but not so hard as to be concussed thanks to Wide Gregâs fine-tuned sense of proportion. Flat on his back, holding his head, groaning, his eyes grew large with terror. For how many weeks would Wide Greg bar him from the White Birch? How many long, lonely nights would pass alone with the History Channel?
But Wide Greg did nothing to excess. Order restored, justice dispensed, he slipped his bat back in its scabbard of PVC pipe nailed under the bar, picked up a towel, and resumed polishing.
I walked Donny out to my car.
He looked around blearily. âWhat is this piece of crap?â
âRented from Pink. Put on your seat belt.â
I got him home and up his front steps, in the door and up the stairs to his bedroom. When I came back down, his mother, a white-haired lady in her seventies with whom he moved in after his last divorce, was in the front parlor wiping her hands on dishtowel. âOh itâs you. Hello Ben. Donny okay?â
âTouch of flu.â
She looked at me. âYes, itâs going around this summer.â
Mercy Mission accomplished, I went back to the White Birch where I found Sherman yawning over a new beer. âWhat was all that about?â I asked. âWhat were you on Donnyâs case for?â
Sherman shrugged.
âAnd whyâd you take a swing me? Donnyâs your pal, Iâm your cousin. Whatâs going on?â
âStressed, man.â
âOver what?â
âStress.â
âYouâre stressed out by stress?â
âBig joke. Youâd be stressed too.â
âParole officer on your case?â
âNaw. He donât have anything on meâ¦Nothinâ thatâll stick.â He glanced over at Greg polishing and lowered his voice. âThing is, man, somebodyâs leaning on me.â
âWho?â I asked, wondering who would dare.
âI donât know.â
âWell, what do you mean leaning?â
âTried to kill me.â
âWhat?â
âYou heard me.â
âSomeoneâs trying to kill you and you have no idea who it is?â
âNope.â
I looked at him. He looked back.
Sherman was a first class liar. His vast arsenal of mendacity had been honed in prison where congenital prowess takes on a professional edge. It made him an excellent judge of character and a keen observer of motive. I did not doubt that someone was trying to kill him. Several of the worlds he inhabited could generate enemies; some, for sure, who regarded death as an appropriate closing argument. But I did doubt that he didnât know
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