From SPR Review: “Love, loss, brotherhood, and purpose clash in a timeless examination of freedom through a drug-addled lens. With a clever and original flourish for simple, unexpected descriptions, the prose hums along at an even clip, occasionally taking time to wax poetic, à la Kerouac, with the urgency in Frank’s mind and movements reminiscent of Sal Paradise, if not Dean Moriarty. Comparisons aside, this book is far from derivative; it is a refreshing homage to beatnik life, telling an accessible story with a familiar lesson – you can’t go home again, and home is wherever you make it.”  

Rolling across the pitch black desert in the station wagon, dust cloud in the rearview glowing taillight-red, giant cacti looming beyond the arc of the headlights like lost soldiers in Pancho Villa’s army, Frank could only shake his head at the turn the evening had taken.

All because of the young girl on his right, her nose full of white powder and her belly full of booze and downers.

But no, that wasn’t really accurate.

What went down was all because of the predatory behavior of two overly entitled white guys with too much money and too few values.

Guys who believed it their right to take what they wanted without concern for the consequences.

But, hey, they weren’t the Hillside Stranglers, as Clayton Cook had so fervently declared.

Frank’s mind switched gears and began working on the thorny problem of what to do now.

“You got some place to go, Evelyn, some place I can take you?”

“No, not really,” Evelyn replied, her jaw set at an angle and her eyes momentarily wide and staring in the glow of the dash lights.

“Whattaya mean, no not really? You haven’t got a home? Come on, I’m just trying to help here.”

“Of course I have a home, pendejo. I share an apartment with my brother Javier.”

There was that ben decko shit again.

“Good, I’ll take you there. But you have to tell me the way. I’m not from around here.”

“Really,” she said, sarcasm dripping from her words like wax from a candle, “I never would have known. Your car is just like the cars in my neighborhood—old and shitty.”

Girl using sarcasm? She must be doing better than he’d thought. “It’s not shitty. It’s reliable. Trustworthy. Just like me. Now tell me how to get to your apartment.”

“No.”

“Excuse me?”

“I stutter or something?”

“Just give me directions.”

“I give you directions out here in the desert, you’ll just forget them by the time we get to Phoenix.”

Frank couldn’t help himself and broke into song: “ By the time I get to Phoenix, she’ll be waiting.”

Evelyn made a face. “You got a permit for that voice? Permit to carry a tune? Think you’re in violation, Jack.”

“Name’s Frank. Give me the directions when we get back to civilization then.”

“Javier finds out I’ve been doing drugs, he’ll slap me around.”

“Your brother beats you?”

“Only if he catches me doing dope. Both our parents are dead and Javier thinks he has to play father to me. Even though he’s younger. I’ve had some trouble with drugs in the past, so I guess he has a right. I can drink as much as I want and he doesn’t say a damn thing, but he finds out I’ve had one taste of coke or a pill or something, he blows his cork.”

“Where would you like me to drop you then?”

“I dunno. Hotel?”

“Got any money?”

“Few bucks.”

“Nice. Sweet. Just fuckin’ dandy. How old are you, Evelyn?”

“Twenty-two.”

“Got ID?” You’ve been a bartender for ten years, you have to ask.

“I need ID to ride in this piece of shit?”

“Never mind. I’ll take your word for it.”

But Jesus, look at her, she looks seventeen.

If that.

He could see the state trooper shining a flashlight in the window at the dangerously young girl with booze on her breath and white powder on the edge of her nostrils. And then the light hits the loaded handgun on the front seat.

Night plinking in the desert, son?

Then the cop shines the light on the face of the driver—a much older man— forty, at least.

Only thirty-six, Frank was thinking as he tossed Larry’s pistol out the car window.

And what, pray tell, is the age of consent in Arizona?

For an answer he got an image of Clayton Cook: “Old enough to bleed, old enough to butcher.”

Pleasant.

“You got any tunes in this car?” Evelyn said, still showing signs of life.

“Radio doesn’t work.”

“Shitty car, like I said. Even the campesinos have a radio.”

Frank jammed on the brakes and the wagon skidded to a halt. “You want to get out and walk?” he said, feeling like what he imagined the father of a teen-ager might feel.

He watched her look out the window at the blackness. Saw a couple pairs of eyes looking back.

Arizona coyotes.

She laughed. A guffaw, a snort and a girlish giggle. “No thanks. I know you won’t leave me, you have kind eyes.”

“Okay, you got me.”

He hit the gas.

Few minutes later, glancing at Evelyn, he could see she was starting to fade again, her eyes getting heavy and her head lolling forward like one of those bobblehead dolls people were putting in their back windows. “You know, Evelyn, your friend Clayton put Tuinals in your drink.”

“Toenails in my drink, ew.”

“No, honey, Tu-i-nals. It’s a barbiturate.”

“Barbershit?”

“Sleeping pills.”

Fuckin’ lumiosos. Now I need a toot.” She stuck her hand in her purse and came out with the coke bag, pinched a wad between thumb and forefinger and sniffed it in.

“Okay, honey, that’s enough for now. Wipe off your nose and give me the coke. We’ll be back in town pretty soon and we can’t have the policia seeing you snort up. Definitely not cool.”

Frank was keeping track of her snorting; determining that she needed a toot about every fifteen minutes just to stay reasonably coherent.

Time to cut her off and hope she passed out.

“Stop calling me honey,” she said, handing over the bag of powder.

“You got it, swee—ah—Evelyn.”

And before too long, miraculous as it seemed at the time, they came upon some lighted streets Frank halfway remembered.

And then, more miracles, they were somehow back in front of the Neon Cactus, the club now looking eerily vacant, surrounding streets empty and clean as if no one had been there for a week.

(To be continued)

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From International Review of Books: “(Frank Ford) wasn’t a saint and wasn’t a hero, but carries (the story) with flying colors by being a regular guy dealing with a dark past, self-doubts, and, perhaps to his surprise, a chivalrous streak…”

Coming into the big house now, the lights in the main room dimmed and atmospheric, Frank was getting that off-kilter vibe again; the feeling that there was something skanky roiling just under the surface of this place.

Cook was standing in front of the stairs giving Frank a look that seemed to be somewhat condescending, like maybe Frank was tracking dirt or dog shit into the hallowed grounds.

Frank had the urge to stop and check his shoes but instead just followed Larry into the back of the house where the bar was. Larry kept turning his head and glaring at him.

The lights from the pool were shining in through the glass doors of the game room. The water looked placid and luxurious in shades of aquamarine. Clayton was at the bar laying out lines on the dark surface. Bryce was at the stereo tuning in the same radio station they’d listened to in the car. Evelyn was sitting on a barstool leaning on her elbows, eyelids drooping.

The way she’d snuggled with Clayton in the car; Frank had begun to have second thoughts about the need to look after her. She gave him a sideways glance, eyes unfocused, as he took a seat at the bar next to her. 

“Where is everybody?” she half slurred, half snapped. “You said we were going to a party.” She looked at Clayton and then down at the lines on the bar top.

“This is a party, Evie,” Clayton said. “Now have yourself a toot and maybe Frank here will be kind enough to fix us all a drink. Maybe something festive, like tequila sunrises or Margaritas. Ever make a zombie, Frank? Frank’s a bartender from Minn-e-so-ta, you know, Evie.” Saying Minnesota with a parody of a Scandinavian accent.

Frank felt Clayton’s little dig. Remark hit him square in the gut, which was already a little queasy and uneasy, from all the booze and spicy food.

But he wasn’t about to show it.

“No,” Frank said, “never mixed a zombie. Served plenty of ’em over the years, though. About half the crowd at closing time, most nights.”

Frank thought it might be better if he just left these people to themselves. Went back to his little dome and tried to get some rest. Long drive ahead of him tomorrow. Would be tough enough as it is, without going round and round with these assholes.

