Holding on to Nothing Read online

Page 2


  During the fourth song, he watched, mesmerized, as Lucy’s hips snaked this way and that through the crowd toward the band. She had a small tray in her hands, on which rested five shot glasses, full of what looked tantalizingly like whiskey. She waited at the left side of the stage a few feet from Jeptha until the song ended.

  “Hey,” she said after they wound the song to a half-hearted close. “It’s Jeptha, right? Deanna’s brother?”

  “Unfortunately.”

  “You said it, not me,” she said, her eyebrow raised. “Judy told me to bring these over. Said y’all couldn’t sound any worse drunk than you did sober.”

  Jeptha winced. “I was hoping y’all couldn’t hear that,” he said, passing out shots to Cody and the other guys. He nodded at the tray. “Who’s that one for?”

  “Me, I think.”

  “You get to drink on the job?”

  “You are.” She wrinkled her nose at him and straightened her shoulders, clearly annoyed. Jeptha felt like a fool. “Besides, Judy said I needed to loosen up, get some better tips.”

  “You look to be doing all right to me.”

  “If you count slaps on the ass as tips, then yeah, I’m rich as hell. Cheers,” she said and tipped the shot down her throat. In his hurry to keep up with her, a few drops of whiskey went down the wrong pipe, and he coughed so hard tears welled in the corners of his eyes.

  Lucy cocked her head at him, a teasing smile on her lips. Jeptha’s insides fizzed with a longing so fierce he felt it in his fingertips. “I’ll tell Judy to make the next one a lemon drop,” she said.

  “Hey, that ain’t nice,” he said to her, but in his head he was thinking, Do it again. Please, God, do it again.

  All trace of teasing dropped off Lucy’s face, and she nodded seriously. “You’ll be great. I heard you play at church back when.”

  “You did?”

  “Yep. Besides, if you get nervous, imagine all these people naked. Not me, though. I want no part of that, thank you.”

  It was the longest conversation Jeptha had ever had with Lucy. She walked away as Jeptha tried and failed to keep his mind off the much-nourished fantasy of her naked. Finally, he shook his head and tore his gaze away. He nodded thanks to Judy, who mouthed, “For what?” followed by the tiniest, coolest of smiles. He relaxed under the influence of the whiskey and the image of a naked Delnor Gilliam tapping his foot against the floor, his gray, straggly beard bouncing off his belly in time to the music. He nodded at Cody, ready to play again.

  The next forty-five minutes belonged to Jeptha in a way that no other moment in his life had. He was on fire, ready to take on the devil at any minute. His band was the first to notice. They kept punting solos his way on three different songs that had never had solos before. The crowd quieted to listen, roaring to cheer him on when his solos ended. But Jeptha only had eyes for his mandolin and for Lucy. He stumbled only once in his playing, when he looked up from a complex part and didn’t spot her anywhere in the crowd. His hands momentarily ceased all movement until he saw the bathroom door open and Lucy stood in the hall watching him play for a minute. The light glowed off her hair and the sheen of sweat on her nose. He picked right up playing again, joy coursing through him and out his fingertips.

  When their set ended, Jeptha bounded off the stage, mandolin in hand, pushing through the crowd until he stood in front of Lucy, his body bouncing with the energy of a set well-played.

  “You were amazing!” she said, her smile huge, well past polite. Jeptha could tell she meant it. He had to grip his mandolin with both hands to keep from crushing her to him, sweaty t-shirt and all.

  “You don’t have to say that.”

  “I’m not saying it because I have to; I’m saying it because it’s true,” she said, her fingers toying with a wisp of hair that hung over her shoulder.

  Jeptha had joined the band because Cody had promised him they’d rarely practice and there might be groupies. No practice and the possibility of sex? Jeptha was in. But he had never expected the girl in thrall to be the one he’d been in love with since he was sixteen.

