1.1 Worm
The store sat at the far end of a strip center on the east side of town, the kind of place that sold loose cigarettes from behind the counter and kept the beer cooler padlocked after ten. A cardboard cutout of a woman holding a bottle of Fabuloso stood next to the door with one corner of her face peeled back from the sun. The parking lot had three cars in it and a shopping cart turned on its side near the curb, one wheel still turning in the wind that came across the flats carrying dust and the faint sulfur smell of the oil patch.
Saint walked the aisle with two loaves of white bread held in one hand by the twist ties, the plastic swinging against his thigh as he moved. In his other hand he had a pack of colored pencils, the cardboard backing bent where he'd pulled it off the hook. He turned the pack over once and looked at the color chart printed on the back, the row of swatches running from a pale yellow down through burnt sienna and raw umber to a black that wasn't really black but close enough.
Dani moved ahead of him with a jug of milk hooked on two fingers, two packets of cold cuts pressed flat against her chest with her forearm, and a bag of apples swinging from the other hand. Her eyes scanned the prices taped to the shelf edges, her mouth working through math. Keen trailed behind them both with a bunch of bananas gripped by the stem and a handful of chip bags fanned out between his fingers, the foil crinkling every time he shifted his grip.
The clerk, maybe fifty, thin through he shoulders, stood behind the register with his arms folded over the front of his vest, his chin lifted, his eyes tracking them down the aisle, his head turning with them as they walked.
Dani stopped at the end of the aisle and turned around to face them. She looked at what they were carrying then she looked at their faces.
"Y'all got money, right?"
Saint shifted the bread to his other hand. "I got like six bucks."
"Guess you better put them colors back, bro," Keen said.
Dani's eyes moved to Keen. "You didn't answer if you got money, nigga."
Keen sucked his teeth and held up the bananas and the chip. "I got like a dollar if I'm being real with you."
Dani looked down at the milk jug hanging from her fingers, then at the cold cuts pressed against her chest, then at everything the three of them were holding between them. Her jaw shifted once to the side.
"We gonna have to put shit back."
"We wasted gas getting out here so we're still fucked if we put shit back," Keen said. He adjusted the chip bags in his hand, the foil catching the fluorescent light. "Might as well get what we picked up."
The clerk's voice came from the front of the store, pitched to carry. "Y'all need some help?"
Saint shook his head without turning around. "Nah, we good."
"I can take y'all up here when you're ready then."
Keen looked at Saint. His eyes held for a beat and then his chin dipped toward the door, a small motion.
Dani caught it. "C'mon. Y'all not doing that shit again today. Gary still pissed from the last time."
Keen kept his eyes on Saint. Then he turned his head toward the register and nodded that direction, his shoulders dropping, his face smoothing out. "Nah, c'mon. We gonna figure it out up there."
Saint shook his head, but he started walking. The three of them came up the aisle together, Dani in front, Saint behind her, Keen bringing up the back with his sneakers dragging on the tile in a slow shuffle that didn't match his eyes.
Dani set her things on the counter first. The milk jug landed heavy and she stacked the cold cuts on top of each other next to it and set the bag of apples beside that. She reached into the front pocket of her jeans and pulled out a small wad of cash folded once lengthwise, the bills soft and creased from being carried.
Keen put the bananas down on the counter. Then he looked past the clerk at the back wall where the vapes hung on a pegboard display behind a sheet of plexiglass.
"How much them is?"
The clerk turned his body to follow where Keen was pointing, his hand coming up to adjust his glasses as he squinted at the display behind him.
Saint went for the door.
He dropped his shoulder into the push bar and the door swung open hard enough that the hinges barked and the electronic chime fired twice in quick succession. The air hit his face, the light his eyes and he was already three steps into the parking lot before the door had finished its swing. The bread swung from his hand and the pencils he shoved down the front of his jeans as he ran, the cardboard scraping his skin before it settled flat against his hip.
Behind him Keen's sneakers slipped against the tile, the rubber squealing once before they caught, and then he was through the door too, the chime going off again, his laughter already starting somewhere in his chest as he cleared the threshold and hit daylight.
The clerk spun around from the vape display. His hand slapped the counter and he came forward, his body hitting the door a second after it had swung shut.
"Hey! Come back here!"
Saint reached the edge of the parking lot and pulled up, his chest working, the bread tucked in the crook of his arm now. He looked over his shoulder and saw Keen running toward him across the asphalt, his face split open with a grin, and behind Keen the clerk trying to keep up, his finger pointed at Keen.