So what the hell, might as well act humble, he thought. Make the drinks and look for an opening to make a graceful exit.

Glancing at Evelyn, he thought she looked a little uncomfortable now.

Could just be the coke, but her recent comment about the lack of party guests had pushed up a red flag.

Frank stepped behind the bar. Clayton gave him a smirk and moved around front, sliding in next to Evelyn. “We’re going to need a few things,” Frank said. “Triple sec, a few limes, salt…

“I think you’ll find everything you need behind the bar,” Clayton said. “I think there are some limes in the mini-fridge.”

Frank had always made a great margarita. Felt strangely good to work up a specialty drink again, like his hands had missed the work. When he was done, he set the sweating glass pitcher on the bar. “Margoes are ready. Come and get ‘em.”

And then to Evelyn: “Are you aware that Clayton here dosed your drink at the Neon Cactus?”

“Hosed my sink?” she slurred.

“No, girl. D-o-s-e-d your d-r-i-n-k,” spelling it out. “What was it you dosed her with, Clayton? Wasn’t an upper, judging by her condition.”

Frank shot Richards an eye laser as Larry sat there staring straight ahead at the wall behind the bar.

“Frank,” Larry said, his voice low and soft, “We need to talk. Let’s step around the corner so we can have some privacy.”

“No problem,” Frank said, and followed Richards into the dining room.

“What is your deal, Frank?” Richards said as soon as they were on the other side of the wall.

“You mean because I told her Clayton dosed her drink? I thought she should know what was happening to her, just in case she didn’t want to be gang-raped by you three assholes.”

“You’re certainly welcome to take part if you so choose, Frank,” Cook said, coming around the corner. “And you need to realize that spic chicks only dig the three D’s. Dicks, dope and dinero. Nothing bad is going to happen to the girl. Larry’ll drive her back into Scottsdale in the morning only a little worse for wear. No permanent damage, man, I swear. We’re not the Hillside Stranglers.

Not yet, Frank thought, and then said, “And that would be fine, I suppose, if she was on board with the plan. But there’s no way she’s into this. She was led to expect a party. With lots of people. Not just three horny jackalopes. What’d you give her, ludes?”

“Tuinals,” Cook said. “The apex of American pharmaceutical achievement.”

“You really are full of yourself, aren’t you, Clayton,” Frank said. “Which means you’re full of shit. Without the coke propping her up, that girl would be unconscious. Back where I come from, what you’re planning is called sexual assault. There will be no sexual assault taking place here as long as I’m around.”

Cook snorted. “Then why don’t you go back to where you came from, man? You can take Larry and go back to your mediocre state full of self-righteous douchebags confusing self-deprivation with piety.”

“You sweet on the girl, Frank?” Richards said. “That what this is about?”

“Sweet on her? Jesus Christ, Larry, you Andy of fuckin’ Mayberry or something? You want to be part of a sexual assault, man? That’ll look good on your resume. You forget that we’re all probably on videotape back at the Neon Cactus. That girl starts figuring out what happened to her and maybe gets a bit pissed off and decides she wants payback? Would be no problem for the cops to pull the tapes. Maybe they have the plates of the Lincoln on that tape. Ever think of that?”

“She won’t remember shit,” Cook said. “It’ll all be a haze. And if she does have an idea, she might be so full of shame that she won’t care to report anything. Or, realistically, she’ll look at it as the time of her life. Think of it, man, she’s the center of attention at a luxurious mansion in the middle of the desert, with handsome rich men making love to her. A groupie’s dream, come true.”

(To be continued)

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CHAPTER 1 (Excerpt 1)

South Texas Tangle is a tribute to the work of Elmore Leonard and Donald Westlake, and follows Elmore Leonard’s “Ten Rules of Writing.”

Jimmy Ireno was strung out on speed, bad freeway coffee and fear. But the big problem was the state trooper with the absurd wide brimmed hat, shovel-blade chin and linebacker shoulders waiting at his window.

“Driver’s license and registration please, sir.”

Saying it nice and polite.

But those were the last words Jimmy wanted to hear anywhere, let alone the middle of flatlands nowhere, hundred miles south of San Antonio. Thing was, he didn’t have a valid driver’s license. Revoked last year for a couple of chicken-shit DWIs coming home from the clubs. Cops on that shift can be real assholes. And registration? Nothing like that in here. They run the VIN they’ll find the listed owner to be some long-dead Minnesotan or an incarcerated miscreant, maybe someone only exists on paper. That’s the system.

“Are you aware that your vehicle has no license plates, sir? Seems that the mounting hardware was, ah, substandard.”

Jesus, no plates?

And why was the cop dangling a gnarled-up garbage bag tie in Jimmy’s face? Did somebody back in Minnesota not know that screws work a lot better? Jimmy didn’t have a clue. And was also totally clueless about a lot of other things—like what the hell he was going to do now.

Looking up at the cop, Jimmy said, “What? No plates? Seriously? That can’t be right. They were on there when I left Minneapolis.” And coming up with the best lie he could think of on such short notice: “Someone must’ve taken ’em. Probably at the campground last night in Oklahoma. Some Mexicans were checking out the van, they must’ve—

“Your driver’s license, sir.”

Politeness fading.

But Jimmy’s really huge problem was the million dollars in small bills hidden behind the cheesy Chevy conversion’s simulated wood paneling. Jimmy and the cash were on the way to McAllen, Texas, just a short jaunt over the Rio Bravo from Reynosa, Mexico, a place where—Sam Arndt had told him—they might as well put up a sign: Cash Wash—Cheap. Come one come all to Javier’s Pawn Shop. Bills Cleaned Daily. We Don’t Ask No Stinking Questions.

Up ahead now in the near dark, Jimmy could see a green road sign in the splayed beams of the van’s headlights, fluorescent white letters spelling out Gamble Gulch Rd.

Gamble Gulch?

This was clearly an omen. And Jimmy believed in omens. It was all the impetus he needed. Reaching down like he was going for his wallet, Jimmy jerked the door handle, put his shoulder to the door and drove it at the cop’s chest. But the trooper, evidently no rookie, was standing far enough back that the door missed him by three inches. Despite his miscalculation, Jimmy continued his burst from the truck, raced by the surprised trooper, dove down the bank and rolled to a stop in the high weeds directly below the Gamble Gulch sign.

Jimmy Ireno could always run. And the trooper had a decent-sized gut hanging over his belt, making it unlikely he could catch up to Jimmy, now slogging toward a grove of trees, the image of a speeding bullet coming at his back filling his troubled mind. Once inside the sheltering foliage, Jimmy listened for the clomping of the cop’s long boots or the wailing of sirens.

Neither one came.

Whattaya know.

(To be continued)

Enjoy Chapter 15 of T.K. O’Neill’s crime/noir enovel Fly in the Milk–and order the whole thing for just $2.99!

CHAPTER 15

William “Big Cat” Edwards always thought it peculiar how he grimaced when the cops passed by on the road. City cop, highway cop, sheriff or goddamn game warden, it didn’t matter. Every time he saw a vehicle with a flasher on the roof and a uniformed driver, he felt the stirrings of anger and resentment and maybe hatred. There was possibly a little fear, but he would never admit it.

Driving north on Highway 53 in his ’69 Buick Electra four-door, he wondered what his old parole officer would say if he ever told her that one. Like if he just came out and said I hate fucking cops, Marlene. The bitch would be busting her ass to get him back inside, that’s for sure. At least until after her period was done with and she mellowed out again.

The bitch. He’d see her in the bars all the time with her old man—her husband—both of them drunk as skunks. Yet they always found a way to look down at you, didn’t they? Give someone a job with power over others and they start thinking their own shit don’t stink.

