
Velma and Louie
by Carole Bellacera
Get that smug look off your face. I know
what you're thinking. Well, I'll tell you
right now, this ain't no "Thelma and Louise"
story. Leastways not with the same ending.
I'm here to tell you about it, so it's mighty
clear we didn't drive off no cliff into the
Grand Canyon. Blame foolishness, if you
ask me. That ending. Didn't ring
true, and I said so to Louie when we watched
that ignorant thing on his VCR in the Happy
Valley Home for Retired Citizens. 'Course
you couldn't tell him
that. By the time those two dim-witted
females drove their car into the next world,
Louie was so randy from the love scene, he
couldn't keep his blessed hands off me.
'Course, I was hotter than a July
firecracker myself from eyeing that purty Brad
Pitt. Lawsy...if I were about forty years
younger...hmmm...mmm!
Well, back to the matters at hand. My name
is Velma Huddleston. I'm seventy-three
years old and up until last August, I lived at
the Happy Valley Home for Retired Citizens in
Charleston, West Virginia. That's where I
met Louie. He lived across the hall, and I
met him one day down by the mailboxes. We
got to talking and he told me about his grandson
who had made it big in a rock group called Hairy
Armpits or Harry Krishna or some such nonsense.
Against his mama's wishes, Louie added with a
big toothy smile.
"She thought he was trotting down to hell on a
fast horse in a porcupine saddle," he told
me in what I was to learn was his unique way of
telling a story. That Louie! He has
more sayings than a dog has fleas.
Anyhow, as he was going on about his rock-star
grandson, I listened politely, thinking as how
that hardly was something to brag about, but you
could tell he was proud as pie when he talked
about that youngun, and who was I to burst his
bubble about it? It's not as if I have a
lot to brag about in my family. My only
son, Jarvis, has never been able to hold down a
job because he suffers from that Roulette's
Syndrome, or whatever its called, and he never
fails to cuss up a storm during the worst
possible moments--like funerals and weddings.
And then there's the yips. Lord a my!
Sounds like one of them little dogs who look
more like big rats than canines. 'Course
he's gotten better since he started taking
the drugs for it. Drugs don't always help
though, not when he's riled up about something.
Which is more often than not. He got that
from his daddy. Anyways, Jarvis even found
a woman who'd put up with his ailment, (course,
you can imagine how taken aback she was when he
said "marry me, Loretta ugly bitch I love you
(yip) like crazy.") Loretta was one of
them Bible thumpers who thought she was put on
this earth to personally rescue the downtrodden,
and I guess that's what she thought Jarvis was
because she married him lickety-split and spit
out three younguns right in a row.
Each and every one of them, God bless 'em, as
dull as bad-year molasses.
But I'm gettin' off the subject. I'm
allowed to. I'm seventy-three years old.
Now, Louie. He's seventy-five, cute as a
button, and I love him. Ain't that a lark?
seventy-three years old and in love like a
school girl. Who would've thought it?
But I guess I was due, 'cause I'd never been in
love before. Not even with Skank, my
husband of fifteen years. That low account
mean sumbitch. Back before he caught the
black lung disease in the coal mine where he
worked, he used to beat me black and blue for
looking at him crooked. Something I
apparently did more often than not back in the
early days of our marriage. I was fourteen
when I married Lowell "Skank" Huddleston.
And I was fifteen when I gave birth to Jarvis.
Ain't that funny? I'm only fifteen years
older than my boy. Why, if they hadn't
torn down the Happy Valley Home for Retired
Citizens, he could've moved in here with me, but
that wouldn't have happened, because I wouldn't
have had him. Law! Much as I love
him--'cause after all, he's my own flesh and
blood--that boy would drive me crazy if I
allowed it. Louie don't like him at all.
Says he was born tired and raised lazy, and I
guess maybe I should take offense at that
observation, but hell, I'll just blame it on
Skank. He did the raising, not me.
His rules were law, I'll tell you that.
But when Jarvis turned fourteen, and the raising
was pretty much done, Skank up and died, and
I'll tell you right now, I didn't shed a tear.
