Cowboy lager, which was one of the two beers Frankâs little brewery made out back. âYouâre still working here,â he said to her.
Sonny set the tall beer in front of him and looked him in the face. âMeaning?â
âSonny,â he said. âMeaning nothing.â She looked tired, a pretty woman with dark hair to her shoulders. She wore a manâs blue dress shirt with a pen in the pocket. âI never said one thing in my life that had a meaning. Iâm surprised to see you. I donât know.â
âWell, hello to you too, Craig Ralston. You ought not to come in here in your Mr. Hardware shirt like that. The good folks will think weâve got plumbing problems. Which we do.â She glanced up at the television and started to move down the bar.
âSonny, I didnât mean anything. Iâm an oaf. Donât be offended by anything an oaf says. You know already that I like you just fine.â
She softened and smiled. âI do know. And you are an oaf. And Iâm still in town, and I still have a job, and this is my job, and Iâm sort of happy and plan, frankly, to stay. Enjoy your beer. Frankâs right around the corner at one of the tables if you want to know.â
âYou always had a way with women,â the man next to him said. It was Al Price, who had spent more time in the Antlers than any man, even Frank, who owned the place. Once or twice a month in the winter Al would end up sleeping in one of the big booths in the back. Heâd been in their class too, a tough guy who didnât play football and who lost a hand in his first month as a roughneck in the Chevron fields. Heâd been nineteen. Now he was gray and grizzled, looking both wiry and soft at the same time, looking, Craig thought, as old as the rest of us.
âHey, Al. Can I buy you a beer?â
âYou ainât been in here for a while,â Al said. He was cleaned up, comb tracks in his hair, his eyes bright.
âLife caught up to the good times,â Craig said. âLarryâs a senior, you know.â
âJesus Christ. Iâd heard rumors that they kept that school open after we ruined it. A senior. Whatâs he going to do to shame us all?
âHe wants out of Oakpine,â Craig said. âAnd heâs not really picky after that.â
âAn idealist.â
âAnd howâs Marci? Donât even tell me. I know sheâs thriving. Sheâs the one of us not to worry about. Sheâs always been together.â
âRight there, Al. Sheâs at the museum. What you been up to?â
âDribs and drabs,â Al said. âIâm doing swing security at the transfer station. Itâs okay. Enough to buy beer, but not enough to get my teeth fixed.â Al lifted his head and showed the two gaps on the sides of his mouth. âWeâre so old, our teeth have given up. You still got yours.â
Craig looked at Al. It was a picture of two fifty-year-olds at a bar, Craig knew, but all he could see was this kid he had known who had been a smartass and careless and whoâd hung on the periphery of things. All these years had passed, but it seemed simply impossible. âYeah,â Craig said. âI still got mine, but I never use them.â Al snorted at this and began to laugh, a tight wheeze of a laugh, an alcoholic laugh overtly, and when his face settled, his eyes looked ancient. âIâm going to catch up with Frank,â Craig said, standing. âSonny,â he called to the woman who now stood at the end under the television, âletâs get Al a beer.â
She pointed her finger at him and pulled the trigger. âYouâre an ace,â she said.
âThanks, man,â Al said. âYouâre an ace.â
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
Frank was in the first booth talking to his brewmaster, Ted Klein. There were papers spread on the table. âWell, Big Craig