Sure, he knew that all cops weren’t bad. And yeah, they were necessary to keep the real assholes in line, but he still swore to himself whenever they passed by on the road. Back when he was a kid, his teachers were always preaching that the cops were there to help you. He’d never seen much of the helping, only the throwing in jail part. His daddy… his uncle… him…

Sometimes he wished he were still a kid, innocent and playful, only worried about if his mother might embarrass him with her alcoholic incoherence or her lunacy. Now and then when he was a little down, he wondered if he’d be better off a retard like his younger brother. Ride around all day in a window van with all his tard buddies, making weird faces at the passing cars. Wouldn’t have to go through the grind anymore. Wouldn’t have a care in the world, except maybe if you crapped your pants or not. But maybe that wouldn’t bother you either.

Yeah, this life was getting to be a grind, that was true, but none of the straights would ever believe you if you told them. They think it’s because you’re lazy that you make your money on the other side of the law. They think it’s an easy life, running a blind pig. They don’t know it’s harder than running a regular bar, and you always got to worry about getting busted, besides. These days there’s lots of competition and the money is tight. People would rather stay home and get stoned and watch cable TV. And you’re always looking over your shoulder to see who’s coming after you. Is it the cops or just some crazy drunken asshole you eighty-sixed a month ago?

They think because the blackjack tables and the roulette wheel are always busy, it means you’re rolling in the dough. Nobody thinks that you got partners like anyone else in business. And you got cheaters coming in and trying to rip you off, and you got your own partners trying to skim every nickel they can get away with.

Nah, man, it ain’t easy being an outlaw. You got your times of underemployment just like anyone else. And if you fuck up, you don’t just get fired, you get thrown in the slam.

Big Cat, like his bud Johnny Beam, believed it was time to move on to sunnier shores. Bring the wife and kid down to where it was warm all year long. Score a nest egg and roll down to Florida; maybe buy into a bar or a liquor store and sell gin to retirees. It would sure be nice to not have to see Artis and Gary again. Why in fuck he’d ever partnered up with them, he didn’t know. Maybe it had been God’s will….

The rusty Electra rode like a pillow on a wave, floating along as the sky tried to decide if it was going to rain or shine. Twenty minutes past the Three Lakes Road at the first right after Dunston Road, Cat turned onto the gravel and pushed down the pedal, watched in the rearview as the dust kicked up behind him like an exploded vacuum bag. Two miles on the dirt and he’d be at the house, the sleazy shithole with the dilapidated chicken coops out back that Artis called home.

He was still kicking himself about the past, wondering how he could have let it happen like it did. If he’d been thinking back then, he would’ve asked Johnny to let him run the Hanging Dog. Just him alone, not the other two lizards. But the Big Cat, so named because of the three white vertical steaks along the left side of his full, dark head of hair and the feline grace he’d shown in the boxing ring, could never hang onto money. And Johnny had needed the bread up front. Gary Masati always had cash because there was money in his family. And Artis was Gary’s strong-arm guy. That was how the deal came together. But that was a long time ago and the Cat had always been Johnny’s man, the only one of the three that was smart enough to keep an enterprise going.

Artis Mitchell paced back and forth on the cracked, yellowed linoleum in his spacious and filthy kitchen. Dirty dishes were piled high in the sink and the place was getting too dirty, even for him. Time to get Elizabeth Hardy from down the road over again to do some cleaning. Maybe this time he would get her inside the bedroom and get her pants off. She was only sixteen but she could clean up the house real good. Three dollars an hour and she earned every cent. Watching her ass in them tight Calvin Klein jeans was worth two-fifty an hour alone.

Warmth flooded him as he replayed in his mind the night that had changed his life and brought a ray of hope into his otherwise bleak existence. That time when there was a knock on his door and Elizabeth was standing there in her red wool car coat, pretty as a pin-up. When she smiled that toothy smile, her lips all curvaceous, and asked so sweetly if she and her friends could come over to his house and party sometime, you know, hang out and smoke dope and drink beer—well, old Artis was thinking a miracle had happened. He’d hesitantly agreed, using every bit of his will, to keep from drooling and babbling like a diseased monkey.

On the evening of the much-anticipated party, five kids had showed up on Artis’ front porch: Elizabeth, her friend Jenny, and three boys whose names Artis kept forgetting. Ricky and Billy and Tommy or some shit like that. They’d brought their own weed and a partially consumed half-gallon jug of Red Mountain wine. Artis kept his own stash of Colombian pot a secret, but he did share a few cans of Pabst from his fridge.

The kids were nice to him but a little afraid of the man with the big beer gut and the huge, hairy arms. Artis chose to believe that their standoffishness was, in fact, respect and shyness.

After the get-together was over and the kids had stumbled out, leaving his little house quiet again, Artis had parked himself on the lumpy gray couch, beer in hand and cigarette burning on top of an empty Blue Ribbon can on the cluttered table, and come up with a grand scheme.

He would invite the gang over again, someday soon. Make sure he had everything set up just right before they got there: some nice Boone’s Farm apple wine for the girls and Steinhaus beer for the boys. Cheap booze always worked better. Then bring out the good weed and the Penthouse magazines and get the kids horny, tell’em to feel free and use the spare bedroom if they want to have a little fun. After a couple had been in the room going at it a while, he’d say he was going to roll a joint and go into the closet of the other bedroom where his camera was mounted on a tripod.

He could work the hole-in-the-wall action all night long.

When the film was developed he’d have leverage on the kids. They wouldn’t want their parents to know what they been up to, so they’d do some favors in exchange for the pics. Maybe some free weed or some stolen goods from the boys—maybe a grab-and-dash job or two. The girls—they got things they can do, too. Let your imagination work for you on that one.

Artis sighed, scratched a stick match on the window molding and fired up a Marlboro, looked through the dusty glass at the brush and scrub trees along the edge of his backyard. Dark clouds like buffalo turds were moving slowly across the steel-gray sky.

He was starting to get pissed off. Where in the fuck was that goddamned Masati? Fat fuck was supposed to be here an hour ago so they could work on their story… excuse… alibi… explanation for the discrepancies in the accounting books at the Dog. Porky son of a bitch was probably into the Valium again and would more than likely be totally useless in convincing the Cat of their innocence.

As Gary Masati bounced along the highway in his Ford Bronco in the direction of what he often caustically referred to as “Artie’s Acres” or “Mitchell’s Mansion,” he had indeed been into the Valiums. Trying to cut back on his coke and speed usage, he had ingested the tranquilizers as part of a self-prescribed therapy regimen.

Masati had two nicknames. One that you could say to his face: Assram, or Ram for short, which referenced his unique ability to break through locked doors using his sizeable hindquarters as a battering ram. The second nickname, “Gag me Gary,” referred to his predominantly rank body odor. You only spoke this behind his back, unless you wanted some trouble. At this moment, his jaw was a bit loose and his mouth hung open. He seemed to breathe and snore at the same time and he didn’t give a fuck about much of anything.

That’s the thing about Valium, take enough of it and you just plain don’t give a shit. No matter what you do, have done or are about to do, you care not. The little pills, be they yellow or big blue, were often prescribed as a means of putting the mind on an even keel, freeing the unhappy user from the sufferings of anxiety and fear and guilt. And they worked. Empathy, patience and tolerance were also frequently banished from one’s emotional repertoire by diazepam, but this side effect was one about which Gary Masati could not have cared less.

As far as he was concerned, the meeting was more for Big Cat and Artis; they were the ones who cared about the Hanging Dog. He, you know, didn’t give a fat fuck. He didn’t need the club and the club didn’t need him. He had an income, a monthly inheritance check from a long-dead uncle that kept him in the necessities of life, like food, dope and alcohol and a place to crash. And because of his ingenious method of entering locked rooms, he was a valuable addition to any burglary crew—and a damn good auto mechanic besides, if he had to work. If you had to work a steady, at least in a garage you could stay stoned on something all day. Currently, he had a tricked-out pick-up on the market that he’d assembled from all “borrowed” parts.