  No one had ever looked at him like Lucy did then—like she was a kid spying the newest Christmas toy for the first time. He flashed to his mother’s face, searching for one memory where she looked at him like he was something special. None surfaced. Rather, her face was lined with the disappointments of having married a man who couldn’t stop being mean long enough to direct a little bit of his paycheck toward the upbringing of his kids rather than to alcohol and drugs and gas for the many affairs he conducted across the county. His mother had never had the time or the inclination to shower admiration on her children. If Jeptha or his siblings had demonstrated any talents, they were more likely to be squashed as a dangerous rebellion against the Taylor norm. For generations, his family had worked as hard as they could at doing as little as possible outside of making moonshine, stealing cars, and collecting as much social security as they could con the government into giving them. Jeptha’s grandfather had been arrested more times than anyone could count, and his father only slightly less. If there was a break-in, or a bar fight, or a drunken accident on the road, everyone in town expected a Taylor to be involved. So far, no Taylor had killed a person, but it wasn’t for lack of trying. His father had been so drunk the day he had tried to kill Jeptha’s grandfather that all six shots he’d fired had missed the old man, who stood stock still, as if getting shot at happened every day. When his dad had thrown the gun away in disgust, the old man shook his head and walked back into the house to finish his drink.

  Jeptha’s mom had married in and tried for the first few years to make the future something other than an unedited rewrite of the past. However, by the time Jeptha was born, her spirit had been worn to a nub and her skin to an ever-present mottled green sheen in trying to fight against her husband, and she had come to learn that putting her head down and getting through each day was best for everyone. It was no way to be happy, but it was a sure way to survive. The only thing she wouldn’t concede was church—there was no sin so great that church on Sunday couldn’t atone for it.

  Even though the church ladies like Mrs. Slocum were nice to him, Jeptha had long understood it was only because it was their Christian duty to do so. He’d been ten when he snuck out of the sanctuary one Sunday and down into the fellowship hall where the church ladies were preparing the after-service snack. There, hidden under a card table covered in a floral paper tablecloth eating a stolen donut, he had heard Mrs. Gilliam whisper to Mrs. Slocum, “Them Taylors now, they is as direct a rebuttal of that evolution nonsense as anything Pastor Terrance says. He is mean as a snake like his dad and his dad before him and, bless her heart, she’s dumb as a bag of rocks. Them kids don’t seem no better. Ain’t a one of them evolving.”

  Mrs. Slocum had hushed her quickly, but not before Jeptha’s cheeks flared with the heat of shame. He was suddenly aware that other families weren’t like his. He understood the looks and whispered conversations when his dad walked into a store; recognized that near-weekly visits from the sheriff weren’t the norm for other families; and saw with sudden and painful clarity why the kids laughed even harder than usual when he stumbled over a word in reading.

  Everything changed in that moment. No matter what he did, he’d always be a Taylor. He’d become a man then, huddled under that card table. He sometimes wished it had made him a different kind of one. But if he was going to be a Taylor no matter what he did, he’d quickly decided he might as well enjoy the reputation. He’d stopped trying in school, dropped out as soon as he could, and got his own visits from the sheriff. He’d gone to church with his mom until he was seventeen, but when she died of lung cancer that summer, he’d looked around during the funeral service and realized that no one much cared if he came to church anymore, nor did they much want him there. It was much easier to hate the sin and love the sinner when he wasn’t standing among you every week. For the last five years, he’d worked only when he had to, drunk as much
as he could afford, and took advantage of the loose morals of any number of girls named Chastity and Honor. He reckoned he had been as happy as any Taylor could expect to be. But now, drinking in the look on Lucy’s face that made him remember his name was Jeptha, not just Taylor, his sweaty fingers cradling the neck of his mandolin in the way his hand wanted to be holding the back of her neck, he understood for the first time in his life the value of giving a damn.

  “Jeptha?” Lucy said, touching his arm lightly.

  “Oh, God. Sorry. I … I guess I spaced out for a second.” He blushed, embarrassed to think how he must have looked.

  “It’s all right. Judy wanted me to ask if y’all want another round?”

  “She buying again?”

  Lucy nodded. “On the house.”

  “I’d be a damn fool to say no to that.”

