She chased him all over America. Always a couple of steps behind. She could smell him. That aftershave he wore, High Karate, marked a trail through Arizona, New Mexico, into Texas. He couldn’t shake her.
Motel receipts. Candy bar wrappers. Used tubes of red lipstick whittled down. An eyelash brush. A map inside a glovebox wadded up in a ball. A Gatorade bottle. Sleeping with the front seat of an old Ford leaning back. Money had come and gone.
The young woman started selling things. Books she no longer wanted to read. Records she couldn’t listen to. Her soul, which was badly damaged. Parking in truck stops and knocking on cabs for business propositions. Wearing halter tops and tight jeans. An old red wig to try and disguise who she really was. Only God knew for sure.
He was running. Running away from himself. Terrified of what he really was. A middle-aged man who messed up every chance he got. Every opportunity slipped through his hands. Even easy jobs. Work that required no thought or skill would disappear in a week’s time. Gas station attendant, grocery bagger, bartending gigs, all gone because of disagreements with management. Like he said to his boss at the Piggly Wiggly, I’m going out for lunch. Maybe I’ll be back. Maybe not.
He left no forwarding address. Just took off after an hour of stocking shelves only to find he was on the streets again. Cold. No money. A book bag filled with stories he’d written by hand. She used to read them out loud, correcting his grammar and spelling. Naked bodies under blankets. He thanked her with a kiss.
But, the kind corrections became mean. Criticism was given. Non-constructive words came from her mouth. Mean insults. You’ll never be anything, she told him. Living off dreams, she said. When are you going to get real?
And so, in the middle of the night, in the middle of the week during the middle of November, he took off. Left her behind. Wasn’t until morning she realized he was gone.
At first, the woman was happy he’d left. She was tired of feeding two mouths. Fed up with paying bills. The more she thought about it, the angrier she became.
Why should he have all the fun? She asked herself. How come he gets to run away?
So, she loaded up the sedan and took off to find him. Did she love him? Not particularly. Did she care? Not really.