No sir, and I'm not a bit ashamed to admit it.
Anyhow, back to Louie. He used to be a
truck driver. Drove one of them big old
rigs from Charleston to Lexington, Kentucky and
down to Knoxville on occasion. He married
a hometown girl who, according to him, looked
like sixty miles of bad road, but who he loved
in spite of, and they ended up having a couple
of twin girls, and I'll get to them in a minute
'cos Genovidene and Geneva are a big part of our
story. Anyways, he settled down in
Charleston when he wasn't on the road, and lived
that life until his homely wife died and Geneva,
the daughter that stayed in town (the other
moved to Richmond), got him an apartment at
Happy Valley. And it was right after he
moved in that I met him and we fell in love.
I'll set the record straight right now, seeing
as how you're probably wondering about the
sex-thing. Right off the bat--I didn't
waste no time in spoonin' with Louie. At
seventy-three years, you don't have that much
time to waste. And I'll put another thing
to rest right now while I'm at it. Sex is
just as good at seventy-three as it is at
twenty-three. Maybe not as athletic, you
understand, but just as good. There ain't
no swinging off the chandeliers and dixie-doodling
the bedsprings until Sealy-Posturepedic has sent
you a Hotline number for emergency service.
But it's still pretty damn good.
Like I told you already, Louie is just as cute
as can be with his twinkling blue eyes and
apple-red cheeks and that thatch of silver white
hair that stands up like a horsehair brush no
matter what you do with it. But looks
ain't why I love him, and it ain't the sex
either. He makes me feel young again.
And he makes me laugh.
It was a day in early August that our life fell
apart. I'd taken the rollers out of my
white hair and painted my face up with the
cosmetics this young girl downstairs in the
office kept me supplied with. They didn't
make me look like that Cindy Crawford, but only
a pair of sharp eyes could tell the difference
between me and Rupaul. (Don't get your
undies in a wad, Blondie, I'm just fooling with
ya.)
Anyhow, I walked across the hall to meet Louie
to go to breakfast down in the dining hall like
we always did, and I gave his door a tap and
walked in like I always do, and slap the dog and
spit in the fire, there was Geneva and
Genovidene, looking like Marilyn Monroe
imitators, dressed to the nines and wearing
faces as long as a slow walk on a wet day.
I looked at Louie, and blamed if he wasn't
looking just as sour. "Who licked the red
off your candy cane?" I asked, hoping if I
used one of his sayings, he'd grin at me at me
and say, "Well, hell, Velma, it ain't
nothing. Why, Genovidene here, broke a
fingernail this mornin' as she was opening her
Slim-Fast box." But deep inside, I knew he
weren't gonna say that. Something was
wrong. And I knew it was gonna affect both
of us--and affect us in a way we weren't gonna
be over the moon about.
Well, Genovidene (she's the one with the
skinnier face--that's how I can tell them
apart), pursed her perfectly outlined red lips
and said, "Well now, Velma, don't over
react, but..."
"...Happy Valley has gone bankrupt and you all
are gonna be turned out," Geneva
finished the sentence for her.
That was something I was still trying to get
used to--the way those two twin girls finish
each other's sentences. Not a seam showed,
not a pause, not a breath. Nothing.
It was like they shared a brain even though they
were separated by two bodies. Damn eerie,
I tell you that. Gives me the creeps.
"...and the fact is, hon, Papa is gonna come
live with me in Richmond for six months out of
the year, and then he'll come back..."
"...to my house for the rest of the year, and
that way, you'll get to see him..."
"...just as often as you want while he's here in
Charleston." Genovidene finished
with a bright smile as if she was a female Ed
McMahan who'd just told me I'd won the
Publisher's Clearing House Sweepstakes.
I stared at Louie and he stared at me. And
then
our talking in unison began. Okay,
maybe it was more like
screaming in unison. Well, as we
ranted and raved and protested and I cried and
Louie cussed, twin looks of stubbornness came on
those cheap floozies' faces, and Louie finally
turned to me, squeezed my hand and said,
"It ain't no use, Velma. Talking to them
two is like a rubber-nosed woodpecker trapped in
a petrified forest. We ain't gonna get
nowhere."