The cruiser turned into the lot from the street.
It came in slow,, rolling over the speed bump at the entrance without stopping, the Odessa Police Department seal on the door catching the sun as the car angled toward them. The clerk saw it before Saint did. He slowed down and his voice carried across the parking lot.
"They're stealing!"
The door opened and the officer stepped out with one hand on the roof of the car, his belt heavy on his hips. He looked at Saint across the hood, took a breath that lifted his chest and let it go through his nose.
"Don't make me fucking chase you today, Saint."
Dani came through the store's front door behind the clerk, the milk jug, the cold cuts, the bananas and the apples gathered against her body, her receipt balled in her fist. She saw the cruiser, the officer standing beside it, and her head dropped then she turned and walked the other way along the front of the strip center, her stride measured, her eyes on the sidewalk in front of her feet.
Saint shifted the bread tighter into the crook of his arm. The officer stepped around the front of the cruiser and started toward him, one hand reaching up for the radio on his shoulder.
Saint took off.
He cut to the right, away from Keen, his feet finding the asphalt and pushing off it in short quick steps. The officer changed direction and angled to cut him off before he could clear the far end of the lot, his boots heavy on the pavement, his hand keying the radio as he ran.
Saint saw the angle and saw the officer's weight commit to it, his body leaning forward, his center already moving. Saint hit him with a stutter step, both feet chopping the ground in three fast beats, his shoulders dipping left. The officer lunged. Saint planted his right foot and pushed back to the left, his hips turning, his body narrowing past the outstretched arm, and then he was past him. The officer's momentum carried him forward and down, his boots sliding on the asphalt, his knee hitting first and then his palms, the radio squawking once against the pavement.
Saint ran. The bread bounced against his ribs, the pencils pressed flat and warm against his hip. He ran across the lot and into the street beyond it, his feet carrying him, light and quick.
Tanner took the snap and turned his hips and held the ball out in the space between them. Saint pulled it in against his ribs with both hands and cut behind Danny as he came pulling across the formation, Danny's shoulder pads low, his feet chopping the turf in short heavy steps. Saint got behind him and read the hole forming to the left, Trevon sealing his man to the inside, Danny driving around to push Damion back and widen the lane.
The lane opened for a beat and then Wyatt read it from the second level and crashed down into the backfield, his body angled low, his arms already spread to cut off the outside.
Saint chopped his feet. Three quick steps, his weight settling, his hips still, his eyes on Wyatt's hips. Wyatt hesitated. A half second, maybe less, his cleats biting the turf. Saint kicked back onto his left foot and spun to his right, his shoulder dropping past Wyatt's outstretched arm, the fabric brushing against his hand but never catching. He came out of the spin with his eyes already upfield and saw Damion shedding the block, his hands shoving Danny aside, his body filling the space Saint was running toward. Saint planted his left foot and cut back across Damion's angle, his hips turning the other way, his feet finding the seam.
He picked up four yards before Lane closed from the outside and got his arms around Saint's waist, driving him down into the turf.
The whistle blew.
Travis Meeks, Permian’s offensive coordinator, ripped the visor off his head and slammed it into the turf. It bounced once on the rubber pellets and settled face down.
"God damn it, Bazile!" His voice carried across Ratliff Stadium, past the empty bleachers and the press box and the goalposts standing at the far end of the field. "Stop all that fucking dancing in the backfield and you could've gotten ten or twelve. Plant your fucking foot and get up the fucking field!"
Saint pushed himself up off the turf and brushed the rubber pellets off his forearm. He shook his head, a small motion, his facemask hiding most of it. His eyes went to the far sideline where Dale Kendrick, the head coach, stood with his arms folded across his chest, his whistle hanging from his neck, his hat pulled low. He watched with the stillness of a man who had already decided what he thought.
"Beau!" Meeks picked his visor up off the turf and slapped it against his thigh. "Get back in there and show his ass how you run the fucking ball, please."
Beau pulled his helmet down onto his head with both hands, the chinstrap already buckled, his mouth working a piece of gum behind his facemask. He jogged onto the field, his shoulders loose, his arms swinging easy at his sides. Saint walked off the field toward the sideline and Beau passed him going the other direction, reached out and slapped the back of Saint's helmet with his palm, the sound flat and brief, his eyes already on the huddle forming ahead of him.