Sure, he’d skimmed a little off the top here and there at the Dog. Fucking anybody would, working that place. It’s not like there were any tips or anything. But the kind and size of the losses Artis was talking about had to be from something else. Like maybe fucking Artis was stealing a pile and concocting some kind of intrigue bullshit to cover it up.

Gary knew how easy it would be to start out small, lifting a few bucks here and there, telling yourself you were going to pay it all back later when you got ahead. But then you never got ahead and all of a sudden you were looking at a pretty big hole in the bookkeeping. That’s probably how it went down.

The road went by in a soft haze. Hardly seemed like any time at all before he was cutting the ignition and staring blankly at the dust as it swirled down on his hood and drifted into the side of Artis’ shitty house. Gary’s brain was a jellied mess, the last twenty miles a total blank.

He had risen that morning with a fierce craving for a burst of illicit chemical energy in the form of powders or pills, a habit that, in its infancy, he had told himself would be good for him, help drop a few pounds. Having finally assessed the damaging nature of such a habit to both his pocketbook and his mental health, Gary often fought the urges with a ten-milligram Valium, which usually reduced the craving to a muffled moan. He had boosted at noon with another blue tablet and nearly passed out during lunch at Silk’s pool hall. Then Peter Klang had given him a white cross in the men’s room to help him revive.

Gary climbed out of the fading orange Bronco, steadied himself on the doorframe and fired up a Viceroy with a black plastic lighter. Mellow but mean; he hoped nobody gave him any shit because he wasn’t in the mood. Didn’t want to pull out the .38 from the waistband of his jeans under the tail of his blue flannel shirt. All he wanted to do was rest. Rest and think about the burglary job that Tommy Soderberg had clued him to, a small safe with cash, old coins and jewels. The picture in his head glowed with warm colors that promised satisfaction like a five-course dinner.

He staggered up the incline and let himself in through the dirt-smudged, scratched-up wooden front door. In the nearly empty dining room, dust floated thickly inside an angled column of sunlight streaming through a high window on the west wall, the sun having found a break in the bank of clouds.

He saw a blurry Artis sitting on a wooden chair in the kitchen, nursing a can of Old Style, huge forearms resting on the rickety wooden table with a cigarette burning between his thick fingers. A steady blue-gray stream of smoke rose toward the yellowed ceiling. Artis looked worried.

“Jesus Christ, Artis, you pig,” Masati snorted, jiggling across the litter-strewn floor. “Don’t you ever clean this place? I remember that peanut butter jar over there from three weeks ago, for the Christ sake. You’re gonna get some kind of rat-shit fever or something. Smells like the fucking landfill in here.”

“Fuck you, Ram. Clean enough for a shitbag like you.” Artis bared his yellowed, tobacco-flecked teeth in an artificial smile that looked more like a grimace.

Masati sat down heavily. The wooden chair creaked and sagged. He dropped his cigarette into an empty Old Style can on the table and took a deep breath. His eyelids were heavy and so was his lower jaw.

“Well I’m heerrrrr…” he slurred.  “Whasss with all the drama? You knock up a sheep an need bread for an abortionnn?”

“I thought it was a sheep at first but then I discovered it was your mother.”

“You would fuck my mother, Artis, you sick fuck. Even the old man won’t do that anymore.”

“Who could blame him after you came out.”

“Fuck off. What the hell you call me out here for? What’s this goddamn emergency you’re all worked up about?”

“Big Cat’s on his way out. He’s gonna want to know why we’re out of liquor at the club and why we don’t have his usual share. Then, in a couple days, when he hears from Randall that he ain’t been paid, he’ll be ready for it.”

“It’s that bad, uh? We got to prepare him for the worst? Fucking shit. You never can tell… it ain’t my fucking fault.”

“Nobody’s saying it’s anybody’s fault. I’m saying we lost a ton at roulette last summer. I think someone was past posting. I think there was a team working us. Remember all those new guys? Them assholes with the Ohio plates?” Artis’ eyes pleaded slightly, hoping for backup on his grasp at straws.

“Nahhhhhh…… but, y’know… there’s new faces every summerrrr.  You can’t catch da same fish everrrryy day.”

“You better remember those faces when Cat shows up, Ram. You better remember how they slicked us. Otherwise he’s gonna think it was you and me been stealin’ him blind and causing the Dog to go tits up.”

“We’rrre tittsss ubp?”

“Like a beached sucker. We only got enough booze left for you and me to get drunk. We can’t afford the rent or the skid to Randall, and the women don’t want to come around no more  ‘cause nobody wants to spend anything on them. Dudes’d rather sit home and whack it to porn videos. And there just ain’t any money around. Not enough for a place like the Dog to stay goin’, anyway.”

“Hell’s gonna happenn to da stuffff?  Jukeboxss an pinball?”

“’Magine someone will come for them.” Artis said, watching the dust-filled column of sunlight as it faded away. “Can’t see Lambert or Johnny Beam leaving them behind. Unless the cops get there first. I think it was just a matter of time before we got popped, anyway, you know what I’m saying? It’s like, we’re getting out at the right time.” He heaved a heavy sigh. “You want a beer, man?”

“No thanks, I’mm watcchhin my waistline.”

“What are you watching it do, take over the county?”

“Fuck you.” Masati shot Artis the bird in slow motion.

Artis snorted, raked the empty beer cans off the table, pinned them against his barrel chest and stood up. He paused to gape at Masati’s head as it lolled on his thick, fleshy neck like a beach ball on a rhino, the chair creaking sharply each time it jerked back upright.

Then they both turned their heads at the sound of a blown-out, window-rattling muffler. Artis looked out the window above the sink and saw a big Buick pulling up, followed by a cloud of dust that swirled around the house. He dropped the beer cans in a plastic garbage pail under the counter by the sink and wiped his hands on the front of his blue denim coveralls.

The Buick jerked to a halt in the dirt. Big Cat held his breath as the dust cloud passed by and settled on the patchy lawn. The massive, copper-colored two-door hardtop with white vinyl roof shuttered and shook, chugging for twenty seconds before it finally wheezed and went quiet.

“Sounns like Cat couldd use hisss timing adjustedt,” Masati slurred.

“Why don’t you offer your services?” Artis asked, grinning.

“I hav in tha passst, I’ll havv yuu knowww—but he never sidts down long enough to gedt it donnne.”

“That’s another thing, man,” Artis said, eager for the opening. “He’s hardly ever at the club anymore, only shows up when we’re closing, to count the cash. Shit, lately he doesn’t even show up at all, half the time. Fucker’s been having me drop it off at his house. Trouble is… I ain’t brought nothing over for the last three weeks.”

“Thisss isss whadt I gedt when I de-le-gate yuuu sommme re-sponnsa-billlidty?”

“Fuck you, Masati, if you hadn’t been passed out in the office or not there at all every goddamn night, I wouldn’t have had to do it.”

“So it’sss my fauldt thattt you spennt the housse’s casssh?”

“I had to pay my rent and electricity, and I had a shit load of parking tickets—they were going to throw me in jail,” Artis frowned until the thick hair of his eyebrows joined at the bridge of his nose. “What fucking choice did I have?”

“I forgive you Artis,” Masati said, his speech momentarily returned to normal due to the rush of apprehension and fear brought on by Big Cat’s arrival. “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn. But you’re going to have to ‘splain that to our boy Mr. Cat. And I think I hear his footfalls a rustling on the porch right now.”

Then the front door scraped open and the screen slammed behind it. The six-foot-two former boxer and part-time musician known as Big Cat, came striding in, the heels of his blue and red cowboy boots knocking on the decaying wood floor.

“Greetings from the Land o’ Nod,” Masati said from the kitchen, his tongue thickening.

The three men jerked to attention as a clap of thunder ripped the sky. In an instant, a hard rain came ripping down from the black clouds, large oval drops hitting the dry dirt and bouncing. Drumming on the tops of the cars and tapping like a thousand tiny hammers on the shingled roof of the house.

