The following story is based on the Jason Isbell song of the same name. The plot undoubtedly deviates from the intent of Mr. Isbell's song, though his lyrics in their entirety are included here. They are denoted by italics at various places within the story.
*
Jenn Ryan was the best thing that ever happened to me. But she would be the first to admit, she was also the worst thing that ever happened to me. Most of the time -- after the elephant first entered our lives up and up until the day that it and Jenn disappeared -- things were bad... for both of us. Still, in the long run, the good totally overwhelmed the bad, no matter how bad that bad got, and it did get pretty bad... at times.
We just encouraged each other's worst excesses. But as Jenn so often reminded me, claiming with a wink of her eye that William Blake's proverb -- "The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom" -- just made so much sense. It was her mantra she said -- her life's highest ideal. She wasn't serious, not really, but she lived her life like she was.
If Blake was right, then Jenn Ryan was probably the wisest person I ever knew. But wisdom is not really what comes to mind first when I think of Jenn -- and that happens pretty much nonstop nowadays. I'm not sure what does come to mind first: beauty perhaps, humor maybe, almost certainly bravery.
I guess the real truth -- and Jenn always claimed that I, above all others, could always find the real truth -- was that too many things come to mind when I think of her. It would be as futile to try to pick out
one
as it would be to select your favorite star from the vast pantheon of the firmament -- "the heavens", as Jenn preferred to call them.
Speaking of heaven, Jenn told me twice that she didn't think she'd go there -- said she was pretty sure she couldn't find her way -- too many stars in the way, she claimed. It wasn't that she thought she was a bad person, or that her sins would prevent her entrance into those pearly gates. It was just that she thought she'd get sidetracked along the way -- too many beautiful things to distract her. She thought she'd get lost.
I first met her about a year and half ago at this place outside of Athens where we were playing --
The House of Booze
, a hole in the wall really, certainly not the kind of establishment that I would have taken her to if I had had the choice. But who am I fooling? Both of us belonged in that rat's nest anyway -- we were made for the damn place.
I was playing in a band that Luke, the owner, thought fit the "ambiance" of
THOB
to a fucking T. That we did. Our band was made for the place, too. In consequence, Luke had hired us as a sort of house band -- we played there almost every Saturday night when we weren't touring. We were just alt country shit-kickers whose stuff was distilled through a filter of Southern blues and R&B boogie, and, as every member of the band was either a promising, full-fledged, or recovering alcoholic, Luke couldn't really have found musicians that looked the part of the house band at
The House of Booze
any better than we did.
I fell into the latter category, or at least I was trying to, and as such, I was understandably wary of a woman who looked like she was born with a glass of bourbon in her hand. Hell, playing with a bunch of miscreants, like the other members of
New South
, and gigging regularly at dens of debauchery like
THOB
, it was hard enough staying clear of the demon rum without falling under the spell of some Georgia Jezebel.
I suppose in most ways, though, she
didn't
look the part. She was too pretty; too fucking educated, too. But when I first saw her on that cool spring night, sitting
cross-legged on a barstool, like nobody sits anymore
, I thought she looked at home.
It was around 7:00, about two hours before we were scheduled to go on, and we'd been hauling our gear in from the van for the past 45 minutes. I had stopped at the bar to get some seltzer water, and I was just standing there waiting to get the bartender's attention. Unlike me, she had apparently already gotten his attention -- several times over.
"Hey, you're the singer in
New South
, aren't you?" She flashed me this beatific grin, the cherub smirk of a drunken angel in a denim skirt. I could tell -- I don't know how, but even after hearing only a single sentence, I could tell that she was a Georgia girl, even though she was very careful to conceal any tiny, residual hints of a Southern drawl.
I stared back at her. "Well, the answer to
that
question depends on whether you're a cop, a bar owner who's banned me from his place, or any number of bankers whose loans I've defaulted on. Which one are you?"
She giggled. "None of the above, just a girl who likes your music." She
winked at me and drained her glass
. "I'm Jenn, by the way; what's your name?" She reached out her soft, white hand with the palm down like she expected me to kiss the top of it, and though I accepted it, I didn't shake it, just touched its petite, soft whiteness momentarily before releasing it.
She told me later that she actually already knew my name, but that she didn't want to admit that at the time. She thought that I would think that she was kind of weird and creepy if she was following our band on
or on our website. The truth was really quite the opposite; that was precisely what we wanted people to do.
I somehow instinctively knew that answering her question was almost certain to get me into trouble that I should have known enough to avoid. "I'm not sure I should say", I answered, grinning just enough to prove that I posed no real threat, but not too much to suggest that I had any designs on something more. I was going to tell her later, but I thought it might be fun to tease her just a bit.
"Well, if you're gonna play hard to get, I'll just invent a name for you. I think you should be... 'Mike.' So,
Mike
, did you go to UGA? You look really familiar, like you might have been in a class I took at one time or another."
I tried my best not to show my surprise, but what she'd just said stunned me. My actual first name is Michael, though no one has called me that since I was a child. How in the fuck did she guess that? Instead of acknowledging the coincidence, I was trying to convey nonchalance so I went ahead and answered her question.
"Nah, I went to school in Memphis, until they kicked me out or I dropped out -- I can't remember which."
"Oh, a serious scholar, huh?" She smiled at her sarcasm.