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Venom and the River




  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Venom and the River: A Novel of Pepin

  Part One

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  Part Two

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  10.

  11.

  12.

  13.

  Part Three

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  10.

  11.

  12.

  Part Four

  1.

  2.

  Venom and the River: A Novel of Pepin

  By Marsha Qualey

  Copyright 2013 by Marsha Qualey

  Cover Copyright 2013 by Ginny Glass and Untreed Reads Publishing

  The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright, and has granted permission to the publisher to enforce said copyright on their behalf.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold, reproduced or transmitted by any means in any form or given away to other people without specific permission from the author and/or publisher. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to the living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  http://www.untreedreads.com

  Venom and the River: A Novel of Pepin

  Marsha Qualey

  Part One

  1.

  Saturday night, and people were at home in all three of the houses that faced the park on Hadley Street. In the bungalow on the north corner a teenaged boy stood at a piano and banged on the keys with a fist. One door over, a woman sat in a red leather chair and watched television as she knit a small pink sweater. And in the carefully restored Queen Anne on the south corner a couple made love on a sofa as a kitten nosed and pawed through the clothing on the floor.

  Leigh Burton was aware of none of it, though she sat a short distance away in her car, which idled at the curb on Hadley Street. Her eyes were fixed on the lights going out in the lone house she could see on the far side of the park.

  One by one the windows of the large house went dark. Just as the last light blinked off, the boy at the piano swatted sheet music to the floor, the knitter set down her needles and answered the phone, the kitten pounced on one of the naked lovers, and in the aging Toyota idling at the curb on Hadley Street, Leigh Burton sighed and dropped her head onto the steering wheel for a moment, then she sat erect and shifted the car into gear.

  *

  There were only a few vehicles parked at the River View Motel. The motel sign blinked: $39.50. $39.50. $39.50.

  A door on the second floor of the motel opened noisily, and a man stepped out and moved to the end of the balcony. There was a yellow flash, then the red glow of a burning cigarette.

  Leigh stepped out of her car, turned, and reached back in for a small bag on the passenger seat.

  “Nice ass, honey,” the smoker said. “Come on up. My wife and I like it with a third.”

  Leigh straightened and looked across the parking lot. More neon flashed: Dee’s Café. Dee’s Café. Dee’s Café. She tossed the bag back onto the seat and slammed the car door and walked away from the motel. The smoker laughed.

  Dee’s Cafe was noisy, bright, and crowded. A long bar stretched along the far wall. Leigh paused, plotting a route that would quickly get her past the eyes that had fixed on her the moment she’d appeared in the doorway.

  Early Dylan blasted from the jukebox as she moved briskly past the booths and tables and around drinkers watching the action at a pool table. The bartender who took her order was a fit middle-aged woman with graying twists. Her large breasts tumbled loosely under a sleeveless plaid shirt as she moved this way and that, reaching for a glass, the bottle, ice. Leigh set a bill on the bar. “Are you Dee?” Then she pointed to another bartender—a blond, pretty, younger woman who was leaning on the bar and talking quietly with a very tan, weather-worn man perched on the edge of the end stool. “Or is that Dee?”

  The woman took the money and tapped her chest with an index finger. “Dee,” she said. She pointed to the blonde woman. “Kate.” Then she turned to another customer as she set down change that she’d pulled from the pocket of her short green apron.

  Dylan finished singing about the big brass bed. Leigh looked into the mirror behind the bar and saw that a few pairs of eyes were still staring at her. She raised her glass in greeting, and the eyes turned away.

  Two young guys and a woman at the pool table took turns making tricky shots. Leigh watched in the mirror, quickly figuring out that there was no real game in progress, just some showboating. Between shots the pool players each turned and watched her watching, stares meeting over the reflection of well-ordered bottles.

  The woman at the pool table smiled, tipped her head, and raised an eyebrow as she lifted her cue. Join us?

  The men—boys, really—rested on the edge of the table, punched each other, and giggled.

  Leigh sipped Scotch. It was the second time in not even five minutes that she’d gotten an invitation. Maybe there was a sign taped to her back or forehead: Yes, I’m alone, and yes, it’s been too long since the last time.

  Leigh swiveled her stool from the mirror so she was face-to-face with the real thing. She shook her head. The friendly woman shrugged, turned back to the table, and made a shot that earned loud applause from nearly everyone in the café.

  The woman was securely middle-aged, but she didn’t act or look like the mother of the two man-boys. A family friend? Or maybe the town’s good-time gal, the one who had a reputation for educating Pepin’s young men. When the woman pushed up the sleeves of her tight v-neck sweater, Leigh spotted large diamonds on both ring fingers. A stepmother, maybe. A stepmother out for beer and pool with her new husband’s boys, enjoying a little bit of flirty fun that might take a turn toward family trouble. “Careful, girl,” Leigh whispered.

  “Here on pilgrimage?”

  Leigh drained her Scotch. “Sorry?”

