Once In A Blue Moon

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Once In A Blue Moon Page 3

by Celia Stewart


  But located twenty minutes, and a world away, from my hometown was one of the hottest, trendiest hair salons in San Antonio--The Blue Moon--where everyone, who was anyone, got their hair done.

  And it belongs to me, Bad Betti.

  “Morning, Tara.” My heels echoed loudly in my wake, and I didn’t stop until I reached the back and dumped my purse in an unused hydraulic chair, knowing she’d follow me.

  Each time I stepped through the doors I got a little thrill, wondering what dear old Dad and the good folks of Bluebonnet would think of my classy little cash cow. The salon, done up in shades of blue with a mosaic floor, was divided into eight rooms, each capable of housing two stylists. Right now, we were at maximum capacity, including a massage therapist and two manicurists. Everyone leased and no one ever paid late. Recently, I’ve even been contemplating another expansion.

  Not bad for the girl voted most likely to end up barefoot and pregnant.

  Tara, my salon coordinator and right hand woman, was a twenty-year-old pre-law student, but her mother and grandmother were hairdressers. She knew the ins and outs of salon life almost better than I did and regularly showed up to work with the most outrageous hair color. This week’s selection was a raspberry red with powder-pink highlights.

  “You’ve been letting your grandmother do your hair again, haven’t you?” I set my coffee cup on the washer and reached for tubes and bottles from the storage cabinet beside it.

  “She begged.” Tara shrugged and gathered up my stuff. “She just got back from a new class and wanted to give it a whirl. Oh, and I called Don Jacobs and he’ll be here at nine-thirty instead of eleven for his haircut. That should help you get back on track.”

  “You’re a gem!” Blow dryers buzzed and the pungent odor of a perm tickled my nose. The sounds and smells of success--mine and theirs. “Where’s Patricia?”

  “Relax, she’s fine. I got her coffee, and she’s in chatting with Deni,” Tara said, referring to one of the other stylists.

  After throwing a smock over my blouse, I quickly mixed up Patricia’s color from memory. Grabbing up the bowl of color in one hand and the cup of coffee with my other, I headed to work.

  Thanks to Tara’s quick thinking, most of the day was hectic yet anti-climactic. We closed at six and I’d managed to squeeze out two retouches, a highlight and umpteen haircuts.

  Exhausted, I left Tara to clean up. Not my usual MO but I could barely see straight.

  My car felt like an oven and I left the door propped open as I kicked off my shoes and stuck the key in the ignition. Who cares if driving barefoot in Texas is illegal? My feet hurt so badly, I’d risk the ticket. I shut the door and let myself decompress as the air conditioner worked to cool the car down, and the tension eased from my tired shoulders.

  I hadn’t even stopped long enough to think about Ty, except over a quick lunch with Cassi, but the drive home would take me past the dancehall--sort of. I debated whether to stop or not all the way down I-10. But the dancehall’s neon sign acted like some sort of homing beacon. I took the exit too fast, slammed on my brakes, downshifted and whipped around the corner into the parking lot. One little fix. Five minutes was all I wanted.

  At the same time, I scolded myself. Acting like a lovesick fourteen-year-old will get you nothing but trouble.

  “Five minutes,” the little devil on my shoulder whispered as I parked. Then I’d go home like a good girl and die from exhaustion. I was too old for all-nighters.

  Inside, the band was warming up and I grabbed a gin and tonic from the bar, pausing to study Tim’s woman. A very exotic looking and distant brunette who didn’t seem at all like his usual type.

  I settled in at a corner table, ignoring the speculative stares. As the band announced a break, one of my sister’s friends strolled over, claiming the empty chair on my left. Damn!

  “When’s Angelina coming home?”

  “She’ll be here between the summer and fall semesters.” Workaholism runs in our family, and Angelina was currently enrolled in Texas A and M’s Pre-Veterinary program down in College Station. I missed her terribly.

  Tiffany wrinkled her nose.

  “I know.” I shrugged in sympathy while quickly scanning the half-empty bar for Ty. He walked by but didn’t even glance in my direction. And he looked as tired as I felt.

  “He’s sooooo cute.” Tiffany smiled.

  “Yeah, he is,” I replied, scrabbling in my purse for a pen.

