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Lock, Stock and Barrel By Rob Rosen
“Get out before I toss you out on your fat ass,” my wife shouted at
me during one of her frequent tirades. Smart man that I am, I obeyed. To
tell you the truth, when she got in one of her dark moods, it was always
best to put some distance between us. Luckily, the local watering hole,
Eddie’s, was only a half a mile away – plenty distance enough for me.
Incidentally, my ass really isn’t all that fat; not that it makes much of
a difference to this story, I just thought you ought to know. I rode my bicycle down there, locked it up outside, and strolled into
Eddie’s a mere ten minutes later. The bar was sparsely populated that day.
Save for a few tables of regulars, mostly all of whom had wives similar to
my own, it was just me and the barkeep, the aptly named Eddie. “The usual, Max?” he asked, already mixing my aridly dry Martini. “Yep,” I said. “But go easy on the vodka. Lucy’s awfully pissed
this time, so I may be here awhile.” Eddie poured the glass half full. Of
course, I saw it as half empty - a mighty sad thing to behold, let me tell
you - and I promptly had him fill it all the way. Anyway, I figured, the
drunker I got, the easier it was to handle the missus. That is to say, when
I did finally make it home, I’d quickly pass out and be blissfully unaware
of her. “Why do you stay with that crazy broad, anyhow?” Eddie asked, after
I’d taken my first delightful sip. Then he graciously stored my heavy
jacket in the stock room. “Cause I can’t sleep here,” I answered, without a trace of sarcasm.
Though if Eddie had a cot in the back, I might have given it some thought.
But really, deep down, like Anyhow, an hour later, and with three martinis nicely warming me up,
I’d almost completely forgotten about my need for escape. I’d also
forgotten to grab a sandwich on my way out the door. “Hey Eddie,” I
shouted down the bar. “Got any pretzels or something?” “In the back, help yourself,” he yelled back, as he escorted one of
the drunker patrons out the front door. Eddie was two hundred pounds of pure
muscle, so tossed was more like it. I’d learned that lesson the hard way. “Okay,” I said, stumbling around the bar and into the storage room.
I’d been back there before. Eddie trusted most of us regulars. We knew
full well he’d probably kill us if we ever tried anything funny with him.
And funny was the last thing on my mind as I looked around for something to
eat. But funny is exactly what I found, though not funny ha-ha. Funny
strange was more like it. Eddie had a nice-sized stock room. Bottles of booze took up most of the
space, but he did have a couple of shelves of finger foods, mostly pretzels
and nuts. Plus he had a small desk, a coat rack for himself and some of us
regulars, and in the corner were a few cleaning supplies. I’d seen all
this before. But now, for some odd reason, he also had two cases of coffee
beans. Oh sure, Eddie always had a pot of coffee brewing, but in all the time
I’d been coming there, I couldn’t recall seeing anyone drink any of the
stuff. So why would he need so many beans? And why would he grind it
himself? Seemed like an awfully big waste of time and money to me. Then
again, my time and my money both belonged to a foul-tempered lass I called
my wife, so who was I to judge? In any case, I found a bag of nuts and
hightailed it out of there. Snooping, I assumed, would be a big no-no with
Eddie. I ate the nuts, drank a couple more martinis, and an hour later I rode my
bike home – no easy feat mind you, but a hell of a lot safer than getting
behind the wheel of my car. Thankfully, Lucy was in better spirits, or at
least it seemed that way. Then again, my world was sorta fuzzy around the
edges by that point. The tree outside my front door seemed like it was in a
good mood, too, if that tells you anything. Still, Lucy wasn’t shouting
anymore, so I assumed my time away did the trick. A short while later, I
passed out, as expected. I woke up the next morning, and everything was back to normal. Well, as
normal as my life ever was. I suppose it’s a relative term. I did try to
stay out of Lucy’s way, though. Why rock a boat that was already in rough
waters, I figured. And with a house as big as ours, it was sort of an easy
thing to accomplish. Still, a mere couple of weeks later, I managed to piss
her off yet again. Lucy was like the tides that way. And when the waves came
crashing down on the shoreline, I was out the door and back at Eddie’s –
my hovel away from home. “Nice to see ya, Max,” he said, as he handed me my drink and hung my
windbreaker up. The routine never grew old. Eddie was good at his job, and
I, for my part, was a nice, if fairly unobtrusive, customer. Most of us
regulars were like that. After all, as the saying goes, you don’t shit
where you eat; not the most appealing visual, but you get my point. “Hey, Eddie,” I said, a short while later, “got any of those
peanuts? I’m starved.” “Damn,” he grunted. “I clean forgot to order any this week. Can you
watch the place while I go to the store and grab a few bags?” It was kinda like having the rats watch the cheese, but I said sure.
