I didn’t hesitate to call to them, “Best get in your car, Buddy. I’ll be saying these words to you then calling nine-one-one then calling Gray. If it was me, I wouldn’t be here when Gray gets back.”
Then I turned to the front door, walked three steps and stopped dead with my hand on the doorknob after Buddy called back, “Now, Ivey, is that any way to act the very first time you lay eyes on your Daddy?”
It was stupid, I knew it. I should go in, call nine-one-one, call Gray but instead my head turned and my eyes went to the man walking toward the porch with Buddy.
That hair was my hair.
That hair was my hair.
I stared.
They got close to the side of the porch and stopped.
Buddy, I noticed when I flicked my eyes to him, was grinning. Pleased with himself.
The man had his eyes glued to me. He looked curious. He also looked hesitant. And, even though he was tall, sturdy, weathered, worn and rough around the edges, I sensed a hint of fear.
“Hoot Booker, I’d like you to meet your daughter, the ex-pool hustling, ex-Vegas stripper, current cowboy piece, Ivey Larue,” Buddy introduced, loving every minute of this but my eyes were on Hoot Booker…
Hoot Booker…
My father.
And at Buddy’s words, Hoot Booker’s eyes narrowed scarily and sliced to Buddy.
“Merry Christmas.” Buddy smiled happily then leaned forward. “Oh, and, just so you know, Hoot here, coupla years ago, got outta prison. Murder one. Now, I don’t know much about these things but I think that’s the bad kind.”
“Think you’re done, chief,” Hoot Booker’s deep, rumbling, pissed off voice stated and he looked from Buddy to me. “Don’t know this guy, he found me, said he knew you, paid for me to get here. Swear, girl, until this very second where he turned dick, the man’s been nothin’ but cool with me. I see now you two got history but I do not have a place in that. I just wanted to meet my daughter.”
His daughter.
Me.
I stared at him, immobile, hand still on the doorknob.
Buddy was glaring at Hoot Booker.
Hoot Booker was staring at me.
Then he shook his head, closed his eyes and looked away for a second, taking a moment for what I wouldn’t know before he opened his eyes.
They came back to me and I saw his face was pained before he whispered, “Jesus, f**k, I look at you, can’t believe my eyes, can’t f**kin’ take it in. I created somethin’ as beautiful as you?”
Oh my God.
“I don’t know,” I whispered, only my lips moving.
“Sheila Bailey your Momma?” he asked.
“She gave birth to me,” I answered, still talking quietly.
He nodded his head, a small smile cracking his face, “Yeah, see Sheila never changed.”
“No,” I whispered.
The smile fled and he stared at me, reading me like he knew me my whole life either because I was too stunned at what was happening to hide it or because he had more practice than me.
I figured it was both.
“She didn’t treat you good,” he whispered.
“No,” I repeated, that one, one syllable word weighty.
Hoot Booker read that too and emotions he didn’t try to hide either rolled over his face, more pain, anger, despair.
“That brother ‘a yours?” he asked when he got control of his emotional roller coaster.
“Dead to me.”
He knew what I was saying and I knew he knew when he whispered, “Fuck.”
“This is all very touching,” Buddy put in snidely and I finally moved, turning away from the door to face him and see his expression was even more spiteful than his tone. “Why am I not surprised that an ex-stripper doesn’t mind havin’ a murderer as a Daddy?”
“Think I told you, you’re done,” Hoot Booker reminded him and Buddy turned to my father.
“I am? What are you gonna do, big man? Kill me in front of your long, lost daughter?”
“No, but, the way she said hi, not sure she’ll mind I f**k you up a little bit,” Hoot returned and I couldn’t help it, a giggle escaped me.
Buddy’s eyes cut to me and he hissed, “Shut your slut trap.”
Then Buddy wasn’t there because Buddy was on his back in the snow-covered yard, Hoot’s knee in his gut, his calf in his arm immobilizing it, one hand at his throat, his other hand wrapped around Buddy’s wrist pressing it into the snow.
Oh God.
I moved to the edge of the porch but could go no further because I didn’t have any shoes on, just a pair of thick woolen socks so I cried, “Please, don’t! He isn’t worth the trouble. Honestly, he isn’t worth the trouble.”
But Hoot Booker didn’t even look at me.
Nose an inch away from Buddy’s, he whispered scarily, “You called my girl a slut right to her face and right in front of me.” He paused a scary pause and finished, “I don’t like that.”
Buddy kicked out his legs and snapped, “Get off me!”
Hoot lifted his head and aimed his eyes at me before he ordered, “Go in the house. You call the cops then you call your man.” When I hesitated, he clipped, “Now, girl. Go.”
“I don’t want you to get in trouble,” I said softly, his head jerked and his face changed. It softened and under all that rough, weathered and worn I saw my father was handsome.
“Then keep me outta trouble by gettin’ some folks here to deal with this assclown before I lose it and do it myself,” he said gently.
I held his eyes then I nodded.
Then I ran into the house, dialed nine-one-one, told them what was happening then I called Gray.
He answered with, “Hey dollface. Remember something you need?
“Buddy’s here,” I replied. “He brought my father with him. He said a few things my father didn’t like and now my father has him pinned in the snow in the front yard.”
Silence then, “Say again?”
“Buddy’s here,” I started. “He brought my –”
Gray cut me off to rumble, “You are f**kin’ shittin’ me.”
“No,” I whispered.
“You are f**kin’ shittin’ me!” Gray roared.
Oh God!
“Honey, are you driving?” I asked carefully, reminding myself again to tread cautiously and not get lulled into stupidity by the usually easygoing Grayson Cody.
A moment while I suspected he deep-breathed then, “Yeah, on the way to Gran. I’ll be there in ten. You call the police?”