“At least it will keep the dust down for a few days.” Artis said, looking out at the deluge as he moved slowly into the dining room. He kicked at a crumpled McDonald’s cheeseburger wrapping. “Hey, Catman, how’s it hanging?”

“Long and thick, as per normal,” Big Cat said, deep and mellow. He was a large man with wide shoulders, a strong chest and a square head, features that some mistook for Polynesian or Samoan.

“Beer, William?” Artis inquired, gesturing toward the kitchen and the grease-stained refrigerator that only a year before had been a shiny new unit, part of the swag from a warehouse rip-off on the Zenith waterfront.

“Yeah, I’ll have one, Arty.” Then, seeing Masati’s obvious intoxication, Cat went into the kitchen, bent down and looked into the fat man’s eyes. “And how are you today, Gary?”

“Pretty mellow, I guess.”

“Sampling the mother’s little helpers again, are we?”

“You might say that. Just a couple three, my man.”

“Blues?”

“Yessir. Want some?”

“No thanks. Maybe later. I got to stay sharp these days. These are trying times for the Cat. But that’s not what I’m here to talk about. We’ve got to make some changes, I’m sorry to say. We have to shut down the Dog.”

Artis felt his nerves lighting up as he returned from the fridge with a can of Old Style and set it down on the table. Big Cat grabbed a paint-splattered wooden chair, spun it around backwards and sat down with his arms resting on the back. He picked up the beer, popped the top and took a large pull.

“Annnd jus exacly why does the Dawg haf to die, oh great leader,” Masati slurred, his lips undulating in a failed attempt at a smile.

“It’s losing money,” Big Cat said. “There ain’t enough cash left to keep it running. Fact is, it’s been going downhill for a while now, as you’ve probably noticed. You guys—”

Artis shuffled his feet nervously, stuffed his hands deep in the pockets of his worn, Oshkosh coveralls, lowered his eyelids and studied his feet. “Look, man, I’m sorry—”

“I’m sorry it’s over, too,” Big Cat blurted, “but it’s partly my fault. I gambled away the capital. It’s that simple. I got into this big poker game with some real high rollers. Big-time dudes with deep pockets that I thought I could clean out. To make a long story short, I lost. I came so fucking close on one huge pot—I still can’t believe the cocksucker hit the third ace. He pulled a full boat over my spade flush. I was tapped. Blew like nine grand, right fucking there. That’s why I haven’t been comin’ around.” He took a chug of beer and sat up straight, a serious look on his face.

Artis and Gary shared subtle “do-you-believe-it?” glances.

“Jesus Chrise, Cat, shhit,” Masati said. “I hat three gran in the Dawg but I made that a hunert times over. You can take yer time payin me back, buddy, I donn’t giv a shit.”

“You don’t owe me nothing, William,” Artis said.

“You guys take all the machines that are left,” William the Big Cat said. “The pinball and horserace machines are gone already. Had the guy in there today from West Side Games. You got the bag of quarters, Artis?”

Artis shook his head and tried to look solemn, when in actuality he was relieved. “No… I don’t. Sorry man, I had to use that to pay off these parking tickets I had. I swear, Cat, they were gonna throw me in jail.”

Big Cat took a sip of his beer and shrugged. “C’est la vie say the old folks. So ah, in lieu of a bag full of quarters—anybody know any guaranteed moneymaking scenarios? I need something, real bad.”

“Hey ah, lissen yu guyss,” Masati said. “I, ah, wasn’ goin’ say nothin’ bout thisss, but Tommy Soderberg tole me about this job. He ah, ah—wants me to do thiss job with’im, ya see.  As lonng as yu guyss are’n such rough shape, y’know, why ah, ah—don’t we doit arselfes.”

Cat was disbelieving. Masati was a chronic bullshitter and Tommy Soderberg always worked alone. “Tommy Soda told you about a job? You fucking sure about that?”

“I swear ta Godt, Cat, I ain’t gonna shit you.”

“I can hardly wait to hear this,” Artis said.

“Shut up Arty, let him talk. It takes him long enough, already. You got any coke or speed or something to give him? It’s like listening to a walrus croaking.”

“But, guys, I’m tryin’ to wean maself from stimulants,” Masati insisted, eyes widening slightly.

“Bullshit,” Big Cat said. “I’ll wean you from your nuts if I have to listen to anymore of your mumbling.”

“I shall make an effort to enunciate.”

“Here, then,” Artis said, shaking his head. “Maybe this will help.” He reached in the pocket of his coveralls and came out with a silver bullet filled with coke, set it on the table in front of Masati.

Assram fish-eyed the dull gray metal vial with the tiny hole on the tip. “I do believe it will, gentlemen, I do believe it will.” Moments later, the life was back in his eyes and he was ready to go. “So anyway, as I was saying. Tommy Sodapop told me about a lovely little safe job that he has researched. A safe that is full of old coins, cash and jewelry, he says. Old man used to own a business, but now he’s retired, but he keeps this office to make him feel like he’s still got what it takes, y’know? Maybe he does a little business once in a great while, y’know? Anyways, Soda said he was in the building doing some painting—doing some work for Harold Greene of Meridian Realty— and he seen the old guy going in the safe and pulling out these books of old coins and shit.

“And then he says that later in the day he’s sitting around at the Golden Flow and the old guy comes in, still dressed in his suit and bow tie. The geezer sits at the bar and has one tap beer and then leaves. Soda asks Paul the bartender if he knows the guy and Pauly says Sure, the guy comes in five days a week, always at the same time of day, has one beer and then leaves. He says the guy is loaded, owned a jewelry store for sixty years or some shit like that.”

“Sounds good, Gary,” Big Cat said. “But what the hell did Soda want you to do? I mean, can’t he get in there by himself?”

“He wanted me to help carry the safe out. Said the two of us could haul it out of there and throw it in the back of my Bronco.”

“Thanks for clueing us in, Ram,” Artis said, sarcastically.

“When can we do it?” Big Cat said, setting the empty can on the table and rubbing his hands together like he was washing with unseen soap.

“We hit the place and Soda’s gonna know it was me,” Masati said. “Not sure I want him on my case for jumping his gig.”

“How much of a cut is it gonna take to get you over your guilt and fear?” Big Cat asked, dryly.

“Half should do it.”

“Half the take?” Artis sputtered. Little balls of spit flew from his mouth and stuck in his scraggly brown beard. “You gotta be fucking insane, you fat bastard.”

“Listen, you hairy Greek fuck, not only do I deserve a chunk for finding the job, I should get another bump for crossing Soda. He’s not exactly going to want to hug me for this, in case you’re thinking otherwise.”
“Soda ain’t gonna do anything to you, Ram,” Big Cat said. “Fucker won’t get near you.” He gave Artis a wink on the sly. “All he wants to do is get high and play ball. He’s not the violent type. He’ll just spread the word around town about your deed and hope you get what you deserve.”

“Which is?” Masati asked, warily.

“Judge not, lest you be judged, has always been my policy, Ram. I’ll let someone else decide your just desserts.”

“I’ve got some good ideas about that,” Artis said, wiping at his beard.

“I bet you do, you sick fucking pervert,” Masati said, eyelids growing heavy. “Got another hit of blow?” he said to the air, his gaze directed at a place on the ceiling where a crack in the plaster resembled the letter Z.

“Maybe I do,” Ram, Artis said. “Providing you stay right where you are and give us all the details on this job.”

“Can do, Artis, my friend, can do. It’s not like I was going for a jog or anything.”

Big Cat got up from the table and walked into the dining room. This was the kind of shit that drove him crazy, the way those two dorks carried on. Took them forever to do anything. How he’d gotten this involved with these two was beyond his comprehension. He must have been lonely back then—or maybe he’d taken pity on the pathetic bastards.