Anyway, all of us had filled in at one time or another. Eddie was always
forgetting something, or running quick errands. We trusted him with our
livers, he trusted us with the shop. No biggie. A minute later he was out
the door, and we all just sat there, drinking our drinks and commiserating
about our good-for-nothing wives. “Hey, Max,” one of the regulars shouted over to me, “see if
Eddie’s got any of them pretzels in the back. I gotta eat something
here.” “Yeah, yeah. Keep your shirt on. I’ll go check,” I grumbled.
Though, to be honest, I was hoping for an excuse to go back there. The
coffee bean thing had been nagging at me since my last visit, and with Eddie
gone I could have an uninterrupted look. Sure enough, the stock of coffee beans was still sitting there, only this
time there were three crates instead of two. For some reason my stomach
lurched at the sight of them. Granted, that might have been the booze and
lack of food I’d had, but it was also the fact that something wasn’t
right with this picture. So what did I do? I opened the top crate and had a
look inside. “Coffee beans,” I whispered. No surprises there, right? I
also peaked inside the other two. Same thing: coffee beans. Maybe Eddie was
gonna turn the place into a Starbucks. There were only two on the street
already, so what was one more? But then a little voice inside my head told me to delve deeper. I’m of
course speaking figuratively here. I really don’t hear little voices
inside my head. Usually. In any case, I reached inside the top crate and
rooted around. “Coffee beans,” I said again. “Uh oh,” I quickly
added. The box, it appeared, only partially contained coffee beans. The top
half was full of the familiar hard beans. The bottom half felt soft and
pliable beneath my searching fingers. So I grabbed whatever it was I was
feeling, and I pulled it out. “Uh oh,” I echoed. “Hurry up with the pretzels, Max,” the guy yelled from out front.
“I’m starving.” “Hold your horses,” came the familiar voice of Eddie. “Start on
these peanuts.” “Uh oh,” I echoed, yet again, starting to sound like a Swiss yodeler.
I knew I only had like a split second before Eddie came back to hang his
jacket up, and if he caught me with my hand in the coffee beans I’d be a
goner for sure. So I shoved the bag of white powder inside my own jacket,
quickly closed the crate, and ran from the stock room, with my jacket hung
over my arm. “Leaving so soon?” Max asked. “Oh, um, yeah. Forgot, I gotta go to the grocery store and pick up some
Coke, er, um, soda for Lucy. She’ll kill me if I forget.” “Oh, okay. Well thanks for watching the place, see you soon,” Eddie
said, looking at me suspiciously. I think the stammering and the by-then
profuse sweating may have clued him in that all was not okay. I ran out of
there quick as a wink, so as not to draw even more attention to myself, and
I didn’t look back. But that’s when I noticed it. Or, that is to say, didn’t notice it.
The key to the lock on my bike was no longer in my jacket pocket. It must
have fallen out when I slung my jacket over my arm. Luckily, the baggie was
still snugly in place. Or, that is to say, not so luckily. Okay, as you
might have guessed, my head was reeling by that point. What the hell was I gonna do? Maybe, I prayed, Eddie would never notice
the missing bag. The entire bottom of the crate felt like it was full of
them. That meant there were probably dozens of baggies in all three crates
combined. If he emptied them out simultaneously, he might never notice that
one had seemingly vanished. Though given the size of the bag in my jacket, I
seriously doubted it. I’d just have to think of a way to sneak it back
into the crate. Either that, or leave the state. Or the country. At best, I
figured, I better leave the parking lot. But without the key to my lock, I
had no bicycle. Needless to say, I practically ran all the way home. “Why are you sweating so much?” my wife asked, fifteen minutes later,
as I ran inside the house and bolted the door behind me. “It’s hot outside,” I answered, peeking through the curtains to see
if I was followed. “It’s forty degrees out there, Max,” she said. “Oh. Maybe I’m coming down with something then. I should go and lie
down.” Which I did. I crawled under the covers, shut my eyes, and tried to
clear the bad thoughts from my addled brain. But that was kinda like trying
to erase permanent ink from a wipe board. The bad thoughts kept swirling
around my head all willy-nilly like. Firstly, even I, naïve middle-aged man that I was, knew that drug
dealers concealed there stashes in coffee beans to hide the scent from
drug-sniffing dogs. Which meant that, secondly, in my jacket pocket there
was now a rather large bag of an illicit substance. Which meant that,
thirdly, I had stolen a bag of an illicit substance from a rather muscular
drug dealer. Which meant, lastly, that I was most likely a dead man. Had I
had much of a life, it would have probably flashed before my eyes right
about then. But when I opened my eyes, all I could see was the barrel of the
gun that was pointed at me. “Hi Eddie. What’s up?” was about all I could come up with. “You dropped your key in my stock room,” he replied, with his finger
pressed dangerously tight on the trigger. “Oops. That’s me, Mister Butterfingers. Thanks for bringing it back
to me, you really shouldn’t have bothered.” “And you really shouldn’t have taken my drugs.” “No, I suppose not,” I said, as I slowly raised myself up on my
elbows. The gun raised right along with me. “But you know how that
hindsight thing is.” Just then, my wife entered. “Oh hi, Lucy,” I said, trying hard not to pee the bed. “You
remember Eddie, right?” “Hard to forget a man that comes running through my home with a gun,
Max,” she said, cool as the proverbial cucumber. I envied her calm.