  “I’ll tell her you’re not a fool then,” Lucy said, and walked toward the bar.

  “Lucy! Hey, Lucy,” Jeptha yelled until she turned to him. “Only if you have one too.”

  She weaved her way back to him and stood on her tiptoes, her lips lingering by his ear. “I’ll tell you one thing I’m not, Jeptha Taylor, and that’s a fool,” she whispered.

  She walked to the bar, not looking back once. Jeptha stood stock still, his face on fire with the recent nearness of her touch. A second, a minute, a day later—Jeptha wasn’t sure—Delnor Gilliam tapped him on the elbow. “Hey, ain’t you gonna get up there and play with them boys no more?”

  THERE’D BEEN SEVERAL more shots after that second one. At the end of the last set, when he saw Lucy walk out the back door, looking at him before staggering against the doorframe, he knew this was his last chance before she left his life for good. He followed her out and kissed her before either of them had a chance to say anything. To his surprise, she kissed him back. What started as a drunken whim quickly grew too heated for the wall of a bar. They stumble-kissed their way to his car, where he clawed open the door and followed her into the back seat. By the time he got there, he was too drunk and too excited to listen to the quiet voice in his head wondering if drunken sex with Lucy Kilgore was a good idea.

  After a few minutes of awkward tangling in which his boots caught in the straps of his rifle’s case, he sat firmly in one seat and slid Lucy onto his lap, pulling her shirt off as she undid the five tiny buttons on his fly with one strong pull and shimmied his pants down. Her mouth tasted like hot whiskey and fried food, and all he wanted to do was kiss her forever. And get her skirt hiked up. He had never done anything in this back seat that felt remotely as good as this did. Jeptha’s mind flashed to the fire at Avery’s place and the way it had leapt from wire to wire and finally exploded into flame. He gripped the headrest of the seat in front of him and yelled into Lucy’s hair. As he caught his breath, he bowed his head against her chest, suddenly aware of the sweat and the silence and the fact that the small, perfect breasts moving up and down in front of him belonged to Lucy Kilgore.

  “Wow,” he whispered.

  “Did you …” Her voice trailed off as she pulled back and glanced down to where her denim skirt lapped against his belly.

  “Yeah.”

  “Oh.” Lucy widened her legs, their sweat-slick skin unsticking with a smack, and heaved herself over to the other seat. She groped around underneath Jeptha’s feet for her shirt.

  Jeptha’s heart, still thumping with joy, came to a sudden, deflated halt. But he forged on. As he hitched his pants up onto his hips and elbowed his way back into his shirt, he took a deep breath and asked, “Do you want to go get something to eat? Maybe Waffle House?”

  “I’m at work, remember? I gotta get back in there and clean up.”

  “Oh, right.”

  Lucy suddenly bolted toward the door, her hand scrabbling desperately for the handle. She wrenched it open and dry-heaved. Jeptha stared. Finally, he reached out his hand and rubbed her back in a way that he suspected was more awkward than comforting.

  “Are you okay?” he asked.

  “No. I shouldn’t have had so much to drink. I feel like shit,” she said, pulling her head back into the car and closing her eyes.

  “I’m sorry,” he said. He wasn’t, though, not really. He didn’t want her throwing up, of course, but if drinking had got her in his car, it seemed worth it to him.

  “I should go. Judy’ll be wondering what happened to me. My last day’s not for a few more weeks.”

  “I heard you’re moving,” he said.

  She nodded as she extended her leg into the air to pull on her red cowboy boot. He watched as her tanned calf slipped into the shaft with a sudden pop as her heel slid into place. He wanted to run his hand up her leg, feel that smooth skin against his fingertips, all the way up to the fringe of her skirt. He shook his head and shifted in his seat.

  “Can I see you? You know, sometime?” he asked. All the drunken confidence of fifteen minutes ago had fizzled, leaving his voice breaking like he was in fourth grade.

  “I work here. You play here. You’ll see me.”

  “I meant for, like, a date.”