He stared out the window at the puddles and the splashing water and the wind pushing the leaves on the popple trees to their silvery backsides. Now it seemed he was getting in deeper with the diet-challenged duo. When he’d thought that all was lost, opportunity had fallen out of the sky. More correctly and certainly stranger, out of Gary Masati’s rubber-lipped mouth. This was as close to “out of the blue” as you were going to get.

Curiouser and curiouser, Cat thought, wondering where he’d heard that before. Way back in the anterior lobes of his brain, another tiny voice was trying to be heard. But it sounded too much like his parole officer—the bitch—and he tried to ignore it.

You seem to look for trouble, William, it was saying.

(End of Chapter 15)

Find Bluestone Press’ book, Dive Bartender: Flowers in the Desert, available for a promotional price at @Smashwords as part of their Annual Summer Sale! https://www.smashwords.com/books/search… #SWSale2025 #Smashwords

Also available on sale through July 31, ebook Northwoods Pulp Reloaded https://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=T.K.+O%27Neill

And for all T.K. O’Neill writings, they’re always available at https://bluestonesblog.com/

Find Bluestone Press’ book, Dive Bartender: Flowers in the Desert, available for a promotional price at @Smashwords as part of their Annual Summer Sale! https://www.smashwords.com/books/search… #SWSale2025 #Smashwords

Also available on sale through July 31, ebook Northwoods Pulp Reloaded https://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=T.K.+O%27Neill

And for all T.K. O’Neill writings, they’re always available at https://bluestonesblog.com/

Bluestone Press presents a library of T.K. O’Neill stories for holiday gift-giving.

Also shop locally in Duluth at Bookstore at Fitger’s + Zenith Bookstore in West Duluth!

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Dive Bartender: Flowers in the Desert (ebook + paperback)

Ebook Special $3.99

Sequel to Dive Bartender: Sibling Rivalry

by T.K. O’Neill  

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It’s 1977 and Frank Ford is running from his life and for his life. 

Following the suspicious suicide of his brother Ray and Frank’s own role in the death of twin sisters clearly culpable in Ray’s demise, he hits the road, leaving Minnesota for the promised land, California–with a dog-eared paperback copy of Kerouac’s On the Road as his roadmap. True to its protagonist’s journey, Frank makes a stop in Denver to look up an old friend–in his case high school buddy and former Arizona Amateur Tennis Champion, Larry Richards, now a divorce attorney allegedly raking in the cash, hand over fist. 

Larry’s seemingly successful life was anything but, and Frank gets caught up in Larry’s fraying web of deals and deceit, leading him farther away from California and closer to the same muck he left behind in Minnesota.

Enter the captivating and gifted songwriter Evelyn Raines, lead singer of Evie and the Desert Flowers. The righteous Bill Cross, new roommate, fellow bartender at DJ’s and former Arizona Gold Gloves light heavyweight champion. Clayton Cook and Bryce Parker–entitled, corrupt and twisted. Arturo Reynolds, Denver gangster. Javier Raines, Evie’s faithful brother and manager. A cast of characters that seems to conspire to keep Frank from his Kerouac dream.

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Northwoods Pulp Reloaded (ebook only)

by T.K. O’Neill

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Friendly campfires and twinkling stars can conceal a vast darkness in the great northern forest. Some say it’s in the land itself. Others point to the people who live there. The raw and plaintive stories in T.K. O’Neill’s Northwoods Pulp Reloaded allow for both possibilities.

“Hole in the World” Accompanied by an Indian guide with special skills, a renegade member of the trench coat gang heads north for his share, his woman and his freedom.

“Snowmobile Stick-up” Outlaw snowmobilers heist a bank during a driving blizzard and discover pursuers other than the law.

“The Devil You Say” A down-on-his-luck reporter believes he’s found his ticket to the big time with his investigation of devil worship in a small, Wisconsin town.

“My Ship Comes In” Two dead men in his wake, a Minnesota man flees to every northerner’s preferred hideout: Florida. But temptation is everywhere in the Sunshine State and soon he finds himself waiting on a remote beach for a sailboat loaded with contraband. Complications ensue.

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Jackpine Savages (ebook + paperback)

by T.K. O’Neill  

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Carter Brown always wanted to be a private eye. Thanks to an inheritance from a well-to-do uncle and an online P.I. diploma, the dream is realized. When word spreads of a homegrown P.I. in the backwoods of northern Minnesota and Carter lands his first case through a drinking buddy, Brown Investigations is born. Before he can cash his first check for services rendered, however, Brown finds himself locked up on a murder charge, wondering what the hell happened. Forced to clear his name, Brown must navigate through a host of bizarre characters including a steroid freak, a meth head, traffickers in illegal animal parts, predatory females, a forger and a sex addict.

T.K. O’Neill’s first Carter Brown novel, Jackpine Savages, is hard-boiled detective fiction in the tradition of Ross MacDonald and Robert B. Parker, set on the rugged north shore of Lake Superior.

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Dive Bartender: Sibling Rivalry (ebook + paperback)

by T.K. O’Neill 

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Frank Ford is a survivor of 10 long years at the Metropole Bar, where he’s babysitter and alcohol dealer to Zenith City’s derelict class: the misfits, the losers, the crazies, the old fading lushes, and, of course, the budding young alcoholics unaware or indifferent to what lies ahead.

Set in 1977, Dive Bartender: Sibling Rivalry combines elements of David Goodis and Raymond Chandler with the popular culture of the era to form a pulp-style novel filled with sex, drugs, violence and smelt fishing—the essence of classic northern noir.

*****************

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South Texas Tangle (ebook only)

by T.K. O’Neill 

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T.K. O’Neill’s crime e-novel written in tribute to Elmore Leonard and Donald Westlake.

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Dead Low Winter (ebook)

A Northwoods Noir Story

by T.K. O’Neill

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Originally published in somewhat different form as “Social Climbing,” one of four stories published under the pseudonym Thomas Sparrow in his 1999 debut Northwoods Pulp: Four Tales of Crime and Weirdness and later translated into Japanese and published by Fushosha.

It’s the mid-1970’s and, in his search for a way out of the mire that had become his life, sometimes-cab driver Keith Waverly finds himself in deeper than his wildest nightmares. At odds with both conventional life and life outside convention, looking for a way to break free without giving in, Keith tries to control his fate, but ends up a pawn in someone else’s bigger game.  The vast darkness of the north woods provides a chilling backdrop and powerful force to Dead Low Winter.

Fly in the Milk (ebook only)

by T.K. O’Neill

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It’s early March and a battered, steaming wreck lays at the bottom of a 50-foot cliff. Former boxing champion Johnny Beam is found crumpled and broken behind the steering wheel. Beam was a gambler, in trouble with the law—and now dead. Was it an accident? Suicide? Murder? How did the former hero end up like this? In the lily-white northern town of Zenith, Minnesota, only one thing was certain: Johnny Beam stood out like a fly in a bottle of milk.

Fly in the Milk is a work of crime fiction, a provocative tale of death, betrayal and hypocrisy spanning three generations.

To contact Bluestone Press or T.K. O’Neill, email bluestonepress@outlook.com or call 218.724.5806

Now is your best chance to find T.K. O’Neill’s Northwoods Pulp Reloaded and Dive Bartender: Flowers in the Desert available for a promotional price at @Smashwords as part of their Annual Summer Sale! Find T.K.’s books and many more at https://www.smashwords.com/shelves/promos/ all month! #SWSale2024 #Smashwords

From The Chrysalis BREW Project: Dive Bartender: Flowers in the Desert by T.K. O’Neill takes us on a roller-coaster ride. The hair-raising action sequences, the breathtaking descriptions of the desert, and the uninhibited consumption of drugs and alcohol actually made me feel like I was living in the wild west of the seventies.