Actually, I envied the lack of a gun pointed at her smug face. “Give me back the bag, Max, and I might not kill you,” Eddie said, as
the tip of the barrel brushed my nose. “Might not?” I asked. He paused before answering. Maybe he hadn’t given it much thought.
“Nope, I’m gonna kill you,” he finally replied. So maybe he had given
it some thought. “Well, okay, the drugs are in my jacket. But please don’t kill my
wife. She didn’t have anything to do with this.” Eddie shouted over to Lucy, “Go to his jacket and bring me the bag.”
The gun stayed rested on my schnoz. Lucy walked over and retrieved the bag,
and then tossed it on the bed. “Now let him go,” she said. “You know I can’t do that,” he said. “I said, let him go,” she reiterated. Eddie slowly pulled the gun away from my face. I breathed a small sigh of
relief. “Okay, Lucy. You’re the boss,” Eddie said. “Huh?” was about all I could manage, but then added. “You mean
figuratively, right?” “No, Max,” Lucy said, and then took the gun from Eddie. “He means
it quite literarily. I’m his boss; and yours, in a way. You’re the one
who’s been bringing him the drugs every two weeks or so. I stitch a little
into your jacket, we have a fight, and you go down to the bar. Eddie hangs
your jacket up, and then removes the drugs. Then he stashes them in the
cases of coffee beans, sells the cases, and sends me back the money through
your jacket. You can hide a lot in a windbreaker, you know.” I sat there stunned. I thought my wife stayed at home all day watching
soap operas. Then I asked, “So this house?” “Drugs,” she said, and nodded. “And my clothes?” “Drugs,” she said, and kept nodding. “And our cars?” “Drugs,” she said, and then added, “It’s all bought with drug
money, Max. All of it.” “But I thought your parents gave you the money,” I said, since that
is indeed what I thought. Oh stupid me. “Nope, my parents send me the drugs. It’s a family business. Welcome
to the family, Max.” “So Eddie’s not gonna kill me?” Now she nodded her head no. “And you’re not gonna kill me either?” Again with the no. “Because?” I had to ask. “Because you’re my husband, and I suppose I love you.” Hmm, the day was just full of surprises. “So,” I said, “I guess
I’m a drug runner now, huh?” Both Lucy and Eddie nodded and smiled at
me. I smiled back at them and added, “Well, it beats getting shot in the
face.” And that’s how I joined the family business. Well, only temporarily,
really. Like for ten minutes. After our little conversation I went and took
a much-needed leak, and then I excused myself and went for a much-needed
walk. Yep, I strolled right on out of there and went directly to the police
station, where I promptly told them the whole story, including where they
could find three cases of drugs, and a home with two drug dealers and at
least one gun. I loved my wife, too, but not enough to go to prison. Oh, and one more thing. Drug running wasn’t the first crime I ever
committed. That would be embezzlement. Over the years I’d taken quite a
bit of money from our joint checking account, and hid it all in a private
storage locker. So when the cops came and hauled my wife away, and then the
government took our home and Eddie’s bar, I was still left with a
considerable nest egg. Now I live in Boca Raton in a small, but cozy,
bungalow overlooking the ocean, which I share with a much younger and more
honest women named Jenny. I paid cash for the place, by the way, which I now
own – lock, stock, and barrel.
Copyright © 2005 Rob Rosen |
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Also from Rob Rosen on SoMa Literary Review: Megalomaniac, Lock, Stock and Barrel, The Glass Slippers, Topless, Love & Haight, For A Change, Shut Your Eyes and Pray, Perfect Strangers, The Mule & The Elephant, Total World Dominations, Life Among the Ruins, The Krispy Kreme Dream Team, You Gotta Stop and Smell the Roses, Ten Minutes and Counting, Thanksgiving – San Francisco Style, The IKEA Paradox, Maybes, Bippo the Clown, Office Romance, Bunny and Hoppy, A Queer Fable, Costco High, Life in the Fast Lane, The Tattoo & Nina Hagen
Rob Rosen was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1966. He spent his childhood in the suburbs of New Jersey, his teen years in Hilton Head, South Carolina, and much of his early adulthood in Atlanta, Georgia, where he graduated from Emory University with a B.S. in Biology and then worked for eight years as a Clinical Biochemist. When he turned thirty, he packed it all in, sold his car, broke his lease, gave up his career and followed his dreams to San Francisco, where he is now an Office Guru. So much for that expensive education. His first book is "Sparkle". |
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Reproduction of material from SoMa Literary Review pages |