  “Jeptha, I’ve got to go. I can’t talk about this now. I’ll see you later, okay?”

  “I can drive you around front,” Jeptha offered. He knew it was ridicu lous as soon as it was out of his mouth, but he couldn’t help it. He wanted as much time with her as he could get.

  “It’s fine. I can go in this door. Might be better if you went around the front though.”

  She got out of the car and leaned down to the window. “Bye, Jeptha.”

  She didn’t look back at him as she walked away this time, but unlike an hour before, when her whisper still shivered within him, Jeptha sensed no promise in her refusal to turn around. The sight of her shuffling back toward the bar—her body bathed in a sickly orange glow from the parking lot lights, her hair a mess of tangles in the back from where he’d run his hands through it, and her denim skirt hanging hunker-jawed off her hips—produced in Jeptha only a deep sense of sadness.

  If someone had told him that he would have sex with Lucy Kilgore and feel worse after the fact than before, he’d have called that man a liar. And yet, here he was, having been closer to her than ever before and somehow, he felt farther away from getting her than at any point in his life.

  2

  “DAMN. DAMN. DAMN,” LUCY said, punctuating the words with elbow-jarring smacks of her palm against the rim of the porcelain tub on which she sat. She stared at the tidy collection of plastic wands arrayed on the sink’s edge and watched as, one after another, the line indicating the pregnancy test had worked grew a faint twin, both lines pink and parallel in their certainty that her life, never so great to start with, was now officially ruined.

  Until the fourth test turned pink, she hoped the positives were the result of Clear Blues gone clear wrong. As wrong as the decision—if one could call it that—she had made three weeks ago to have sex with Jeptha Taylor. Whiskey had obliterated every objection she ordinarily would have had, scouring out the institutional memory everyone in town was born with where it concerned the Taylors. She’d forgotten all about the rumors of the girls he’d slept with; how he’d dropped out of school; how he had no parents (not that she could hold that against him, not having any herself) and spent his days drunk and wild. She even, for a moment, forgot that it had been his dad whom everyone first suspected when her parents had been killed by a drunk driver when she was only thirteen. Even after the trucker—so drunk he would maintain for years afterward that it “wasn’t me, officer, it was my pig”—came forward, no one quite believed that Jimmy Taylor wasn’t the real culprit. But that night, drunk on whiskey and full of an addled sort of awe at how good Jeptha’s mandolin playing was, every single one of those reasons had escaped her mind, like chickens flying the coop.

  She had spent the next three weeks alternately berating herself and praying, hoping contrition and begging would be enough to spare her the consequences of not only sleeping with Jeptha Taylor, but doing it
without a condom. Staring at the tests in front of her, she knew with certainty that God, that old Peeping Tom, figured any girl who had sex in the back seat of a car deserved to get pregnant—even He could see that the sex back there wasn’t that great.

  She had known Jeptha to say hello to for much of her life. She’d even had a moment or two when she caught his eye and felt something for him—it wasn’t interest, so much as appreciation for his good looks and the hungry way his eyes devoured her. But she had never found herself moved to such wanton behavior until that whiskey-fueled night when she had seen something new in him as he played up on the stage, something haunted and passionate and just plain hot. And, up to a point, the night had been exactly the kind of fun that Lucy never allowed herself to indulge in. Kissing behind the bar, fumbling their way to his car, climbing into the back seat—there had been a certain reckless abandon in that. She remembered a joyful, drunken anticipation, a feeling so novel Lucy had a hard time recognizing it. She gave herself over to it, swept away by the insanity of the moment. It was, she remembered thinking, how people she knew described the feeling of heroin.

  But all the pleasure had been in the recklessness of it. As soon as the sex was over, the wild joy of the moment evaporated as quickly as rain off the summer sidewalk. A creeping sense of dismay stole over her as she tried to catch her breath. In the orange glow of the parking lot lights, staring down at the deep V of their shared bodies, she remembered it was Jeptha Taylor, emphasis on the Taylor, whose stubble heaved against her chest, whose un-condomed penis was shriveling inside her.