The offense lined up. Single back, Beau alone in the backfield behind Tanner, his hands on his knees, his weight forward. Tanner barked the cadence, took the snap. turned and put the ball into Beau's stomach, the leather pressed flat against his pads. Beau took it with both hands and hit the line.
Beau plunged forward. He put his helmet into the gap between the guard and the center and drove his legs and the pile moved with him, bodies grinding forward a yard before Hector slipped off his block and came at Beau from the side. Beau dropped his shoulder into Hector's chest and blew through him, Hector's feet leaving the turf for a second before his back hit it, his helmet bouncing once on the rubber. Wyatt came up from the second level on a dead run and Beau met him with a stiff arm that caught him under the chin, drove his head back and slammed him down into the turf, his body bouncing as his arm grasped at Beau’s legs.
Andres came from one side and Cruz from the other, both of them breaking down into tackling position, their feet chopping, their arms out. Beau dropped his shoulder again and ran through the point where they met. The pop of pads carried across the field and into the empty stands. The three of them went down together, Beau rolling over both of their bodies, his legs still driving, only stopping because his feet tangled with theirs and the ground took all of them at once.
Beau was up before the whistle finished, jumping to his feet and throwing his arms out wide, his chest open to the sky, his voice ripping across the field.
"Woooo!"
Meeks turned his head and found Saint on the sideline. He lifted his hand and pointed at the field where Beau was still standing with his arms spread and half the defense picking themselves up off the turf around him.
"Is that so hard for you to do?" He let the hand drop. "Just run through the damn contact."
Saint stood on the sideline with his helmet in his hand and his mouthpiece clenched between his teeth, his jaw working it in slow circles, his eyes on the field where the offense was breaking the huddle again.
Lane came walking back down the field from where the play had ended, his helmet propped up on the top of his head, his chinstrap hanging loose. He'd chased behind the play without getting close to it and his breathing was easy. He passed behind Saint and his voice came low, barely above the sound of the wind moving across the turf.
"Should've told him you can't do that because Beau run like a white man and you run like a scared nigger."
Saint's right hand came around before the last word had finished settling in the air between them. The fist connected with the bridge of Lane's nose, the knuckle finding the cartilage and the cartilage giving under it. Lane's head snapped back and his eyes went wide and wet, blinking fast, his hands coming up too late.
Lane dropped his chin and charged forward. His shoulder caught Saint in the chest and they went down together, Saint's helmet falling from his other hand and bouncing on the turf beside them. They rolled in the grass and the rubber pellets, Saint getting an arm free and swinging it into the side of Lane's head, Lane driving his knee up into Saint's ribs. Bodies from the sideline started moving toward them, some running, some walking, voices rising and overlapping.
On the far sideline Kendrick stood where he'd stood for the last hour, his arms folded, his hat pulled low. He watched the two of them rolling in the turf afternoon. He shook his head once, the motion so small it barely moved the brim of his hat, and his arms remained crossed.
Holt Breckenridge stood at the chain-link fence that ran along the visitors' side of Ratliff Stadium with his boots planted wide and his arms resting on the top rail, his sunglasses pushed up into the hair above his forehead, graying at the temples. He watched the coaches let them go. Saint and Lane rolled in the turf and swung at each other, the players standing in a loose ring around them, some with their helmets off, some still wearing them, all of them watching. A whistle blew, Meeks waved his arm and bodies moved in and pulled them apart.
Car doors closed behind him, two of them, the sounds spaced a second apart. Holt turned around to see two Odessa police officers walked across the track toward him, their boots crunching the rubber surface, their belts heavy at their hips.
"Scott, Allen." Holt pushed off the fence and met them with his hand out. "How are you boys doing today?"
Scott took his hand first, then Allen. Holt kept his weight easy, his shoulders open, his eyes moving between the two of them.
"What brings y'all out this way?"
Scott shifted his jaw to one side. "Saint Bazile again."
"Shoplifting and evading," Allen said.
Holt waved his hand, the motion small and loose. He reached into the front pocket of his jeans and pulled out a roll of bills held together with a gold money clip. He turned the roll in his fingers.
"Where was it?"
Scott's chin came up a fraction. "We got an officer who's going to be limping for the next three weeks because he tried to chase the kid."
Holt worked the money clip free with his thumb and started peeling bills from the outside of the roll, his eyes still on Scott. "You know that boy's fast. I don't know why y'all try to chase him." He folded three twenties together and held them out between two fingers. "I'm guessing it was out at Willie's."