  “I heard his ex is shacking up with Melyn Cooley and Billy Green.”

  “Eww.” I made a face and she giggled in agreement. I jotted down Angelina’s email address on a napkin, slid it across the table at her and hurriedly excused myself.

  I tracked Ty down in the beer garden out back. “Ty?”

  “What?” he growled, his back to me.

  I swallowed hard in surprise, my eyes glued to the logo on his ball cap and the longish blonde hairs that tickled his neckline. I walked up behind him and rubbed his back, unable to miss the knots of tension through his worn T-shirt. “How are you?”

  “Fine.”

  This wasn’t the same man who’d kissed me good-bye and promised to call me this morning. The uneasy feeling in the pit of my stomach slowly seeped into my knees, leaving me wobbly. When I crossed over in front of him, he looked everywhere but at me.

  “Ty, what’s wrong?” I tried again to catch his eye.

  “Nothing, Betti.”

  It must be bad. Ty would never call me Betti. I could feel a big, dark hole opening up in my chest and sucking me in. I sighed, but it came out sounding more like a whimper. My face burned and my throat was thick with tears. Letting go of his arm, I moved away. “I’m afraid I don’t understand.”

  “Last night was... I’m just not ... Rhea,” he sighed, running his fingers through his hair, then replacing the ball cap.

  I nodded, lips pursed to hold back the sob building, and took another step backward. My shaky knees failed me. One of my heels got caught in the brick walkway and I stumbled and landed with a smack on the wooden bench behind me.

  Ty held out a hand. Touching him seemed like the worst form of self-abuse. I stared at his hand for the longest time then forced myself to accept his help up. But I couldn’t look at him. Instead I focused on tugging my blouse smooth. Focused on forcing oxygen into my lungs.

  Forced myself to walk away.

  I’d gambled and lost. No need to be a sore loser. Or beg and cry. I couldn’t have gotten a word past the lump in my throat anyway.

  Through the beer garden, then the sparsely crowded bar I went, barely able to hold my tears in until I reached the car.

  I shifted into reverse and gunned it, then slammed on the brakes at a slap on the trunk. Glancing in the rear-view mirror, I discovered it was Tim. Shit.

  “What’s your hurry?” he asked after I rolled down the window. I prayed he wouldn’t lean over and see my tears.

  “No hurry.” I glanced down at my lap. “Just tired and wanna get home. You know, long day.”

  “So how’d things go with you and Ty last night?”

  I could hear the grin in his resonant voice and my stomach rolled over. “Fine. Just fine.”

  “Yeah? He seemed pretty pleased this morning.”

  “What did he say?” I could have kicked myself and hoped Tim wouldn’t answer. Not sure if I wanted to know, honestly. Kicking myself for breaking Rule Number Ten: Don’t Ask Question You Don’t Know the Answer To.

  “Nothing really. When he got in the truck I thought I’d need a chisel to get that grin off his face.” Tim laughed. “By the time he got home I guess lack of sleep caught up with him, because Dad said he called and gave him some B. S. about not feeling good. He never even said thank you for hookin’ him up.”

  “You told him it was your idea?” Great. Lovely. Just wonderful! Maybe next time I’d listen to my own damned rules. Starting with number one! I continued, not bothering to wait for a reply, “And maybe I was right. Maybe a woman wasn’t what
he needed last night.”

  Then I backed up, threw the car in drive and hit the gas, not caring if I spit gravel on Tim. Only wanting to get home and have a good cry. I’d thought ... no, I’d hoped. Not that it mattered. Hopes and dreams are very dangerous things. I had mine. Apparently Ty had his, too. Rhea. I’d suffered worse losses in my life, and I’d muddle through this too, after I was through mourning.

  I got home, broke open a bottle of Llano Riesling and burrowed in the chair for a good cry. If I hadn’t loved that damn chair so much, I probably would have dragged it out back, doused it in gasoline and danced a jig while it burned. His cologne clung to the denim fabric. That made me cry harder. I didn’t want to smell him or love him or anything.

  Bad Betti got her hand slapped, again. Someday, maybe I’d learn to stay away from Bluebonnet’s men.