  Dee’s very firm dark brown biceps tightened and relaxed as she wiped the bar. She set down her towel. “I’m guessing that you’re a little girl who’s come to visit the big river. I was one myself once, making that first trip to the holy land. Fell in love with the place, and I’ve been here ever since.”

  Leigh rattled the ice in her glass. “A little girl? Clearly not. I’m five-nine and I’m forty-seven.”

  Dee looked at her for a moment before nodding. “Doesn’t matter. You’re welcome here, and the next one is on the house.”

  Before Leigh could refuse or say thank-you, Dee pushed the bottle toward her and moved away. What the hell, Leigh thought. She poured.

  “I’m here…” she called out. Heads turned. She studied the glistening mix of ice and liquid in her glass, then drank deeply.

  Dee returned and cocked her head.

  “The vice president,” Leigh said. “His new secretary. Sort of.”

  “Sort of?”

  “His papers and things. He’s promised them to the state historical society and he’s trying to get th
em in order. He’s hired me to help.”

  Dee’s smiled faded. She glanced toward the other bartender and the tan man, who were both now staring at Leigh.

  “Name’s Leigh, right?” Dee said as she reclaimed the bottle.

  “Yes. How did you know?”

  “Word’s gotten around. Apparently the vice-president’s pretty excited about your arrival. We never see him down here, but don’t let that keep you away.”

  Leigh cupped the glass in her hands; in spite of the spoken welcome, she was suddenly certain Dee was regretting the free drink.

  A woman’s laugh rippled and soared. Leigh finished her Scotch, set the glass on the bar, shouldered her purse, and walked toward the door, where she turned and glanced back.

  Dee was whispering to the woman at the pool table, who had her eyes fixed on Leigh while her hand rubbed the lower back of one of the young guys. When she noticed Leigh looking she once again lifted her cue. The boy nuzzled her neck as she shouted, “Welcome to Pepin!”

  *

  Two drinks in ten minutes. What the hell was that supposed to prove? Leigh shook her head as she walked out of the motel bathroom. She put the sleeping pill on her tongue and chased it with water. There was a brief pinch of worry when she pictured the alcohol mixing with the pill, then she shrugged away the thought and again tipped the glass to her lips. A few drops dribbled on her T-shirt as she walked, drank, and glanced down at the strip of light that suddenly spilled across the floor from the narrow gap below the thin door that separated her motel room from the adjacent one.

  Her neighbor’s hall door slammed shut, and immediately something landed heavily against the hollow separating door. “At last!” a man said.

  Leigh paused, looked at the door, waited for more.

  There was another thump, then the sound of something or someone sliding down to the floor.

  “What if someone saw us?” said a woman. “Smack in the middle of town!”

  The man mumbled.

  “I don’t care what lie you told the desk clerk,” the woman said. “Mother will know what I’ve been doing. She’ll smell it on me.”

  More mumbling.

  “Oh god, yes,” said the woman. “We must be crazy. Quick, be quick.”

  “Mother will know,” Leigh whispered. She set her water glass on the night stand, sat on the edge of the bed, and pulled her legs into her arms. Lovers in room 213. What was the story? She leaned forward to listen, and the shift in weight nearly spilled her from the soft mattress onto the floor. She pushed out a leg to catch herself just as the man and woman next door laughed and moved deeper into their room.

  As 213 quieted, Leigh crawled under the covers of her bed and opened her current reading. The book mark fell onto her lap: Emily’s prom picture. It was a solo shot—no sign whatsoever of the date, some boy named Aaron. Not that Emily had told her the boy’s name or even told her she was going to the dance. Not that Emily had sent the picture. All Leigh knew about the night, the date, and the boy was courtesy of Emily’s new stepmother, who had attached the photo to one of her cheery monthly emails that always carried the same subject header: “Update from Columbia, SC!”

  She ran her fingers over the edge of the photo. “Beautiful girl,” she whispered, studying the salon-styled hair, the blue dress, the confident smile. “My beautiful girl.”

  Two pages, then the sleeping pill landed, and Leigh’s head sank heavily. She tucked the photo into the book and set that on the table. She reached for the light and nearly knocked the lamp over before finding the small knob and turning it off.

  The lovemaking next door became suddenly audible and then quickly reached a howling climax. That was quick, thought Leigh. And just as she melted into sleep, she touched her fingers to her lips and blew the lovers a kiss, wishing them well.

  2.

  Bell does not work. Please knock; we’ll hear you.

  Leigh smiled at the handwritten message that was taped over the doorbell button. An encouraging sign, that semi-colon. Nice to be going to work for once in a place where even minor household messages involved thoughtful punctuation.

  She lifted and dropped the tarnished heart-shaped door knocker, then turned and looked across the expansive yard that bordered the park on Hadley Street. She instinctively noted and mapped the three houses opposite, the two red-x’d elms at either end of the block, a majestic, late-blooming white lilac that shaded a square sandbox, and the dense copse that curved like a green half-moon from beyond the park’s sad playground to the edge of the house where she stood.

  A woman and child walked into the playground. The woman waited while the girl skipped from swing to swing to swing, pushing the flat green boards into motion one by one. When she reached the slide she sat for a moment on the lip before falling back with her thin, bare arms raised above her head.