Allen looked at the money then looked at Scott.
"I'm sure that more than covers it, and we'll just ignore that other thing," Holt said. He pushed the bills forward another inch. "Bring that over to Willie."
"That's not going to deal with the evading," Allen said.
Holt let his hand hang in the air with the money pinched between his fingers. His voice stayed where it had been, easy and level. "If he didn't steal, he wasn't evading arrest because there was no reason to arrest him."
He looked at Scott. Then he looked down at the money in his own hand. Then he looked back at Scott.
Scott let a breath go through his nose,. He reached out and took the bills from Holt's fingers, folded them once and put them in his breast pocket.
"If you're just going to pay for whatever the kid steals, can you tell him so he can stop fucking stealing?"
Holt slid the money clip back onto the roll and put it in his pocket. "I'll talk to coach and see if we can set something aside for him."
Scott held up the pocket where he'd put the cash, tapping it once with two fingers. "Willie's going to be pissed either way."
Holt shrugged, one shoulder lifting and dropping. "Tell him that I'll let him come hunt pronghorn at Chalk Draw if he lets it go."
Scott shook his head. He turned and started back across the track toward the cruiser. Allen stood there a beat longer, his hand resting on his belt, his eyes going past Holt to the field where the team was lining up again.
"We're really not going to arrest this kid?" Allen said.
Scott kept walking. "C'mon. We got other shit to do."
Allen looked at Holt one more time then turned and followed his partner across the track, his stride lengthening to close the gap.
"Y'all have a good day now, gentlemen," Holt said.
He turned back to the fence, set his arms on the top rail and watched the practice.
Beau pulled into the driveway and killed the engine. The truck ticked under the hood as it cooled, the light catching the windshields of the other vehicles crowded into the driveway and the yard, two trucks and a sedan parked at angles that left barely enough room to walk between them, one of the trucks up on the curb with its front tire sunk into the grass.
He pushed his door open and stepped down and reached into the bed for his duffel bag, swinging it up over his shoulder by the strap. He snaked between the vehicles with his free hand trailing along a fender, a side mirror, the edge of a tailgate, until he reached the front door.
He unlocked it, pushed it open and stepped inside.
The house was warm and close, the air conditioner running somewhere in the back of the house with a rattle in its cycle. Beer cans lined the windowsill behind the couch, some of them crushed and some of them standing upright with the tabs bent back. A plate sat on the carpet near the wall with something dried to it that had gone dark at the edges.
Bailey sat in the recliner in his underwear with a beer balanced on the armrest, his bare feet crossed at the ankles on the footrest. He looked up at Beau over the top of the can.
"You bought some more beer?"
Beau dropped his duffel bag by the door. "I ain't have time to. I'm gonna go out later. I'll do it then."
Bailey lifted his chin toward the TV. A college football game played on the screen, Tarleton State and Mississippi Valley State, the footage from the previous season, the scoreboard graphics already dated. Bailey gestured at it with the hand holding the beer, a lazy arc that sloshed the liquid against the inside of the can.
"Been watching these highlights from Mikey's games. That boy's going to be at UT after next year."
Beau snorted a laugh as he crossed to the kitchen. He pulled the fridge open and leaned into it, his hand moving through the wreckage inside. He slid a pizza box to the side, pushed past a cluster of empty beer bottles standing in the door shelf, reached over a plate with something green growing along the edge of whatever had been left on it. His fingers found the neck of a bottle near the back wall of the fridge, second to last, the glass cold against his skin. He pulled it out and let the door swing shut.
He set the cap against the edge of the counter and brought the heel of his palm down on it. The cap popped free and spun on the linoleum and settled. He leaned back against the counter and took a long pull from the bottle, his throat working twice before he brought it down.
Vickie came out of the hallway at the back of the house, putting an earring in with her fingers working the post through the hole, her head tilted to one side. She had her work uniform on, the polo tucked in, a name tag clipped to the front pocket. Her foot caught a plate on the floor and she kicked it aside, the plate scraping across the linoleum and coming to rest against the baseboard. She shook her head and looked at Beau.
"Mama want you. She need someone to go cash her draw."
Beau took another pull from the beer and held the bottle against his thigh. "Looks like you going out."
"I'm fucking going to work." Vickie's hand dropped from her ear, the earring in. "Something y'all need to do instead of sitting in here destroying mama house."