And as we stared at each other in resigned
silence, we heard the commotion out in the hall.
"Mama, open up, (yip) it's me, Jarvis (yip)
fucking hell. And the bitch (yip) Loretta.
We have (yip) to talk, Mama shit-face.
(Yip) got some bad goddamn it (yip) news."
I turned around and opened Louie's door.
There he was, my son, Jarvis, and his saintly
butter-couldn't-melt-in-her-mouth wife, Loretta.
I looked at them and frowned.
"You didn't take your medicine today, did you,
son?"
***
"So, what are we gonna do, Louie?"
I askt him that later that evening when that pack of
squalling brats hi-tailed it home. For an hour, Jarvis and
Loretta reasoned with me, if you can call it reasoning when
fifty percent of the words spewing out of that boy's mouth was
pure unadulterated filth. I swan! Lord knows he can't help it,
but la, it wears on my patience; I made him take his pills but
they didn't kick in until about forty minutes later and by the
time that happened, I'd already told them there ain't no way on
God's green earth I was gonna come and live with a man who barks
like a dog and cusses like a sailor and a woman who prays to the
Almighty every night that she'll have a smooth and satisfying
morning dump.
Louie looked at me, and damned if I didn't see his
blue eyes twinkle. "Don't you worry, Velma. Nothing's gonna
tear us apart. Not your younguns, and not mine. Them girls
ain't too big for me to paint their back porches red, I'll tell
you that. Now, I'm gonna go get on the phone and see what I can
do about this calamity." He stood up and stared at me
thoughtfully. "Velma, tell me something. Is there anything
you've never done that you always wanted to do, but never got
the chance?"
I thought about that a moment, and then I looked up
at him and said, "Well, Louie. I've never seen the ocean. Not
once in my life. I believe I'd fancy that."
He nodded, gave me a whopping kiss on the lips and
walked to my door. "You just give me a couple of days, and
don't worry your pretty little white head about a thing.
Louie's gonna take care of everything."
And no matter how I tried, I couldn't get a thing
out of him in the next few days about what he was up to.
***
Well, to cut a long story short, that's how Louie
and I found ourselves on the road in a little red Corvette,
traveling through the Blue Ridge Mountains toward Virginia
Beach. Oh, our britches were riding high, I'll tell you that.
It was Louie's grandson, you know. Gareth. The one in the rock
band. Turns out that when he first wanted to head off to
California to join in that rock band, and his mother raised a
ruckus--Geneva did that on occasion, I understood, although I'd
never actually witnessed it--Louie, who thought a man oughta do
what a man wants to do with his life, gave the boy $500 in cash
to get him started out there. And once that rock band began to
make money, well, that boy--who just proves my theory that
miracles do happen and some children grow up to be fine
specimens of the human race no matter who spawned 'em--paid his
grandfather back many times over, but he still felt like he owed
a great debt to 'his favorite old man.' And as soon as Louie
called him, within twenty-four hours, that red Corvette showed
up at the Happy Valley Home tied with a big old yaller ribbon
and a note that said, "Go for it, Gramps!"
And we did. Louie, being an ex-truck driver, loved
to burn the rubber, and there was hardly any traffic on old
I-64, and let me tell you, he gave that car a work-out. We
crossed Sandstone Mountain and stopped at its foot where a dinky
little gas station perched on the banks of the New River looking
like at any moment it might take a swan dive right into it.
Louie gassed up the Corvette and went inside to pay while I got
out to stretch my bones and made an acquaintance with a cute
little Border collie who wandered up and sniffed at me as if I
was hiding an old steak bone in my skirt. Louie was inside for
an awful long time, and I was beginning to think he'd grown
tired of my company and had sneaked out the back to hi-tail it
back to Charleston. 'Cept there was no back to the place--just
the river. Couldn't get far that way, not unlest he'd turned
into a fish or a muskrat.