  * * * *

  Bleary-eyed and a tad hung over, I spent the following morning cleaning the salon. Tara had done most of the work but cleaning was therapeutic. Who cares if it only lasts a day or less?

  Cassi showed up mid-afternoon, breezing in through the back door and scaring the living daylights out of me. Def Leopard’s begging for someone to pour some sugar on them had drowned out the sound of her Tahoe pulling up out back.

  “Don’t you have anything better to do, Mama?” I teased, folding the last of the towels.

  “Yeah, but that would mean staying home with the kids. What fun is that?”

  “Aw now. Girl, you need to find you a nice man.” I was a fine one to talk with my less-than-stellar track record.

  “Yeah,” Cassi scoffed, one sable eyebrow quirked. “Show me a nice man that wants to date a woman with four kids, and I’ll show you ten dozen who don’t. Or better yet, ten dozen jobless, mooching losers.”

  I laughed. Cassi and I’d met at a hairdressing convention in Dallas about five years ago. Shortly after her divorce, the ex was arrested for embezzlement. Bye-bye child support. She’d gotten her Nail Technician’s license and was trying to support the kids on nothing when we hooked up. I’d convinced her to move south, loaned her some seed money and gotten a great return on my investment. A talented nail tech and a best friend.

  “Speaking of nice men, did you hear from that guy you met Friday?”

  “No,” I muttered before my throat swelled shut.

  “That’s too bad. You really sounded like you liked him.”

  “It was just a fuck.”

  “Oh, now Betti! Don’t be like that.”

  “You’re a fine one to talk.” I gathered up the towels and headed across to the shampoo bowls to hide my sniffles, but Cassi followed me.

  “I might be, if I could get laid.” Seeing my tears, she hugged me and tugged the towels I’d been shoving in the cabinet out of my hands. “You really liked him?”

  “Shit, Cas, since like the sixth fucking grade.”

  She hugged me again and I sobbed on her shoulder like a broken-hearted fourteen-year-old. Which was what I got for acting like one. Once my tears had subsided to a dull roar, we curled up on the blue velvet couch in my office and opened a bottle of Chardonnay.

  “Maybe you could give him some time then, you know, invite him for dinner. Take things slow. You did say his divorce was just finalized. How long were he and his wife together?”

  “Since the second grade,” I wailed, sipping my wine.

  “God save me from small towns. The second grade? You’re shittin’ me?”

  “No, and they were together all through junior high and high school. Hell, her senior year she practically lived with the Boudreauxs. Frankly, I always thought she was a bitch leading poor Ty around on a leash.” Rant over, I emptied my wineglass and slumped deeper into the sofa.

  “That’s quite a ghost you’re up against.”

  “I’m not up against shit! Wanna order some Chinese and keep me company while I pay bills?” Past time for a change of subject.

  “Sure. The usual? And what do you mean you’re not up against shit?”

  “Yeah, and I mean,” I said, getting up and walking over to my desk, “just what I said.”

  “So you’re not gonna chase him?”

  “Fuck no! Bad Betti doesn’t chase. She gets chased. Get me an order of Crab Rangoon too, would ya? I’m starving.”

  * * * *

  Work was my universal cure-all, but in the days that followed, I couldn’t seem to get Ty off my mind or pull myself together. And ten days later I ran into his ex-wife at the grocery store.

  I’d been on a roll with my good buddy Mocha Java Chip but found myself running low. So what if it was nearly nine at night. I wanted ice cream.

  My impulsiveness now had me wedged between the freezer door and my basket, a carton of ice cream in my hand, as I eyed her over my shoulder. I suppose rumors of us leaving the dancehall together had gotten back to her. Why she’d care, I have no clue, seeing as how she stood in front of me welded to that asshole, Billy Green.

  Just another reason to hate this godforsaken town! I sent up another silent prayer the house sold soon.

  “How’s it’ goin’, Bad Betti?”

  Rhea stood there in shorty-shorts and a halter top that showed off her tan and a pierced bellybutton. Her homemade dye job was long past due for a retouch. The hairdresser in me shuddered, eyeing at least two inches of black greasy roots. She’d once been a very pretty girl.

  “I’m fine, ReeRee. How are you?” In the fifth grade, she’d beaten a girl up for calling her ReeRee. Pretty but not nice. I was pushing it and didn’t care. After all, she was the reason for my frustrations with Ty.

