My
big mistake was in expecting a twenty-mile drive to erase the thirty
years I had been away. I set myself up for the unwarranted sense of
betrayal that came when I saw a flat lot with a beer garden standing
where I remembered rows of curbside-service speakers, covered by orange
awnings. Otherwise, the outside of the stone and glass building appeared
untouched except for the new name.
Hunts was now Rubbies.
While
I was growing up, my family ate out most Friday nights. We hit the
church fish fries, Sizzler and Pizza Hut after they came around, and
Frisch’s on occasion. Once in a great while, we donned good clothes and
manners and visited an upscale restaurant. The one place we all enjoyed,
and therefore frequented most often, was Hunts, a family-owned,
neighborhood bar-restaurant combination with one small and one large
dining room, a banquet room, and servers who delivered food outdoors, on
trays that attached to the car windows. Hunts' original salad dressing
made them famous. Individual jukebox connections on each table made the
dining room our favorite spot to eat. For a quarter, each of us could
choose a song. A dollar entertained us through the whole meal.
Last
week, my daughters and I went back to Hunts, where an eerie
combination of old and new greeted me. Everything and nothing had
changed. Hunts had taken the salad dressing but left the bar,
standing across from the same row of booths, seating what looked like
some of the same people, in the same clothes and hairstyles. A stage
replaced the jukeboxes, and open mic meant we could still eat to music
and choose a few of our own songs.
Before I registered the significance of the glass-encased antique
coke bottles I might have emptied in the past, or absorbed the
nostalgia of the coconut face on the wall, I spotted my uncle standing
at the bar. A few pounds heavier, much shinier on top, same brandy in
hand, he looked past my pounds and gray and recognized my daughters.
Hours and hugs later, I wondered if his mist over partying with great
nieces came from the bottle, the years passed, or realizing how few we
might have left. Maybe he thought, as I did, that I should be my
daughter’s age and he should not be the only male left in the only
generation ahead of me.
Harmonious
discord wasn’t exclusive to our table, nor did familial concern end
there. When the red head in the out-of-season, cardboard New Year’s Eve
tiara draped her arms around my daughter’s shoulders and smiled at me,
my heart sank. How could I have forgotten her name when she was so
obviously overjoyed to see us? I mentally removed the tiara and a few
lines from her face, and tried on the name of every second and third
cousin I could remember. Nothing fit, except the warmth she radiated and
the smile my daughter wore.
As
the tiara bobbed and the stories poured, I narrowed the prospects.
Laughter accompanied her complaints about the pawing she had received
from the old fart by the pool table; she had to be from Mom’s side. I
would either remember her name by the time she finished the rundown of
safe, arms-length, and stay-the-hell-away men present, or I would ask my
uncle when he found his way back from the bar.
Her
name was Bonnie. I didn’t remember because I had never known. She was a
regular, not related on either side, but already vested in my family by
the time we found out. Bonnie stayed with us the first hour and then took
off to pull a good-natured, stay-the-hell-away guy to a back corner for a
dance.
Later,
Bonnie hugged her way to a back table of arm’s-length listeners and my
uncle grew roots beside a blonde barfly. One daughter went off to
reserve her ten minutes on the sign-up sheet, while the other huddled
close to hear a friend yell over the heavy metal group on stage.
A
lone dancer hypnotized me with her routine – five steps to the right,
raise the beer bottle overhead, bow, five steps to the left, flip the
hair off the face, turn a complete circle, and repeat. Although
disturbed by the obvious role of long-term chemical use in this dazed
ritual, I respected the dancer’s disregard of public opinion. As if
willing to enhance my appreciation, an ageless, gender-undisclosed
clogger unfolded from a lotus position beside the stage and tapped
passionately to the last thirty seconds of a poor rendition of Queen’s
“We Will Rock You”.
Possible
explanations flooded my mind: flashbacks, nightmare, Twilight Zone,
time warp. Flashbacks seemed unlikely since I had refused even the drugs
prescribed to me, and I’d never heard of contact flashbacks. The
Twilight Zone was fictional and I knew I was awake. A mullet head
conversing with a tube top supported the time warp, until I looked past
my daughter’s nose ring and focused on the table behind her. Three men
stared back at me, one fiftyish with waist-length hair poking out from a
bandana scarf, a thirty-something, clean-cut yuppie, and a
sixty-something, toothless biker in a leather vest. I would surely have
warped to one era and there was no way these people all belonged in the
same one.
Sometime
after the clogger sang “Let It Be”, and
before seventies rock, they called my daughter to the stage to introduce
ancient country. While she tested the mic and whispered to the bass
player, a ghost from my past climbed on stage beside her. Not quite the
guitar player her father had been, and not knowing he was standing next
to an old friend’s daughter, a worn man plugged in and accompanied her
on a song her father had sung twenty years before.
I
watched his tired eyes travel with the music, maybe wishing he could
recapture the same thirty years I had wanted the trip to erase for me.
He stared into space, the middle-aged bass player watched the back of my
daughter’s head, the young drummer kept his eyes closed, and my
daughter’s eyes never left mine. My uncle and Bonnie left their fans and
came to stand beside the mix-matched crew behind us. The lone dancer
repeated her routine and the clogger remained in lotus position.
The
magic of this unique little world hit me as I watched young-and-hopeful
stand two feet and a world away from holding-on-to-what’s-left on the
stage. Everyone had come to share common space and individual passions
and paths. Some were young. Some were old. Some were sober and others
hadn’t been in decades. No one laughed and pointed at the clogger or the
lone dancer. No one booed when the band changed, or when the music was
horrible. The stay-the-hell-away guys didn’t shun Bonnie when she pawed
them and turned the story around.
I hadn’t been anywhere so accepting in years, and couldn’t remember when being unaccepting had come into vogue.
Twenty miles got closer. We’re anxious to go back, where people remember how to let it be.
Originally posted to Author's Den and Gather on Thursday, April 27, 2006
1 comment:
Rubbies is still a great neighborhood hangout. The consumate south-end 'cheers'. Great story.
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