"So, you can go cash the draw."
Vickie sucked her teeth. "Just fucking do it, Beau."
She grabbed her keys off the counter and went for the front door, her ponytail swinging behind her as she pulled it open and stepped through. The door closed and a few seconds later an engine started in the driveway and tires rolled over gravel and she was gone.
Beau shook his head. He pushed off the counter and walked down the hallway, the carpet worn flat in the center where the traffic pattern ran, the walls bare except for a few nail holes where something had hung once. He stopped at the last door, knocked twice with his knuckle and pushed it open.
"Mama."
Kim sat in a recliner wedged between the bed and the window, the curtains drawn, the room lit by the TV bolted to the wall across from her. She wore a robe that had gone gray at the collar and the cuffs, the terrycloth pilled along the front where her arms rested. She looked over at him, her eyes taking a second to find him in the doorway and reached for the tray balanced on the arm of the recliner. Her fingers found an envelope and she held it out toward him.
"Go on and cash my draw for me, baby. And get me a carton of Marlboro Lights. I'm out."
Beau took a drink from the beer, stepped into the room and took the envelope from her hand. He turned it over once, feeling the check through the paper.
"We need some groceries, too."
Kim looked at him again, her head turning on the headrest of the recliner. "Take like twenty out that."
Beau nodded. "Alright."
He walked out of the room and pulled the door shut behind him,. He went down the hall to his own room and closed that door behind him too.
He crossed to the closet and pulled the door open. A Cowboys footlocker sat on the floor against the back wall, the star on the lid faded and scratched. He grabbed it by the handles and slid it to the side, the weight of it dragging across the carpet. Behind where it had been, a section of drywall sat loose in the frame, the edges cut clean.
He pressed it to the side with the flat of his hand and reached into the gap in the wall. His fingers found the stack and he peeled a few bills off the top, pulled them out, folded them once and put them in his back pocket. He slid the drywall back into place, pulling the footlocker over it then stood up and walked out of his room.
Brynn sat in the back corner of the McDonald's with her spine against the wall and her shoulders angled so she could see the door and the parking lot through the window at the same time. The dining room was mostly empty, two old men sharing a table near the front with coffee cups and folded newspapers, a woman with a toddler standing at the counter waiting on an order.
A McDouble, a small fry, four chicken nuggets, and a small drink sat on the flattened burger wrapper in front of her. She pulled the fries from the sleeve one at a time and laid them down next to each other on the wrapper in a row, each one parallel to the last, the way someone else might lay out tools or pencils or cards. She scanned the row and found the longer ones and pulled them apart with her fingers, tearing them at the midpoint until they matched the length of the others then set the torn halves back in line.
She picked the burger up with both hands and pressed her thumbs into the center of the bun and pulled it apart, working it slow so the meat stayed and the cheese stretched and broke clean between them. She set both halves down on the wrapper.
She counted the fries by eye, divided the row at the center, and swept half of them back into the paper sleeve. She picked up two of the nuggets and dropped them in on top of the fries and slid the sleeve into the bag, folding the top of the bag down once, then again, pressing the crease flat with her thumbnail.
She took a breath that lifted her shoulders and let it go.
She picked up one half of the burger and brought it to her mouth and bit off a small piece, the size of a dime, and chewed it slowly, her jaw working in measured circles, her eyes on the table in front of her. She set the burger down and picked up a fry and bit the end off it, the same small careful bite, and chewed that the same way. She set the fry down and picked up one of the two remaining nuggets and tore a piece off the corner with her front teeth, chewed it, swallowed and set the nugget down. She reached for the drink and brought the straw to her lips and took a pull that lasted a second, the liquid barely rising in the straw before she set it back on the table.
She went around again. Burger. Fry. Nugget. Drink. The same order, the same pace, each bite small enough that the food in front of her seemed to shrink by fractions, the pile diminishing so slowly that someone watching from across the room might think she was just picking at it.
She kept going until the wrapper held one thing, the other half of the burger sat where she'd set it down, the bun slightly flattened where her thumbs had pressed it apart, the cheese hardening along the torn edge. She stared at it with her hand resting on top of it, her fingers curled over the bun. Her jaw shifted once to the side. She shook her head, picked it up and wrapped it in the paper, folding the edges tight then put it in the bag with the rest.
Her phone buzzed against the table, the vibration turning it a quarter inch on the laminate. Her eyes went to the window. An old truck swung into the parking lot, the body sun-faded and the front bumper wired on at one corner, the exhaust coughing once as it rolled past the drive-through lane and nosed into a spot near the door.
