Shading his eyes, he watched this swollen new version of the skinny Sandy of his past bustle around the luggage below him, laughing. Even her breath seemed to have gained weight, husking out of her throat with an effort. Swollen. Her neck where she had rubbed it, her wrists, her back, all swollen. But her weight actually rode lightly, defiantly, like a chip on her shoulder.
M’kehla’s Great Danes discovered her in the yard and came barking. Sandy sliced at them with her pink plastic handbag. “Get away from me, you big fuckers. You smell that other mutt on my wheels? You want the same treatment? Damn, they are big, aren’t they? Get them back, can’t you?”
“Their big is worse than their bite,” he told her and shouted at the dogs to go home to their bus. They paid no attention.
“What the shit, Deboree?” She sliced and swung. “Can’t you get your animals to mind?”
“They aren’t mine,” he explained over the din. “M’kehla left them here while he went gallivantin’ to Woodstock with everybody else.”
“Goddamn you fuckers,
The ravens were flying again. The sun was still slicing a way through the impacted smoke. The radio was playing “Good Vibrations” by The Beach Boys. Back in the yard below, at her luggage, Sandy was humming along, her hysteria calmed by her victory over the dogs. She found the bag she had been searching for, the smallest in a six-piece set that looked brand-new. She opened it and took out a bottle of pills. Deboree watched as she shook out at least a dozen. She threw the whole handful into her mouth and began digging again into the case for something to wash them down with.
“Ol’ Thandy’th been platheth and theen thingth thinth Mexico,” she told him, trying to keep all the pills in her mouth and bring him up to date at the same time. Seen lots of water under the bridges, she let him know, sometimes too much. Bridges washed out. Washed out herself a time or two, she told him. Got pretty mucked up. Even locked up. But with the help of some ritzy doctors and her rich daddy, she’d finally got bailed out and got set up being half owner of a bar in San Juan Capistrano; then become a drunk, then a junkie, then a blues singer nonprofessional; found Jesus, and Love, and Another Husband—“Minithter of the Univerthal Church of Latterday Thonthabitcheth!”—then got p.g., got an abortion, got disowned by her family, and got divorced; then got depressed, as he could well understand, and put on a little weight, as he could see; then—Sunday,
“A plathe to read and write and take a few barbth to mellow out,” she said through the pills.
“A few!” he said, remembering her old barbiturate habit. “That’s no ‘few.’ “ The thought of having more than one carcass to dispose of alarmed him finally into protest. “Damn you, Sandy, if you up and O.D. on me now, so help me—”
She held up her hand. “Vitamin theeth. Croth my heart.” Pawing through a boil of lingerie, she at last had found the silver flask she had been seeking. She unscrewed the lid and threw back her head. He watched her neck heave as the pills washed down. She wiped her mouth with her forearm and laughed up at him.
“Don’t worry, Granny,” she said. “Just some innocent little vitamins. Even the dandy little Sandy of old never took
He pointed, and she went humming off to the corner of the barn. The big dogs came to the door of their bus and growled after her. Deboree watched as she ducked under the clothesline and turned the corner. He heard the door slam behind her.