Frank’s head was on a swivel, searching the nearly empty, Old West-themed streets for cop cars, motels, all-night restaurants or anything that might provide an alternative to the present situation.

But mostly cop cars…

The local cops had a reputation for hard-ass behavior, the Gold Dust Twins had said earlier in the evening.

Not knowing what else to do, Frank kept cruising around, sweat dripping from his armpits one cold drop at a time.

And then Evelyn was pointing across the way at a grand old structure that looked like it’d been there since the fifties, Frank thinking maybe Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and the Rat Pack had comped suites for life.

Sign on the front said, Hotel Valley Ho.

“I could get a room there,” Evelyn said, the words struggling to come out. “Always wanted to get a look inside that place.”

Frank looked at the dashboard clock.

Nearly four a.m.

And the needle on the wagon’s temperature gauge was up way too high all of a sudden.

What the hell?

Must be a coolant leak, he thought. All the hot weather taking its toll.

And that fancy hotel had to cost two hundred a night, at least. And Evelyn would need another blast to go through the lobby and maybe want another when they got to the room and then Frank would be stuck in there listening to a bunch of coke-and-Tuinal-fueled nonsense until she could go home and Frank could get the fuck out of town.

So the Valley Ho wasn’t going to work, no matter how cool it looked.

Frank kept on driving, the Hater back front and center in his head and letting him know what he thought of all this.

Hater wasn’t very kind.

And then, just as suddenly as the lights had appeared upon reentering Scottsdale, the surroundings got darker and the buildings became fewer and farther in between.

Frank’s eyes were jumping from the temperature gauge—needle precariously close to the red line now—to Evelyn’s nodding head and then back to the dark streets. Repeating the cycle every few seconds

Then—hallelujah—he caught sight of what seemed to be a major artery. A north-south highway according to the compass mounted on the Ford’s dash, one of the former owner’s additions to the wagon’s accessory package.

His hands sweaty on the wheel; Frank approached the highway cautiously and was uplifted by the sight of a neon sign on a frontage road to his right.

Tru West Motel.

Icy AC.

Cable TV.

In-room phones.

A place only Norman Bates could love.

Frank swung in the lot, stopped in front of the Office sign.

Evelyn looked at him from behind her haze. “You gotta be shitting me,” she said, her lips slack. Then her head lolled against the car door and she was out.

Frank was grateful for the small favor.

He got out and went up to the office door, wondering if he’d be able to raise anyone at this hour. There was a button on the wall next to the door. Sign below it said Push for After-hours Service.

He pressed it and heard a faint ringing behind the door.

He shuffled his feet and looked back at Evelyn.

Still out.

He waited.

Time passed slowly.

Behind him a few cars went by, lights reflecting on the motel’s windows.

Feeling antsy, he pushed the button again and heard the bell.

“All right, I hear ya. Hold your horses,” said a voice.

The door opened.

Guy standing there in a thin baby blue robe over a white strap undershirt. Small feet in old-time brown slippers. Fit Frank’s idea of someone who’d own a place like this. Short and fat, with a white beard, horn-rimmed glasses askew on a gin blossom nose and a scowl on his face that let you know he wasn’t a jolly, roly-poly type of guy, even though he kind of resembled Santa Claus.

Of the department store variety.

But who could blame the guy? Four in the morning confronted by a big stranger with booze on his breath and—Frank looking at his hands now—bloodied knuckles. The result of scraping against Bryce Parker’s teeth. And, oops, there was some blood on the top of his Adidas sneaker.

“Sorry to bother you at this hour, sir,” Frank said, polite. “But my wife and I have been driving all night—we’re from Minnesota—and—”

“You need a room. Hell else you’d want at this hour?” He stepped outside and looked at Frank’s car, checking the front license plate and peering in at Evelyn.

“My wife’s asleep. We’ve been on the road since Colorado.”

“All right,” Desert Santa said, giving Frank a sure-you-have look. “That’ll be fifty dollars. In advance. Checkout time is noon. You wanna stay longer it’ll cost you extra.”

Frank pulled his wallet from the pocket of his khakis and thumbed out two twenties and a ten.

“Gotta come in and fill out the card,” the guy said.

(End of Chapter 33)

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To contact Bluestone Press or T.K. O’Neill, email bluestonepress@outlook.com or call 218.724.5806

From the (St. Paul) Pioneer Press: “Although O’Neill…writes from the noir end of the mystery genre, “Dive Bartender” is not a violent book. Some of it is funny and there is tenderness in Frank’s all-consuming devotion to Evelyn. Also, there are gangsters and drugs.

Frank straightened himself to his full six-two, gave Cook his best Clint Eastwood sneer. “I’d heard that guys like you live in a bubble, Cook, and now I know it’s true. Guess it’s up to me to burst that bubble.”

“Good luck with that, bartender,” Cook said, walking away.

Then Bryce Parker came around the wall wearing an indignant look, his chin raised. “You know what, Ford? You are no longer welcome at Sonora North. Get in your rat’s ass station wagon and get off my property.”

Frank let his torso go limp and dropped his gaze to the floor at Parker’s feet. “You gonna call the sheriff, Bryce?” he said, raising his head and looking Parker in the eye.

As Parker stood there blinking, Frank set his feet, got his hips and shoulder into it and drove his right fist into the center of Parker’s squared-off chin.

Parker’s arms flew out to the side as he toppled backwards like a chopped tree, banging his head on the hardwood floor and going still.

Frank watched Larry turn stiff. Man looked shocked and disturbed.

Welcome to the club.

Frank left Larry gaping there and went back to the game room. Moving quickly across the hardwood towards the bar, he watched Cook’s saucer eyes get even larger.

“What the fuck, are you doing, man?” Cook said, his voice going up a couple octaves.

Evelyn’s eyes were especially wide and her body was showing the signs of actual muscle tone as Frank moved in and grasped Cook by the collar of his “high-end” shirt.

Clayton grabbed at Frank’s hands and tried to pull them off. “Frank, man, c’mon, ease off. We’re all friends here.”

“Friends don’t dose friend’s drinks with Tuinals, Clayton,” Frank said. Then he shifted his right hand from Cook’s collar to the back of his head and drove Cook’s forehead down onto the bar top.

Clayton’s head bounced off the granite, his eyes rolled back and his ass slid off the barstool.

He hit the floor like a wet bar rag.

“Come on, Evelyn,” Frank said. “We’re leaving. Think you can walk?”

“No party?”

“Party’s over, dear. But you can take that bag of coke with you if you want. Something to see you through, something for your inconvenience.”

She made an attempt at a smile before bending over and picking up the rolled-up hundred. She snorted a long line of powder, pinched her nose and grabbed the coke. She put the glassine bag in her purse, a fringed leather thing she clumsily lifted off the stool next to her.

Being gentle, Frank put his hand on her elbow and helped her to her feet.

Together, arm and arm, they started for the door.

“Whattaya think you’re fuckin’ doing, Frank?” Larry Richards shouted from behind them. “You pull this shit—after all the hospitality we showed you?”

Frank craned his neck around.

Saw Larry pointing a gun.

The commemorative Colt.

“Sorry, Larry, but it looks like I’ve already done it. And you better put that pop gun away before someone really gets hurt.”

Frank let go of Evelyn’s arm and turned square with Richards. She swayed on her feet but remained upright.

Richards raised the gun to the level of Frank’s chest, hand shaking. “That’s five hundred bucks worth of blow.”

“I look at it as a fee. I figure she’s got it coming. And c’mon, Larry, get real. You and I both know you’re not going to shoot me.” But looking at the panic and growing hysteria in his old chum’s eyes, Frank wasn’t so sure.

Larry lowered the gun.

“Give it to me, Larry.” Frank held out his hand.

Larry handed it over, a guilty look on his drained-of-color face, Frank thinking of that Procol Harum song, “A Whiter Shade of Pale.”