  Leigh smiled, feeling the heat of the sun-soaked metal and the contagious, drowsy torpor of long school-free days. She checked the date on her watch. Emily’s summer vacation started tomorrow. Some vacation: riding camp, mission trip to Mexico, tennis camp, a one-week SAT prep program, three weeks at Hilton Head with the newly blended family and the stepmother’s parents.

  I can’t come to Minnesota. There just isn’t time.

  The entire summer? Not one goddam long weekend the whole summer?

  Well forgive me for having a life. Maybe next year, okay? I promise I’ll visit whatever new hiding place you’ve found. And you should watch your language, Mother.

  Leigh turned angrily toward the door and banged the knocker down on the dark wood that was striped with peeling yellow varnish. Ten o’clock, he’d told her ten o’clock so why didn’t anyone answer? She looked over her shoulder at her car parked on the edge of the circular crushed-stone driveway. A bit of rust. Some dents. One hundred and nine thousand miles, which wasn’t that much, really. It was a Toyota, after all. Plenty of life left in it, more than enough for a quick, no-turning-back-now drive to South Carolina for an unannounced visit. If they didn’t open this door in ten seconds, maybe that’s what she’d do. To hell with the job, the money, Mr. Doesn’t-answer-his-door Vice-President.

  Suddenly the girl in the park slid down onto the sand at the bottom of the slide, picked herself up, and tore toward her mother. What happened? Leigh wondered. What fright or worry or command or desire made her run like that?

  What had she desired at that age? What did she want now?

  Leigh stared at the mother and child hugging and knew the answer: to be there, ready, when Emily came running.

  Behind her, locks and bolts clicked and slid into place. “Just a sec!” a woman shouted. “It’s kind of stuck. Would you mind kicking it down at the bottom right corner?”

  Leigh kicked.

  A young pregnant woman scowled at the door as it swung open. A fat baby rested on her hip. She stroked its back with her free hand and said, “You’ll have to get used to things not working. He has so much money, you know? But he won’t fix things. Anyway, you’ll want to use the kitchen door when you come and go. I’ll show you where that is. Sorry you had to wait. I heard the knocking the first time, but I was feeding the baby and he’s just getting used to drinking out of a bottle instead of me and I didn’t want to interrupt him. Come on in, Terry’s all ready for you. He’s pretty excited.”

  “I’m Leigh Burton.”

  “I figured you were. We’re not expecting anyone else. I’m Geneva, his cook and whatever.” She smiled. “Not that sort of whatever, okay?” She motioned Leigh in with her head, then pushed the door closed with her foot, giving it a second, harder shove with her free hip to put it securely in place. “And neither baby’s his, okay? The one in my arms or the one due to slide out in October. Neither one—no matter what you might hear from anyone in town. That would be something for you to put in his memoirs, though, wouldn’t it? Probably worth a whole chapter: The ancient statesman and his fertile young wench.”

  Leigh hoped her face showed nothing. “I’m here to help with
his papers, not a memoir.”

  “Good grief, I clean the guy’s bathroom and I change his sheets. He doesn’t hide anything from me.” Geneva shook her head. “I’ll play along if we have to. I guess that’s how it is with a ghostwriter, you can never admit anything.”

  Leigh fixed a smile.

  Geneva rolled her eyes. “I hope you get paid extra for the lying. If you get tired of it, you don’t have to keep it up with me, okay? Like I said, there’s nothing I don’t know.”

  “Then you probably know what room I’ll be using. Should I bring in my suitcase?”

  Geneva shook her head. The baby tilted back and shook his, then giggled and sank against his mother’s arm. “You aren’t staying in the house.”

  Leigh frowned. “The vice president said I’d have a place here.”

  “You’ve got a place all right, but not in the house. I’ll show you later, when Terry and Tucker are napping.” She kissed the curly crown of the baby’s head. “This is Tucker. He’ll be one at the end of next month, the day before Terry turns ninety. Ever met a vice president before?”

  Three, Leigh thought. And two presidents, two first ladies, and one presidential mistress—though the after-hours bar gossip back then always laid heavy odds that the blonde family friend with the low laugh, Texas drawl, and PhD in comparative lit was in fact the book-loving First Lady’s late night companion.

  What would this girl think about that, Leigh wondered. Not that she could share the gossip because Leigh Burton, hack writer for hire and newly arrived in this backwater town in Minnesota, didn’t have several years as a Washington correspondent on her resume and therefore wouldn’t have years of DC facts and gossip and political nuance stored in a well-ordered mental file belonging to an ex-journalist once named Nancy Taylor Lee.

  Leigh said, “I saw Hubert Humphrey when I was little and on a family trip to Minneapolis. Long time ago.”

  It was a nimble and truthful verbal sleight of hand. Geneva brightened. “He was a friend of Terry’s. He’ll want to hear that. But it’ll get him started talking and you can’t let him ramble too long, especially about the sixties.” She shifted the baby to the other hip and headed down a hall. “His memories wear him out.”