This is chapter 3 of St. Clair, though it is actually the fourth installment. It is in Lesbian because that is where the story started with "Soldier Girl." I strongly recommend reading the other three first. I am working on next installment and plan on having it out in couple weeks. Readers of this series have been incredibly patient and I appreciate it. These are much harder to write than my usual fare. The subject matter of this story is decidedly dark and very heavy, even by my standards: PTSD, Survivor Guilt, TBI. You have been warned. There is no graphic sex in this story line, and it certainly wouldn't fit in this one anyway. Special thanks to sbrooks103x for editing and beta reading, and to jezzaz and blackrandi for giving a beta read. Any remaining errors are entirely mine - probably added after their assistance. And thanks again to everyone for the encouragement and support.
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Saint Clair CH 3: Siren
"Hotel California" softly whispered around her. It had always been a favorite, even before she'd become lost. She knew it was reaching out, calling in the darkness.
She extended one tattoo covered hand out and tapped the music down just a hair. Had to get the sounds balanced, layered just right. The music. The engine. The sound of the rig's tires humming on the road. It had to be perfect.
She'd planned on trading in the old Kenworth for a new rig, but when she tested the new one, she couldn't hear anything. The sound proofing in the new Kenworth was simply amazing. She'd cut her test drive short, practically sprinting away from the confused "Sales Representative," her suddenly-jittery, screaming, nerves firing like electric shocks until she was miles away, the humming tires and growling engine lulling them back to rest.
Nights like this were perfect. As alone as it was possible to get. Cocooned in her steel shell, protected from the world. The soft, hypnotic song of the truck weaving with the sounds of her precious music, pushing thought, pushing herself, pushing everything away into the blissful dark distance.
She couldn't bring herself to deal with the only discordant note. A stained, faded, crumpled piece of paper on the console that kept nipping at her thoughts. She resolved to throw it away again, for the hundredth, maybe thousandth time. Even though she knew she couldn't.
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"What'd TJ do to get stuck with shit detail?" Swede watched as TJ pulled the Beast out of the parking lot and headed south.
Shannon watch after her for a second. "What shit detail?"
"Looking in on Luther. Old bastard is mean as hell."
"Somebody has to do it and she's the only one that never bitches about it. Asked if she minded doing it, she said it was fine."
Swede shook his head. "Must be a glutton for punishment."
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TJ pulled the Beast partway up the rock and dirt drive in front of the faded little wood cabin, then shut her down. Mae was sitting in her usual chair on the front porch, shelling beans into a pot, barely bothering to look up at TJ.
"He's around the side, Deputy."
"Has he been behaving?"
"No wors'nt than usual. Ornery cuss, but he's stayin' mostly out of trouble." She went right back to concentrating on her beans.
TJ smiled. Mae's surly attitude toward Luther meant everything was right in the universe. If she'd have sounded worried at all, TJ'd have been calling for either back up or an ambulance.
Around the corner of the forest-sheltered cabin, TJ found Luther pulling a last chunk of firewood from the back of his battered old pick-up truck. He tossed it expertly onto a pile and turned toward her as she stepped carefully over the giant sleeping mountain of black fur that was snoring loudly in the middle of the dirt path between the cabin and the outhouse.
He brushed his fingers through his long, tangled grey beard as best he could. "Morning, Sarn't"
"Morning, Luther." TJ glanced back at the enormous dog. "Does he ever move?"
"He must. Something's eating all that damn food I set out for him. Thought he died last week, but he just had himself a gassy spell."
TJ winced. "Glad I missed that."
He turned around, shifted the old roofing hatchet he always kept tucked through his belt, and pulled himself up to sit on the tail gate. "Just finished aging a run yesterday."
TJ pulled herself to sit on the other side of the tailgate. "That so?"
He looked at her slyly from under his bushy eyebrows while he dragged an old milk crate out from behind him and slid it between them. "It is. Tried some pecan char in this one."
He pulled two not-terribly-clean coffee mugs out of the crate, handing her one, then he fished a mason jar full of a brownish liquid out and held it up to the light.
"Looks a little doubtful, Luther."
He grinned showing a panorama of missing teeth. "It does, Sarn't, but somebody has to try it."
She held her mug out while he filled it halfway and waited for him to fill his.
"Fallen comrades."
They each sipped a bit of the moonshine.
"Smoother than it looks. Strong flavor though."
"Maybe I need to cut back on aging it a bit. I'll mix a little more 'raw' into this and it'll be fine."
"Yeah, I think that'd work. Beats all hell out of that vanilla and orange peel shit."
Luther looked down at his feet. "Don't wanna talk about that. Mortifyin', that's what that was. Mae loves the shit though."
TJ shuddered. "Good Lord."
They sat for a minute looking into the trees, watching leaves rustle a bit in the light breeze, sipping quietly.
"Everything going good with you, Sarn't? I worry some, what with you hangin' out with jarheads and chicken chokers."
TJ stifled a chuckle at the crude references to Shannon's Marine Corps service and especially the 101
st
Air Assault Division that Swede had been with when he was in. Luther just couldn't get past that.
"Swede was young, he needed the money." She paused. "We all make mistakes."
"Nobody's that desperate. He always was a damn good lookin' boy. Could always have turned tricks at a truck stop. More respectable."
TJ shook her head. Luther got along fine with the Vietnamese couple in town, but Swede had obviously done the unforgiveable. "We should be a little more accepting of our lesser brethren, Luther. Even if they associate with rotor heads."
"Ain't happenin." He took another sip. "I hear you gotta start attendin' some board meetings."
"Yeah, kinda strange. I guess the board wanted somebody from the Department at the meetings. I figured Shannon would do it, but he said something about them asking for me."
"Shannon's been making noise about retiring for a while. I hear Harlan brought your name up, thinks you ought to attend some meetings, see if you would work as Sheriff someday. Shocked the pure hell out of some of the church-goin' members, but they kept their mouths shut."
"Harlan?" TJ tried to hide her own shock.
"Yep. Said how you dealt with that Angie stuff showed how you handled pressure."
"Tammi took her down, not me."
"But you figured it out, got everyone away from the river. 'Sides, everyone knows you 'n Tammi are a package deal. He also said something about knowing you had discretion and empathy."
"How'd you hear all this?"
"Mae goes and sits in when they have their meetings. Says it's her 'civic duty.' I think it really just gives her an excuse to dress up some once in a while. Even buys herself hats to wear at the meetings."
"Harlan." TJ mused, more to herself than to Luther.
"Yeah. He seems a little stiff necked most of the time, but he's just trying to live down his blood, ya know."
"Hadn't heard."
"You know that song 'Long Line of Losers?' That's his family. Drunks, losers, not even very smart ones. His older brother's in the state penitentiary, armed robbery of a gas station. Didn't even get any damn money. His grandfather died in prison. His Dad drunk himself to death, 'bout 45 years old. His mom ran off with a trucker when Harlan was fifteen. Boy thought he was cursed. Thought if he did one bad thing, he'd fall into the same hole. Started hitting church every day, didn't date, didn't drink, didn't do anything. He coulda turned into a real self-righteous prick. Ellie's the best damn thing coulda happened to him."
"They seem good together."