  I set the ice cream in the basket alongside the frozen fruit and yogurt for smoothies and pushed past her, letting the frosty, glass door swing shut behind me. I now had icicles on my ass.

  “I heard you were with Ty the other night.” From her laughter you’d think someone had shared the funniest joke ever with her. Either that or she was high, and judging from the large assortment of munchies in the basket Billy had a grip on, that was a distinct possibility.

  I pushed my own basket up enough so I stood directly in front of her. “And?”

  She stopped in mid-laugh, looked me up and down, then laughed again. “I don’t know what’s funnier. Him fucking you or you fucking him.”

  I have to admit I didn’t look my best--okay I looked like shit--but still. My sweats might have seen better days but they were clean, and I wasn’t high. This was the last time I shopped so late at night.

  “Ty’s a dickwad,” mouthed the overly arrogant Billy.

  As if! I eyed Billy who stood before me in long sleeves. The temperature had hit one-oh-five today, and even after eight at night, it hovered in the low nineties. Not exactly long sleeve weather. He’d been a horrible kid and grown up to be a small time drug dealer who also apparently used. He slung a Neanderthal sized arm around Rhea’s shoulder and gave me a glassy-eyed grin.

  “Where’s Melyn?” Maybe they were sharing. I shuddered. How anyone could pick Billy with his twenty-seven brain cells over sweet, sexy Ty I had no clue. But then how could sweet sexy Ty mourn the loss of her?

  “Mind your business, bitch.” Billy curled a lip, but failed miserably at looking threatening. Maybe it was the zit scars.

  “Oh, go snort some cocaine, Billy!” I snapped, my patience thinning like the layer of ice on my ice cream.

  Shrugging off his arm, Rhea got in my face. Things were about to get ugly. I smiled. From the corner of my eye, I spotted a stock boy at the end of the aisle, a mop clutched in his hands. Poor thing couldn’t have been over sixteen, and he looked ready to yell ‘dial nine-one-one!’

  I glanced at Billy, then focused my attention on her. “You do know the only reason he has such staying power is the cocaine. Don’t you?”

  “Fuck you. You fat bitch. Billy’s got the biggest dick this side of the Mississippi!”

  She might as well have gotten on the store’s intercom system and screamed, “I’m a sleazy bitch who’s boinking my best friend�
�s leftovers.” A few aisles over I heard laughter and the squeak of a basket rapidly departing.

  My turn. I think my snorts of laughter conveyed my doubt.

  “...and he knows what to do with it, unlike Ty. That stupid hayseed could barely find...”

  That was the last word that came out of her mouth before my fist made contact with an immensely satisfying crunch.

  Chapter Four

  Same old song and dance

  Ty felt like a heel. A worn out one with a big hole in the bottom. He hated confrontations and knew he’d really botched it badly with Bettina but didn’t know how to make things right. He’d rambled like an idiot.

  More than once over the last couple of weeks he’d driven by her house, worried he’d see “Sold” on the realtor’s sign in her yard.

  All of this brought home by the good Dr. Ritter. She’d spent half their therapy session trying to worm it out of--what exactly was bugging him now. He hated therapy, but he’d promised his dad he’d go until the doc gave him a green light. Which was his fault for freaking out and having a panic attack in front of his dad in the first place.

  He was thirty years old and suffered from anxiety. He hated talking about himself, digging in deep. The doc insisted if he didn’t, things would only fester and grow. Like cancer.

  Ty was more inclined to think if he’d leave his battle scars alone they’d heal up with fresh air and sunshine.

  With a crunch of tires on gravel, Ty pulled into the parking lot of Mae’s Diner, squeezing his old Chevy between an even older Buick and his brother, Zack’s, Dodge.

  Ty crossed the parking lot, giving two of his mother’s church biddies who were leaving a cheerful hello, then reached for the door handle, ready to face Mae’s lunch-time crowd. Only to jump back in surprise as the door flew outward at him.

  Zack came barreling out of Mae’s, his face ruddy with agitation. “When are you gonna break down and get a cell phone?” his brother demanded.

  “When hell freezes over. Why?” Getting a cell phone hadn’t been a high priority after Rhea had cleaned him out.

 

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