Brynn grabbed the bag and the drink and slid out of the booth. She stopped at the drink machine on her way to the door and held the cup under the nozzle and filled it to the top, the ice crackling as the soda climbed over it. She pressed the lid back on and pushed through the glass door into the parking lot.
Wes leaned out of the driver's window with his elbow hooked over the door, his other hand draped on the top of the steering wheel. He had a toothpick pinched in the corner of his mouth and a Twister pulled low enough that his eyes sat in the shadow of the brim.
"Hey, Brynny Brynn." The toothpick shifted as he spoke. "You coming with us, right?"
Brynn nodded. "Yeah."
Wes reached up and slapped the roof of the truck with his palm, the metal ringing once under the hit.
Brynn walked around the front of the truck to the passenger side and pulled the door open. The hinges groaned, the door swinging wide, and Dakota looked up at her from the middle of the bench seat, her legs folded to one side, a smile already spreading across her face.
"What's up?"
"Same shit, different day."
Dakota scooted across the bench seat toward Wes, the vinyl squeaking under her thighs, and Brynn climbed in, pulling the door shut. The latch caught on the second try, the handle loose in its housing. Brynn set the drink between her knees and held the McDonald's bag in her lap, her fingers working the folded top one more time, pressing the crease tighter, rolling the edge down until the bag sat compact and sealed in her hands.
Dakota watched her do it, her eyes tracking Brynn's fingers as they moved over the paper.
Brynn looked over at her. "Don't let me forget that."
Dakota nodded. "Alright."
Brynn looked past her at Wes. "Where we going?"
Wes dropped the truck into reverse and shrugged, his hand pulling the wheel to the right as he looked over his shoulder through the back glass. "Wherever Ol' Betty take us."
Dakota scrunched her nose, her upper lip pulling back. "It's so fucking cringe that you named this truck."
Wes slapped the dashboard with the flat of his hand, the plastic rattling under the hit. "It's good luck."
He reached over, grabbed his phone from the cup holder and thumbed at the screen until music came through the aux, the speakers crackling for a second before the sound filled the cab, bass vibrating in the door panels, the floorboards and the bench seat under them.
Brynn rested her head against the window. The glass was warm from the sun and it pressed against her temple and her cheekbone and she let her eyes go soft as Wes pulled out of the parking lot and Midland started whipping past outside, the strip malls and the gas stations and the pump jacks nodding slow in the fields beyond the last row of buildings, all of it sliding by in the long flat light of a West Texas afternoon.
The fire sat low in a ring of cinder blocks behind Beau's house, the flames working through a stack of mesquite branches that popped and sent sparks up into the dark. The brush stretched out past the firelight in every direction, clumps of creosote, saltbush and the silhouettes of pump jacks scattered across the flats, their heads nodding slow against a sky that held more stars than the town's lights could reach.
Beau sat on the far side of the fire with his back against a cooler, Gracie settled in his lap with her legs draped over one of his thighs, a beer bottle dangling from her fingers. Cruz leaned back in a lawn chair with his knees spread wide and his boots pointed to the sky, his beer resting on the arm of the chair. Saint sat on a mesquite log across from them, his elbows on his knees, the firelight catching the swelling along his lower lip where Lane's forehead had split it open.
Saint tapped his lip with his finger, pulled it away and looked at it, checking the pad for blood. A faint streak of it caught the light and he wiped it on his jeans.
"I should've killed that bitch."
Cruz tilted his beer toward Saint, the bottle catching the firelight. "You know all them white boys on the team a little racist." His eyes moved to Beau and Gracie across the fire. "No offense."
Beau laughed, his chest moving under Gracie's weight. "I ain't take none. I might be a white Texan but I ain't that brand of white Texan."
Gracie shook her head, her hair shifting against Beau's shoulder as she leaned back into him. "I so hope that you leave this God-forsaken shithole next year so you can stop making it your whole fucking identity."
"Hey, now." Beau wrapped his arm tighter around her waist. "I ain't gonna apologize because God made me a Texan."
"You mean because your ancestors came here and stole this shit from Cruz's ancestors," Saint said.
Cruz raised his beer an inch off the armrest. "Some of 'em. Don't forget a few of them came from across the ocean."
