The Lexus From Texas
The red sunlight bounced off the hood of Colleen
Starbuck’s brand new Lexus and struck her right in the eyes. She pondered
the odds of hitting, precisely at dawn, the short stretch of I- 35/80 running
due east through Des Moines. As usual, she was in the right place at the wrong
time. Just like when she’d met H.W. Starbuck.
The 2006 Lexus was, as the brochure had
promised, fully loaded. And not just with upscale options like leather seats, an
automatic sunroof and on-line GPS; it was stuffed with everything Colleen could
fit into it.
Colleen was leaving H. W. Starbuck.
After driving all night, Colleen was grateful
for the Lexus’s deluxe features. A mere flick of a button on her steering
wheel adjusted the visor to get the sun out of her eyes. If only she could press
a button to get H.W. out of her life. “Press here to delete twenty-three
years of marriage.”
It would not be that easy.
H.W. probably didn’t even realize she was
gone. He was passed out on the couch when Colleen left Dallas. He had been
drinking all afternoon before the big party she’d organized for his newest
corporate client and was already down for the count before the first guests were
due to arrive.
Colleen remembered standing over him, staring at
his moist, slack mouth as his eyes rolled back behind half-closed lids. Then she
thought how
easy it
would be to turn off the central air and open up the valves on the gas stove ...
Her momma had once said that if you start wondering what you would do with the
body, then, it’s time to leave.
So she did. She didn’t bother changing
her party clothes; she just calmly marched upstairs and packed, selecting only
the things she absolutely couldn’t live without.
H.W. was not on the list.
Specks of gravel began hitting her windshield as
she approached a construction truck laboring in her lane ahead. Its rear was
marked with large, black letters: Caution: Do Not Follow Into Work Area.
Wondering where the vehicle was going on Sunday morning, she tried to make sense
of the warning. She could think of no reason on god’s green earth that
anyone would follow a truck into a work area.
If only there had been such a sign on H.W.
Starbuck’s rear end when she met him.
A yellow
‘Exit Only’ sign alerted her that I-80 and I-35 were about to
diverge. As the truck rumbled and clattered east, toward Davenport, Colleen
veered left and turned north, toward the Twin Cities.
The sun’s pink rays warmed Colleen’s
right cheek. She stole a glance at the fields skimming past, where the breath of
the tall, August corn hung between the green blades and the opal sky.
God help her, it was going to be a beautiful
day.
And she still had a long drive to Saint Paul.
Not that she was in any hurry to get there. Her
cousin David hadn’t seemed too excited to hear from her. Who could blame
him? Even though she hadn’t told him the real reason she was coming, she
suspected that his bachelor radar had detected her desperate woman
vibe.
Colleen looked at the glowing digits of the trip
meter. “I’ll swan,” she said aloud in her silky drawl,
“have I gone seven hundred miles since suppertime?” She contracted
the muscles of her numb fanny and raised it off the seat a few times. “I
reckon if you drive seventy miles an hour for ten hours and only stop three
times to pee, that’ll do it.” Colleen giggled. She’d said
‘pee.’ Out loud. H.W. would have a conniption. Oh, how she’d
loved to have seen the guests’ faces when they arrived to find H.W. drunk
and drooling and unaccompanied by his
lovelywifeColleen,
which – as she’d explained in her recently-published first novel
– is a compound word in Texas.
Remembering the look in H.W.’s eyes before
he passed out made her skin crawl. It was his “kiss my boots, honey, and
never forget that you married above your assigned station in life” look.
The look that said she should be tickled pink that
he
thought she was good enough for his shallow, greedy, mean, alcoholic do not
follow into work area ass... Never mind that she was smarter and more talented
than H.W. and she had scored 34 on her ACT and gone to the University of Texas
at Austin on a full ride scholarship. And dang it, Colleen had let it go to her
head when someone told her that she should try modeling, even though she was
just weeks away from finishing her MFA. Wouldn’t you know it, that’s
when she met H.W., a hotshot photographer, in a case of what amounted to being
in the
wrong
place at the worst
possible time. She’d followed
him into the work area, and the rest was, as they way, history.
Colleen had been good enough for him then, an
attractive accessory hanging off his arm at parties and corporate events. And
she’d been good enough to manage his business, woo his clients and do just
about everything but point and shoot the camera. He’d become the most
sought-after commercial photographer in Forth Worth-Dallas, but he never gave
Colleen any credit. And he never let her forget that
her
daddy was only a trucker and her
momma was just a hairdresser, while
H.W.’s
daddy was an advertising executive who’d set him up in the photography
business.
Colleen fingered a tender bruise on her upper
arm. Even when he was drunk, H.W. managed to place his hands carefully so her
sleeves would hide the marks. He’d always treated her like dirt, but he
didn’t start hurting her until she went back to school and finished her
Masters degree.
She didn’t even tell him she was writing a
book until an agent agreed to represent her. Instead of celebrating when her
agent called with a publisher’s offer, she had spent the night in a Best
Western hotel to escape H.W.’s drunken tirade.
