Water drips from a faucet. Light bulbs burned out. A fan in the window oscillates. Perry sits, waiting for the rain.
It’s mid-September, and there’s been no rain all summer long. Dry. Grass is brown. Dust blows by. The river is low.
He lights his pipe and blows out the match. A candle burns beside his chair. His coffee cup is empty.
A scraggly beard patched on his face covers scars. Liver spots have been there a long time. He puffs on his pipe and looks at a blank TV screen. It hasn’t been turned on in years. He just looks at the blank picture and mumbles to himself. Track marks on his arm.
Years ago, he says out loud. Years ago, I was wandering around in the desert. Cacti with blooms on them. Tumbleweeds blown across the highway. Prarie dogs. Coyotes. Running in packs. Sleeping under stars with nothing but space. Miles and miles of space, he says. He stops talking and stares at the cracked ceiling.
A truck drives up on his property. His driveway is brown patches of weeds. Some gravel remains. Gray stones, pebbles, crunched by tires. A young man gets out. He carries a brown grocery bag filled with bread, milk, beer, peanut butter, needles, and smack. He walks up to the door and enters without knocking.
Dad. Dad? He raises his voice. Brought your weekly supply. Dad? He goes to the back room where he sees his father in deep thought. Perhaps praying. Am I interrupting you? Perry looks over at the boy and shakes his head. I brought you some Lone Star. He tosses a beer to the old man. Some groceries. And this. He pulls out a baggy filled with heroin. Thought you might like this. Tim says. I’ll cook some up for you.
It can wait, the old man says. It can wait.
Sure?
Yeah. Sit down. Take a squat.
There is not another chair. Tim sits Indian style on the dirty floor. He sees a mouse in a trap. It’s rotting away. The boy leaves it on the floor.
So, I was thinking dad. I might move out here to the trailer with you. Would you like that?
Who you running from?
The young man looks at him. I don’t run from people pop. They run from me. The two of them laugh. I figured you might like the company. I’ll fix the place up. Figured after this dose we could clean up a bit. What do you say?
I want to go back to the desert. Wear my boots again. Sleep under stars.
What do you want me to do, dad?
Drop me off in New Mexico. There’s a diner there on Route 40.
Dad. There’s several diners on Route 40.
Any one of them will do. I’ll get a meal there and then hike into the desert.
That’s a long walk pop.
Yeah. I’m ready to die.
The two of them looked outside at Tim’s truck. Rusted. Beat up. A crack in the windshield.
Think it’ll get us there? The father asks.
Is that what you want? Tim responds. The old man nodded.
Do you remember your mom?
Yeah. Yeah, dad. I do.
She was a looker. Shame she left us.
I thought we left her.
Maybe. Is that the way it went down?
Tim nodded. And now you want to leave me. He laughed. Where’s your stuff? Perry points to the back room.
Got some underwear and shirts, he said. Can we get some cowboy boots?
Sure.
I’d like to die in them.
All this talk of death.
I’ve been dying for years. Just want to make it official. Have my body eaten up by coyotes and prarie dogs.
Can do pop. Can do. He started to cook up a fix for the old man.
No, Perry told him. I want to see everything on this drive.
You’ll go crazy dad. I’m not dropping you off in the desert to kick junk.
It’s best. I’m ready. You got peanut butter? The kid nods. Folds his bottom lip.
Good. I like that.