Samantha had been sitting at the end of a long oak bar with scuffs and
dings from 40 years of pennant races lost and super bowls unvisited.
Broken glass would occasionally find it's way onto a freshly cleaned
floor from bottle smashed against the underside of the bar weeks before.
Despite the turmoil, Samantha sat at the corner or the bar with her
back to the wall closest to the entrance. A glimpse out the front
window over her left should was all she would allow herself as any break
from her biology masters coursework she chose to study on Wednesday
afternoons at Tadwick's on 3rd and Stratman. Tadwick's was known for
it's middle ground draft beer pricing and less than adequate food
quality. It also was a locals bar that few of the college crowd cared
to visit even when Tadwick's extended it's last call a full hour past
the other local bars.
On a day when she found her focus
constantly shifting to the sun peaking in through the half open shutters
on the first temperate day in April, Glen was enjoying his first
afternoon of the first job from which he had ever been laid off at 27
years old. His mood was hampered by a lack of alcohol flooding his
veins and seeping into his brain. Samantha found herself unable to find
a reason to return to her books after she observed Glen smoothly mimic a
head count of the number of guys at a nearby table before ordering four
shots of whiskey only to down them in a sixty second hell-storm by
himself.
"Alcohol is a gateway drug to vomit, you know."
Samantha had spent her high school life skipping parties with the
boozing teenage crowds to get a full ride to the ivy league school of
her choice. She continued this trend moving her way into graduate
school debt free. Even as focused of a student as she was, every one
has a slight draw to a Jerry Springer episode bound to unfold in person.
"I
can afford vomit. I can't afford the drinks. That's why these are on
their tab." Glen flicks his thumb towards the corner table of three men
in their fifties with heads inches from the table and gaining ground
with every nod of a head.
"Well, you should moderate at least or
you'll load all of the alcohol into one shot through your blood stream.
It could send your heart racing at a standstill which could lead to
arrhythmia and possible heart failure. That's where the real beasts get
into your life. I'm sure your current predicament can't be nearly as
bad as that."
A beast is what she used to refer to health
problems in the future. She had spewed a line of garbage with the hopes
that she might convince him to not become a total jack ass before she
could get a good story out him. "Beast" was the one word she should not
have used. Glen would etch those words into his brain for the next
five years as the last sounds he heard of normalcy.
The thing
about being fired before lunch is that a lack of income cuts a man's
hunger in an instant. Glen had not considered this before the influx of
alcohol hit his empty stomach. Combined with a health threat running
through his addled brain, the words he was now hearing sent him into a
panic displaying itself as simple fainting. His head would have slammed
into the ground had he not been sitting on a stool close enough to the
bar for his feet to catch as he lurched backwards towards the floor.
Nobody at the table noticed or made any indication they were anything
more than bourbon scented decorations. Only Samantha came to his side
to check on him. The cold ground was not a valid replacement for the
bag of ice he would need later, but the heat from his head allowed a
slight look of steam linger for a second before coming up to a balance
of temperature.
Glen had his first unconscious moment with a skipped beat. Blakely had just entered the building.
Tuesday, July 3, 2007
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