Beau shook his head and reached behind him into the cooler, his hand plunging into the ice water. He pulled a bottle out and threw it across the fire to Saint, the glass spinning in the air, the firelight catching it once before Saint snagged it with one hand. Beau reached back in and threw another to Cruz, who caught it against his chest with his free hand.
"Y'all need to drink so y'all aren't ganging up on the poor white boy."
Saint laughed as he fished his key out of his pocket and hooked the cap with the edge of it and popped it off. He brought the bottle to his mouth and took a pull, his eyes pinching tight as the taste hit him. He swallowed, looked at the label and took another sip anyway.
He looked over at Beau. "You mind if I crash on your couch tonight?"
Beau shrugged, his shoulder lifting under Gracie. "Yeah, that's cool. You just gotta worry about Bailey wandering in there with his little tighty whiteys on in the middle of the night."
Gracie turned her head toward Saint. "Just be glad he won't randomly grab a boob pretending he's too drunk to know what he's doing."
Beau rolled his eyes, his head tipping back. "That happened once."
"Once is a lot for that, bro," Cruz said.
Gracie threw her hands up, the beer in her hand tipping as her arm swung and a splash of it arcing out of the bottle and just missing Beau's face on its way to the dirt. "Exactly."
Saint took another sip and held the bottle between his knees. "It's either that or Cruz's and every time I'm over there, his fucking grandma tries to drag me to church."
Cruz pointed his bottle at him. "Your bad for calling yourself Saint when talking to a Mexican woman."
Saint shook his head, a smile pulling at the corner of his mouth and catching on the split in his lip. He heard footsteps on the grass behind him, the sound soft and uneven on the dry ground. He turned on the log and saw Brynn walking toward them out of the dark, a McDonald's bag held in one hand and a drink in the other, her face finding the firelight as she came closer.
Beau lifted his chin. "What's up?"
Gracie gave her a small wave, her fingers lifting off the beer bottle and curling back around it.
Brynn gave them both a smile, brief and quiet, and kept walking toward the log where Saint sat. Cruz watched her over the rim of his beer, drinking.
Saint scooted to the side on the log, the bark rough under his palms. Brynn sat down next to him, the bag settling in her lap, the drink held in the hand closest to him.
"Hey." Her voice was quiet, barely above a whisper.
Saint smiled at her. She held the bag out and he took it, the paper crinkling under his fingers where she'd folded and rolled the top. He set his beer in the dirt and the drink she'd brought him beside it, opened the bag and pulled out the wrapped half of the burger. He peeled the paper back and tore the half in two, the bun compressing under his thumbs, the meat and cheese pulling apart between the pieces. He held one of the quarters out to Brynn.
"No, that's for you."
Saint kept his hand where it was, the piece of burger extended toward her. "Beer's like a meal."
Beau raised his bottle across the fire. "That's fucking right."
Brynn looked at the piece in his hand. She took it, her fingers brushing his as she pulled it away. Saint set the wrapper flat across his lap, reached into the bag and pulled out the sleeve of fries and the two chicken nuggets and poured them out onto the wrapper, the fries fanning across the paper, the nuggets tumbling out after them. He slid the wrapper toward her on the log until it sat in the space between his thigh and hers.
She looked at him. He was looking at the burger in his hand, eating, his jaw working through the first bite, his eyes on the fire.
Cruz drained the last of his beer and set the empty bottle in the dirt under his chair. "I need to get a fucking girlfriend, man. I can't be fifth wheeling."
Gracie shifted in Beau's lap, turning her body toward Cruz. "I tried to set you up with my friend Julia."
"She's like three-fifty!" Cruz said.
Beau's laugh cracked across the fire. "Kendrick would put her ass at right guard if he saw her." He dropped his voice low and squared his jaw. "'Get your fat ass out there and clear a path for Beau!'"
Gracie smacked him on the chest, her palm flat against his sternum. "That's mean."
Beau held his hand up, his fingers spread. "I'm including her. What the fuck you mean?"
"You're going to be including your hand later."
Cruz laughed at them, his head tipping back in the lawn chair, his throat catching the firelight. Beau pulled Gracie tighter and said something into her ear that made her shove his face away with her palm.
Saint smiled. The fire popped once and sent a coil of sparks up into the dark above them. He looked over at Brynn. She looked back at him, a small smile sitting on her lips, a fry pinched between her fingers with a bite taken out of the end.
He picked up the drink and held it out to her. She took it, bringing it to her lips and taking the tiniest sip.