“Now Evelyn and I are leaving, Larry. And I suggest you think about doing the same.”

“Frank?”

“What?”

“You’re gonna need to punch me, so it looks like I put up a struggle.”

You need more than a punch to straighten your ass out, Frank was thinking. Parents probably didn’t spank you enough.

This was a subject Frank and Nikki had debated more than once, Nikki calling him a “Neanderthal” when he told her he believed in Spare the rod and spoil the child.

But he was getting sick and tired of thinking about Nikki all the time so he obliged Richards and threw a punch. Only going three-quarters and avoiding the nose and teeth, he crunched his fist on Larry’s cheekbone in a way that was guaranteed to leave a nice, showy, shiner.

With Larry groaning on the floor, Frank thinking he was maybe overdoing it, Frank and Evelyn left the building. Frank used the commemorative Colt to shoot out two tires on the Lincoln, one front, one back, and then they continued down the red brick toward the dome and the station wagon. He was trying to move her along at a brisk pace but it was like dragging a beer keg up the basement stairs at the Metropole.

He helped her into the front seat of the wagon, the girl muttering “Jesus… Jesus… Jesus…” in a scratchy voice. And also something that sounded to Frank like “Ben-deck-ohs.”

He went around and slid in behind the wheel and turned the ignition key.

Wagon fired up and Frank threw it in gear and headed for the gate, hoping to be long gone before Parker or Cook came to.

But the goddamn gate was closed and locked.

“Fuck,” he shouted, pounding on the steering wheel with both hands.

He looked over at the girl. She was into the coke bag already, pulling out a wad of powder pinched between her thumb and forefinger and putting it to her lovely nose.

Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, for goddamn sure.

Frank thought about backing up and making a run at it, picturing the steel gate flying off to the side like in the movies. Then pictured a more likely scenario: gate not moving at all, not flying off to the side, staying shut and leaving his car crunched and unmoving, like a dying steer.

Shit. 

Not knowing what to do, he craned his neck around and squinted at the door of the house.

And saw no one.

Yet.

Then it came to him. This was the American West. He had the gun that won the West on the front seat.

Well, at least a facsimile.

And how did they deal with a lock in every Western movie ever made?

Shot the sonofabitch.

Frank got out, walked up to the control box, pointed the revolver at the box from three feet away, shielded his eyes with his left hand and pulled the trigger.

Bullet hit the box dead center.

Box popped and fizzled.

Frank saw the gate come loose and swing open a few inches. He put his back into it and pulled it all the way open, thing harder to move than he’d anticipated.

When he got back behind the wheel, he was sweating.

(End of Chapter 31)

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Goddamn Larry is such a worm, Clayton Cook thought to himself as he watched Richards and the bartender straggle in, their tight-assed Minnesota ways following close behind.

Thing of it was, though, Larry was a handy guy to have around. He was a decent lawyer and his input on the Denver mall deal had served everybody concerned quite well.

Larry, though, never seemed to be content with his efforts. He suffered with a sort of inbred insecurity it seemed, a constant belief that he was not doing enough.

Clayton picked up on this some time ago, observing that Larry would gladly demean himself and perform acts below his status simply because one of the consortium members made a request.

The cocaine dealing being a case in point. 

And he and Bryce had taken advantage of this trait many times. Pretty much whenever they needed some menial or otherwise unattractive task taken care of.

But this bartender, this Frank Ford, was another animal altogether, and fast becoming a prickly thorn in the side.

Perhaps just a prick.

And it was Larry’s job to see that he wasn’t.

Didn’t.

Wouldn’t.

Larry needed to keep him reigned in.

You weren’t supposed to bring outsiders to Rancho Deluxe; it was an unwritten rule. Granted, Larry’s circumstances this time were a bit extreme, to say the least, and Bryce had reluctantly forgiven the transgression.

Clayton really hadn’t. But as long as Larry kept the bartender from interfering with the night’s activities, things were cool.

What was the big deal, anyway?

It was just some spic chick who wanted to get her nose packed and her twat fucked by some good looking, wealthy men.

Wasn’t only rock stars that had groupies.

And people from Minnesota were probably unaware that Mexican women loved to get fucked by white men—the more the merrier. 

They were going to have a party in her pussy and bring her back to Scottsdale none the worse for wear.

Although she might have some difficulty walking.

(End of Chapter 30)

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Frank felt the pretty, loaded girl’s warmth against his shoulder, her body sliding over to his side of the backseat as the Lincoln bounced and swayed across the hardpan.

Felt pretty damn good.

Something he was missing these days, that type of warmth.

Thinking about it, he realized he’d pretty much always had a girlfriend of some sort, steady or part-time, since high school. This was the longest he could recall being without a consort. 

But that scene back in Scottsdale—the club and all—he’d been through that shit too many times. Pickup bars seemed tedious, repetitive and meaningless to him now.

And as much as it pained him to admit it, it was true: He was getting too old for this shit.

So this was the point in the movies where he’d start falling in love with the pretty girl in the backseat.

She did have beautiful tan legs coming out of a pair of white shorts and her chest was perky under a satiny green T-shirt.

But it wasn’t gonna happen.

Evelyn seemed nice enough—if you could tell such things about someone as loaded as she was—but Frank was holding out for someone smart enough to avoid men like Clayton Cook and Bryce Parker.

Or Larry Richards.

Someone independent.

And definitely not possessive.

But he couldn’t deny that Evelyn’s warmth was intoxicating.

Then he heard Clayton say, “Time for another perk up, Evie, come back over here and I’ll powder your nose for you.”

Evelyn murmured like someone stirring in her sleep and pushed in tighter against Frank’s shoulder. Then she uttered a sleepy sound, giggled and straightened up on the seat before sliding across toward Cook.

Up front, Parker was fooling with the radio, dialing across static, Spanish language broadcasts, old-time country music, top forty stations and finally coming to rest on Linda Ronstadt singing “Weed, Whites and Wine,” the Lowell George classic that was another one of Frank’s favorites.

Linda Ronstadt.

Now there was a woman worth pursuing.

She was looking gorgeous these days.

He wondered if she lived somewhere in California.

Frank glanced over at Evelyn sniffing coke off Clayton’s fist.

The girl bore a resemblance to Linda Ronstadt, if you looked at her from a certain angle. Evelyn’s face was a little rounder and her skin was a little browner but she definitely was a looker.

And the song on the radio had her singing along now.

In a pretty damn good voice, considering.

“Care for a toot, Frank?” Clayton said, damn near shocking Frank out of his shoes.

“No, thanks,” Frank said, closing his eyes again and leaning against the doorframe. They’d be back to Sonora North soon and his trials would be over.

Or maybe just starting.

Drifting in and out, Frank at one point heard Evelyn say to Clayton, “You smell nice.”

And then he thought he heard her say, “Who’s the big guy? You never introduced us.” But he could have been dreaming.

Up in the front seat, Parker had the tunes humming. Radio waves skipping across the desert skies to serenade the love boat on its journey home. A station out of New Mexico was playing two consecutive songs by each artist in honor of the station’s second anniversary. Playing songs by groups that were as new to the scene as the fledgling radio station. Bands Frank had heard of, but never actually heard.

Aerosmith. Sex Pistols. The Clash, Ramones…

Like Dylan said many years ago, “The times they are a changin’.”

In music anyway.

As for the interaction of males and females—not so much.

Frank wasn’t a big fan of the new sound they were calling punk rock, but as the Lincoln topped the last rise and started the descent toward Rancho Deluxe, the compound an oasis of light in the stone dark desert, the Sex Pistols’ “Pretty Vacant” seemed to aptly sum up his state of mind.

As he watched Parker push the buttons on the control panel and the gate swing slowly open, he felt the tingle of adrenaline percolating in his legs.

He wondered why.

Larry swung the Lincoln alongside the front door of the main house and shut off the engine.

(End of Chapter 29)

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