The Late Show at the Argo
The Argo Drive-In late show ended
at 11:30. When the last car had gone, Marti doused the sodium vapor spotlight,
slipped on double latex gloves and rolled the trash trolley through the
semicircular theater lot. An empty pint of Courvoisier, an unfurled Trojan, and
a baby’s sippy cup joined the usual popcorn tubs and soda cans. Nothing
special, not like the previous week’s find of a South Sea
pearl ring and umber calfskin gloves. She heard the cough of the
projectionist’s truck about to leave; Avner sounded a see-you-later beep and
rumbled out the exit toward Cooley’s Package Store before it closed at midnight.
In the distance Marti could see flashing blue and red emergency lights where
the road bent sharply west. Silently she wished Avner a safe detour around the
latest crash.
She remembered to check the
speaker wires at Slot 23. She’d had to disable that speaker earlier; best to reconnect
its parts while it was fresh on her mind. The couple in the car at Slot 23 had
not been ugly about the speaker malfunction, especially since she’d moved them
quickly to Slot 88 at the darkest corner of the parking rows. They hadn’t come
to watch the movie, anyway, Marti knew. The woman had been all over the guy,
humping him in the front seat and the back. They’d been oblivious to everything
around them.
Marti stretched and craned to see
beyond the Argo’s fence. On tiptoe she was 5’10” even. To the west, the red and
blue still strobed. To the east, a quarter moon was rising.
Marti moved on to Slot 88. It was
the Argo’s newest parking slot, created when the need arose one day. She
checked around for any trash or unusual leavings. In the weak moonlight, it
looked pretty much like all the other slots with their yellow numbers, speaker
stands and call buttons, which patrons pressed in case of problems. Its special
feature, though, was something she and Avner had created.
“I want a pit in the ground, like
the one where the mechanic stands under your car, when you go for an oil
change,” she had said.
He’d caught on in a blink. “But
with a roof over the dugout part so it somehow blends with the parking lot.”
He had rented a backhoe to dig
the pit one morning when the Argo was closed. Marti reinforced the sides with
timbers; four by fours at the corners, two by fours to brace them. They ran PVC
pipe downhill away from the pit to drain off water. The bay was big enough to
hold a man of Avner’s size plus a toolbox and a folding ladder. It was narrower
than the wheelbase of any vehicle. Marti drove Avner’s Silverado over the hole,
then her own Acura to check. He practiced sliding under the vehicle’s chassis,
into the pit and out again. He could reach every part of a vehicle’s underside
while down there, especially hydraulic lines and brakes.
“No cutters, no cutting,” he’d
told Marti as he selected the tools that would stay permanently in the bay.
“Lines have to be damaged, but any neat straight cuts can be detected. That
way, no blowback.”
“I’ll blow-back you,” she’d
laughed, and they’d had sex in the bay.
The roof for Slot 88 had been a challenge,
Marti thought as she rolled the trash trolley back to the concession stand. She
turned the popcorn kettle off and rinsed out rags. Impossible to create an
asphalt roof over the bay, they’d realized, and no way to camouflage it
totally. They had given up on making Slot 88 perfectly identical to the rest.
The roof just had to be strong. A flat steel grate slid over the opening, not
soundlessly, but quietly enough. Slot 88 had no other parking slots next to it,
and no lights illuminated it. By the time the late show started, it was a
shadow box.
Cleanup over, Marti exited and locked the
drive-in gates. She liked this quiet time after the late show when she was sole
custodian. Her employers, an elderly couple from Birmingham, left the Argo’s
management to her and Avner. They didn’t update the sound system to digital,
keeping, instead, old-fashioned in-car speakers that broke easily. “Just
replace what breaks,” the man had said. “And keep a good electrician on call.” At
her interview, she had told the owners, “I’ve always loved drive-ins. They’re an
American tradition, and I want the Argo to survive.”
Two shows nightly – the early
shows all PG-rated family fare, the late shows adults-only – meant a short
workday for Marti. Twice weekly she completed paperwork or refilled soft drink
canisters of CO2. Easy-peasy. Her pay, direct-deposited, was not the point.
What counted was the unique opportunity afforded by the Argo.
*******
What counted was the unique opportunity afforded by the Argo.
*******
It was nearly 1 a.m. when Marti pulled
up to St. Vincent’s Hospital on Birmingham ’s
Southside. She rode the elevator to 3 North, the surgical intensive care
waiting room. A haggard older woman, a sleeping child, a nervous-looking man were
occupying chairs below a silent TV screen. The man rose quickly and walked to
Marti’s side. “Shelley’s still in surgery,” he whispered. “The guy, the
driver’s dead.”
“And
that’s your…?”
“Mother
in law,” he answered. “Shelley’s mom.”
“Lorne, let’s get coffee,” Marti said and drew him towards the corridor.
“Lorne, let’s get coffee,” Marti said and drew him towards the corridor.
“We’ll
be right back, Mom,” Lorne called out, then followed.
“Cameras
are everywhere, so here’s what we’ll do,” Marti said. “When you buy the
coffees, take a few extra napkins. Hand me my coffee and put the envelope in my
hand, as naturally as if it was a napkin. Keep to natural movements. It’s all
good; keep talking to me about Shelley and the crash.”
At 2 a.m. Marti entered the apartment,
showered fast and slid into her side of bed.
“Mmmmm,” came Avner’s welcome. “Go okay?”
Marti
fitted her front to his back. “Your half is on the dresser. It’s more than ever.”
The first client had come to Avner,
actually. A plumber checking water lines at the concession stand had griped
about his cheating wife. “Bitch probably comes here to fuck in the guy’s car,”
he’d said. “Bet you see a lot of cheating bitches here. I should come over and
catch her. Damn, I could kill her.”
Avner, joking: “Hey man, I could use
some extra cash. Let me take care of it.”
Plumber, not joking: “Do you know how to fuck up the brakes on a car?”
Plumber, not joking: “Do you know how to fuck up the brakes on a car?”
Marti, hearing about this later,
asked: “Well, do you?”
Avner did, although he didn’t have the
stomach for the aftermath. Marti had the job of visiting the hospitals. She was
okay with that. Each one got easier. Cheating
Shelley had been their fifth.
The routine was beautifully simple: The
paying client told Avner what make and model car and license plate to look for.
Marti passed by the cheaters’ slot and, with a practiced swipe, loosened a
speaker wire. The cheaters complained and got moved to Slot 88. Avner slipped
into the secret bay under their car as soon as the feature started; the couple
drove away at the end of the show. They crashed sooner or later, often with
fatalities to the woman cuddled up against her lover.
Money changed hands, lots of money. Time went
by. Late shows played seven nights a week. People made love in darkened cars as
if they were invisible, the last to copulate on earth.
Marti smiled against Avner’s back as
she drifted toward slumber. Yes, their future was secure. Marti thought, a
recession-proof career. The world would never run out of cheaters.
Yowza! Great write, G!
ReplyDeleteGood one.
ReplyDeleteNever thought Marti could come up with such a sinister plan. Best of luck in her new business. This one was a great surprise.
ReplyDelete