Shoot him 'fore he run now

J. had a freezer full of goose
breasts riddled with shot. His family owned property
on Broad Creek with a duck blind right against the
water, where the menfolk, clad in camouflage, would
sit on brisk fall mornings, guns poised. He showed me
the blind that first summer, took my hand and led me
through a tunnel of cornstalks gone brown. We sat
close on the austere bench, hidden behind grass that
had become hoarse with whispering over the years. I
am sure he kissed me in that humid July air because
we did a lot of that then, sweet lingering kisses in
between fights and sarcasm.
He’d told me that a former tenant of the Sugar Shack,
the house he and his brother were renting from their
grandmother on the far side of the property, had
keeled over one afternoon in the back bedroom, dead
from a heart attack. By the time they found the body,
the man’s faithful dog had chewed off half of his
face. It probably started with wake-up licks that
progressed to nips and then frantic biting. But J.
was often full of shit, and I’m not sure if he was
just trying to scare me. If so, it worked. I’d spend
the night there holding it, too nervous to walk the
ten feet to the bathroom, picturing the gory scene,
the spiritual remains of this lonely person floating
over the room.
One muddy November night, when lingering kisses had
turned into the fire of post-fight sex, I realized I
was on the edge. J. and I had gone from chemical
intensity to a kind of in-between thing that wasn’t
satisfying but was just enough to keep me hooked.
We’d spent the evening at the bar, drinking and
picking at each other. By the time we shoveled into
the Sugar Shack driveway, my brain was crackling. We
had a fight about something ridiculous or something
deep-seated and heavy, it doesn't really matter, and
at some point I grabbed a shotgun from the gun
cabinet.
As I write this, I can’t believe that I did such a
thing, so dramatic, so serious. Could I be making
this up? No. I was drunk and sad and teetering on the
edge of the abyss, so I grabbed one of his (unloaded)
shotguns and pointed at my face. Maybe we struggled.
All I can remember is me stumbling in the shabby
living room of the Sugar Shack where it was cold and
damp. J. was lit from behind so that his face was
cragged in shadow. I was hysterical with pent-up
emotion, struggling to keep hold of this unwieldy
gun. Eventually J. took it away and returned it to
the cabinet. We went to sleep. I woke up the next
morning barely able to move, felt around for his
sleeping form and remembered that he was probably
hunkered down in the duck blind with his cousins.
I’m sure he chalked the night up to my overgrown
sense of drama, another mark against me to go with my
unfaithfulness and love of alcohol. Thank god I've
tossed aside those crutches for the most part, though
I miss the drama sometimes. Drama sparks up the
night, shines a little light into the abyss. Without
it, you have only darkness, have to bravely perch on
the edge until the abyss slowly creeps away. And
that's where I seem to be right now for reasons that
are unclear to me, dirging it out until the fog
lifts.
"Shoot him 'fore he run now," is a lyric to the song
"Shotgun," originally by Jr. Walker and the All
Stars. Click here
for a danceable,
levity-producing version from the
documentary Standing
in the Shadows of Motown. It features some of the
original Motown sessions musicians and the late
Gerald Levert as singer.
Image from the Washington
College magazine.





