Hardtail
She came back alone on a Wednesday.
Ray heard the car. Knew it was her before looking up.
No scrubs this time. Jeans and a white t-shirt with the sleeves rolled up and her hair down, which Ray hadn’t seen in a long time, because the last time he’d seen her, she was twenty-eight, standing in a parking lot outside a bar in Hamtramck with her hands in her coat pockets and her eyes doing that thing they did when she’d already decided.
She came through the gate and stopped ten feet from him.
Ray set the wrench down on the concrete and stood.
“He’s not here,” he said.
“I know.”
The garage was quiet. No radio. No Donny. Just the heat pressing down and a horsefly working the rim of an open beer can on the workbench.
He wiped his hands on the rag. Took his time with it.
She walked to the workbench and looked at the parts laid out in sequence on the towel. She picked up a small chrome fitting and turned it in her fingers.
“You always do this,” she said.
“Do what?”
She set it down exactly where she’d found it, took in the length of the bench, the bare walls, the stopped clock, the Daytona Bike Week plate screwed over the side door.
“Why here?” she said. “Not exactly Daytona, is it?”
“That’s the point,” he said.
She waited.
“My dad’s place.”
She let out a short breath through her nose. “Right.” She turned the chrome fitting over once more without picking it up. “Dear ole dad. How is the son of a bitch.”
Ray didn’t answer.
“So that’s the story,” she said. “You didn’t run. You rode twelve hundred miles to care for the old man? Wipe his ass. Put his affairs in order?” She finally looked at him. “That’s what we’re going with?”
“He needed…” he stopped. “It was the right thing to do.”
“Sure it was.” She set her palms flat on the bench. “But, what’s your excuse for the fifteen years after that?”
A truck went past on the street, heavy, shaking the tools on the pegboard.
“Favor to Butch,” he said.
She went still.
“He came to see me. At the shop up on Eight Mile.” Ray’s jaw moved. “We had a conversation.”
“What kind of conversation?”
“The kind where one man explains to another man how things are.”
She picked up the chrome fitting again. Put it down.
“He never told me that,” she said.
“No.”
“I thought you just—” she stopped. Pressed two fingers to her mouth, then dropped her hand. “I thought you decided I wasn’t worth the trouble.”
“I know what you thought.”
The horsefly landed. She waved it off. It circled, came back.
Ray moved to the Craftsman roll-away against the back wall. Pulled a drawer open, looked in without seeing anything, pushed it shut. Pulled another.
“He loved you,” he said. “Whatever else.”
“I know he did.”
“And he knew.”
The words landed between them, and neither one moved toward them.
Outside, the neighbor’s sprinkler kicked on. The sound of water on dry grass came through the open door.
“Does the boy know?” he said.
“No.”
“You plan on telling him?” he asked.
She looked at the stopped clock on the wall. “Do you?”
He pushed the drawer shut. Stood with his hand on the face of the box.
“I tried to run him off,” Ray said. “He’s respectful. I’ll give him that.” Something moved across his face, not quite a smile. “But he ain’t the type to take no for an answer.”
She almost laughed. “He can be stubborn,” she shook her head.
“Bullheaded, more like it.” He pulled another drawer, half an inch, pushed it back. “Runs into a wall, blames the wall.” He shrugged. “I could try again.”
“Won’t do you much good.” She turned the chrome fitting in her fingers one last time and set it down. “But you could try.”
They both waited on that.
“He’s a smart boy, Ang.” Ray turned to face her. “A real thinker,” he tapped his temple. “And tough, in his own way, I guess. Kid ain’t got an ounce of quit in him.”
She was quiet a moment. “A little lost,” she offered. “I worry about him. What he might get himself into.”
Ray nodded once. Slow. Closed the drawer.
The sprinkler swept past the gate and back again.
“He doesn’t know anything about that life,” she said. “The clubs. The runs. The rest of it.”
“No.”
“And I don’t want him to learn, either,” she said. “About any of it.”
Ray looked at her then. Held it. “That’s not what this is.”
She held his eyes for a moment, then looked away first. Out through the gate and up the hill. The way the boy always came.
“He doesn’t have a man in his life, Ray. Not a good one.”
Ray didn’t answer. He closed the last drawer and stood with his back to the box, arms at his sides.
She picked up her keys from the workbench where she’d set them without realizing.
At the gate, she stopped. Didn’t turn around.
Ray called after her. “You know you’re wrong, Ang,” he said. “About the bikes.”
She waited.
“Bikes don’t lead a man to trouble.”
His eyes went fixed on the oil stain. The concrete where he’d been kneeling when she walked in.
“It’s the wanting for something more.”
A long moment passed.
“Yeah,” she said. “I know.”
She walked to her car.
He listened to the door, the engine, the sound pulling away up and over the hill until it was gone, and the street was just the sprinkler again, hissing against the heat.
He stood there a while.
Then knelt.
Picked up his wrench and went back to work.


