Author's note:
I was sittin' out back nursing a Lonestar longneck β yeah, it's hard to find in the Wine country β listening to my iPod. Faron Young started crooning "The Other Woman (In My Life)" and I thought, damn, that's a sad song. Feeling a jolt of the Texas born alcohol and feeling melancholy from the music I took pen to paper ...
Thanks to Techsan and LadyCibelle for their ongoing editing and general help! A nod to DG Hear for his continuing support.
CARELESS LOVE
Love, oh love, oh careless love
You see what love has done to me
- "Careless Love" Traditional
The bartender shot me another aggravated look as I slid the bottle of Lonestar around in circles on the counter β the sweat from the cold bottles lined up in a careful row mixed with the ashes carelessly shed from the first pack of cigarettes I'd bought in over twenty years were mixed together in a sloppy mess.
Every time he came closer with his rag, I shooed him away with another sawbuck and a wiggle of the latest installment of my attempt to drown in my misery. He was good at bringing a new cold one but, damn, he did have a thing for cleanliness.
Looking into the flyspecked mirror β I guess it was just the bar he had this cleanin' fetish about β I saw this pushin' middle aged (and pushing very hard!) man peeking with red rimmed eyes through the nest of long necks. Being honest with myself β something I hadn't done about Dottie for a long time β I conceded that I wasn't like the handsome, virile young man I'd seen my "lovin' wife" with last night.
Yeah, I could see a gleam of reflected light through the thinning hair on my head and the wrinkles around my eyes showed the effects of all those years working outdoors in the sun and weather at the ranch tryin' to keep Dottie happy. I nodded to myself thinking once again that money didn't buy happiness.
I heard the clink of coins dropping into the jukebox and through that mirror I looked over to see the only guy in the place more pathetic than I leaning on the source of that sad music. I swore, if Hank Thompson started playing that damn "Wild Side Of Life" again, I was gonna stick one of these longnecks where it'd do the most good.
Sure enough, as I gave a deep and lonely sigh, the music cried out:
I might have known you'd never make a wife
You gave up the only one that really loves you
And went back to the wild side of life
Tears came to my eyes as I wagged the empty, asking for more solace.
It wasn't anything grand. I mean I didn't suspect anything ... hell, I didn't have a clue. I almost never left the ranch in the evenings β I was always too damn tired. Jerry had called me and said he really needed some of the casing pipe I had left over from puttin' in a well a few weeks back. He had a leak in the well for one of his stock tanks and "would I do him a big favor?"
So I loaded up the truck with what I had and drove into Uvalde. My ranch was a few miles southwest of Sabinal. We shared a beer and I started back. I was tired and still thirsty so I pulled into Jake's Place β a few blocks before pickin' up highway 90 - on the way back. It was a new place, more of a dance hall than a bar. I pulled up and was shocked to see Dottie's Jeep in the parking lot. She told me she was goin' up to Hereford to help her friend Nancy whose youngest was down with the colic. She'd said that she would probably stay overnight.
I sat there in the hot summer night, the pinging of the cooling engine an off-beat counter point to the dance music coming through the open doors. The sweat was making tracks through the dust on my face and I could smell the long day of back-breakin' work on my clothes.
Gathering myself I got out and walked over to the door. The music was louder here and I stopped inside by the rest rooms looking around. Finally I saw Dottie and this kid β hell, he couldn't have been more that twenty-five β movin' in the shadows by the back door. The band was playing a fast two-step but they were dancin' somethin' slower than a waltz ... if dancin' is what it was. His hands were all over her and she sure weren't complainin'!
I watched for a minute, undecided, when she put her arms around him and gave him a big kiss β sure looked like she was trying to ream out his tonsils. Breaking the hug she took his arm and dragged him out the door β left open in the misguided hope of a fresh breeze. I knew then it was gonna be bad.
I walked back outside and around the building as they were getting' in the back seat of a big crew cab truck. I slowly walked up to the truck. It was hard to see in β the truck was high off the ground. When I saw her dress carelessly tossed over to the front seat I knew there was nothin' I wanted to see anyway.
I dragged myself back to my truck and sat there watching that damn red Jeep of hers. Feelin' childish I grabbed the tire iron from under the seat and broke her windshield and headlights. Damn, it felt good though!
I headed home and drove out to an old line shack we kept stocked with food and such about four miles west of the ranch headquarters. I weren't hungry but I knew there was most of a bottle of my old friend Jack Daniels there that I needed to renew my acquaintance with. The first couple of glasses β I was sittin' out front on the grass under the big cottonwood tree β took the edge off my anger and I took a long hard look at my marriage.
By the time I heard the crash of the bottle broken on a rock by a lethargic throw, I came to understand I just didn't give a shit anymore.
Come to noon, I fixed some bacon and eggs and decided I needed a lot of something cold and wet. As I drove past the ranch house I didn't see her Jeep β hell, I bet she never even saw it herself last night.
I drove down towards Knippa to Willy's Tavern just short of town. And here I was listening to more from Hank:
And I dream of kisses you traded for my tears
And no one will ever know how much I love you
The beers were adding up so I stumbled back to the restroom. Plumpin' back down on my stool, I saw the bar was clean, the bottles were gone and the bartender had a vindictive gleam in his eye. I was strainin' to think of some smart-ass comment to hit him with when I felt a rustlin' next to me.
I turned my head and saw with some surprise Little Annie was sittin' there. Now I'd known Annie for a long time but I hadn't seen her since her husband Bill was buried - killed when a blow-out on the oil rig he was workin' on over by Odessa caught on fire.