The memory made Colleen’s empty stomach
lurch. Why had she gone back to him? What kind of sick person was she to put up
with his abuse? And what had given her the gumption to pack up and leave him
this time?
Maybe it was the hot flashes and mood swings
reminding her that she wasn’t a spring chicken anymore.
Maybe it was that look in H.W.’s eye. Like
he was going to haul off and smack her in the face.
Maybe it was the cool, detached thoughts she had
about doing away with him.
Or, maybe it was simply the advance from her
novel, with which she’d bought the new Lexus.
“I’m drivin’ a Lexus from
Texas!” she crooned, inventing a melody. “There’s got to be a
country song somewhere in this situation.”
The smooth pavement beneath her wheels
threatened to lull her to sleep. “Lawd, I need coffee!” Colleen
rotated her shoulders and stretched her neck. Another flick of a switch on the
control panel activated the on-line information system. “Find the best
espresso shop within thirty miles,” she instructed. “Excluding
Starbucks.” H.W. wasn’t connected to the Starbucks coffee empire,
but Colleen didn’t want to do commerce with the name, anyway. She should
take back her maiden name, Tierney, as quick as a hiccup, as her momma would
say.
Would that require a divorce?
Panic rose in her chest at that thought, but
Colleen swallowed it and took a deep breath. “Just shut up and drive your
Lexus from Texas, darlin’,” she sang to herself as she waited for
the on-line information system to respond to her request.
Beans and corn, alternating with corn and beans,
whizzed by the car window. “I’m in Iowa,” she reminded
herself. “What am I thinking? The nearest espresso shop is probably in the
Twin Cities.”
As if on cue, a green highway sign rolled past,
announcing: Minneapolis, 225 miles. Colleen was about to resign herself to a cup
of sludge from the nearest BP station when the dulcet computerized voice from
the on-line information system said, “Taraccino Coffee, rated the Best in
Ames, Iowa. Twenty miles north, take Exit 111A west ...” A map flashed on
the screen.
In Ames, the route to the coffee shop followed a
business strip bristling with colorful franchise billboards. Traffic was sparse,
but the shop’s parking lot was packed. Colleen eased the white Lexus
between two hulking SUVs, turned off the engine and lowered the vanity mirror.
Light brown, gold-flecked eyes looked back at her. Her eyes were bloodshot and
rimmed by dark circles, but otherwise, she didn’t look so bad for a
48-year-old who’d been up all night. She opened her bag, dabbed concealer
under her eyes, slicked her mouth with lipstick, and stepped out of the
car.
The smartly appointed coffee shop was crowded.
Every sofa, chair and table seemed to be occupied and a line of customers
stretched beyond the case displaying pastries and muffins.
Heads turned and the buzz of conversation fell
when Colleen stepped to the rear of the customer queue. Was everyone staring? No
wonder. She was still dressed in the black, raw silk sheath and satin pumps
she’d put on for H.W. Starbuck’s party. Fidgeting, she smoothed her
champagne-blond bob and adjusted the little velvet wrap she’d thrown over
her shoulders. She might as well have climbed up on the counter and announced,
“I’m not
from
around here!”
Stepping up to the cashier when her turn came,
Colleen met a frazzled, young brunette’s eyes. Though neatly dressed, the
girl was pale and looked as if she’d crawled out of bed without combing
her hair. College girls in Dallas wore the same style. If Colleen’s mama
had been there, she would have lectured the girl on the woeful shortcomings of
trendy haircuts. “Honey, let me do your hair so you won’t look like
you lost a fight with a pair of dull pinking shears.” And Colleen’s
daddy would have agreed. “Girl, you look like your head just blew
up!” And if H.W. had been there, he would have rolled his eyes at
Colleen’s parents and said, “See what I rescued you from, Colleen?
Now, what are you thinking, running off and leaving me?”
In her head, their voices bickered among
themselves, taunting her with the possibility that, no matter how you dressed
her up, Colleen would always be just one slip of the tongue removed from the
trailer park. It didn’t really matter, H.W.’s voice sneered, how
educated or pretty or classy Colleen appeared to be. She would pale to
insignificance if she ventured beyond his aura.
Colleen glanced outside at her Lexus, all pearly
white with gold trim. “Understated elegance,” is what the slick
brochure had said. And that’s what Colleen wanted to embody. But H.W. had
made fun of her choice of vehicles. “Any wannabe can own a Lexus,”
he’d said, swinging the keys to his Mercedes in her
face.
Colleen tightened her wrap and
hugged her arms where the bruises had begun to throb. “I’ll have a
double shot of espresso in a regular cup,” she said. The girl looked at
her blankly, fingers poised above the cash register. “I like to put cream
in it,” Colleen sighed. “So please don’t put it in an espresso
cup.” Colleen pulled a five-dollar bill from her bag. “Keep the
change,” she said.
Posted: Thu - January 22, 2004 at 02:14 PM