But then he come strolling out, a big shit-eating
grin on his face and carrying a handful of bright colored
papers. "Not the friendliest folks in the world," he said as
he flopped down in the driver's seat. "Looked at me like I was
sent for and couldn't go and then went and wasn't wanted. But
looky what I found."
And he tossed those colored slips of paper in my
lap. Brochures! I looked at one and then another, and then
another, and then I looked at him and said, "So?" He was
grinning at me like I was a hot fudge sundae and he was an
Eskimo tasting his first sample of ice cream.
"We're a gonna go river-rafting, Velma!"
***
Well, as you can see, I'm still here. But I liked
to died that afternoon. We took what they call the Class I
white water trip. Mild rapids, they say. Mild, my ass! When
we hit the first one, my stomach went down low, and my feet came
up, and my eyes went crossed, and I swear to the dear Lord, when
that cold water slapped me in the face, my heart stopped for a
good ten seconds. But don't you know, Louie loved it. He
laughed and squealed and his apple cheeks got even redder, and
come to think of it, I found myself laughing right along with
him once my stomach settled back in the place where it's
supposed to be. That four-hour trip went like wild-fire, and
before we knew it, the guide had dumped us off on the banks and
a van drove us back upstream where we'd parked the Corvette.
I swan, we were like too worn-out kids when we got
back in that car and headed off for the nearest motel. Tired,
but as happy as an evangelist holding out the offering plate in
a roomful of holy-roller millionaires. Before he started the
car, Louie turned to me, grabbed my hand, looked deep into my
eyes and said, "Thanks, Velma. Riding those river rapids was
my dream. Something I'd never done but always wanted
to. I thank you for sharing it with me. Let's go get a good
nights sleep, and tomorrow, we're gonna go after your
dream." Then he grinned, and his eyes twinkled. "'Course if
you got a hankering to do something other than sleep right away,
I have a few ideas of how we can pass the time."
"I got a hankering," I said, feeling my face
turning blood-awful red. You'd think that after seventy-three
years on this earth, a soul would quit blushing at the mention
of sex, wouldn't you? Anyhow, we went off to the nearest motel
and did our business.
We got up before the sun rose the next morning and
got on the road because Louie had a dream that the blonde
floozies were after us. I didn't say nothing but I'd been
feeling the same thing--only I was thinking about Jarvis and
Goody-Two-Shoes Loretta. It'd be just like them to sic the
police on us. I could hear Jarvis plain as day, standing in a
police station in Charleston and yipping and cussing and whining
about his senile old mother who's taken off with a wild geezer
whose intentions were damn-flat dishonorable.
Anyhow, we got on I-64 and drove like bats out of
hell toward the Virginia state line. We crossed it long about
6:30 in the morning, and cheered and howled like a couple of
beer-guzzling teenagers who'd won the homecoming game in a
blow-out. And even then, we didn't stop. We kept driving
through the rolling green hills of Virginia until we reached
Staunton (pronounced Stanton, Louie told me, because them
townsfolk didn't aim to pronounce it anyways like the
damn British who named the town back before the War of
Independence. You see what I mean about Louie--he knows the
damndest things!) We stopped at Cracker Barrel restaurant for
biscuits and sawmill gravy which weren't as good as mine, I told
him, but it'd do. He grinned and said I'd have to make him some
when we got a place of our own. His words sent a queer feeling
rippling in the pit of my stomach. It was the first mention of
what we were gonna do once I saw the ocean. Neither one of us
had thought past that. And we didn't want to. Not now. So, we
put the future out of our minds and headed east towards
Richmond, and farther on, Virginia Beach.
It took us two hours to reach Richmond, and then
another forty minutes before we got to Hampton. Well, I won't
deny it, I was jumping in my seat as if a bunch of fire‑ants had
crawled into my girdle when the Corvette broke out of the Fort
Monroe tunnel into the bright sunlight and I saw that blue
stretch of ocean on our left.
Lordy, lordy, it was a sight to see! Stretching all
the way to the horizon. Why, out there somewheres was Ireland
and England, and Paree, France, and all those other excitin'
places I'd had a hankering to visit when I was a youngun. Well,
I knew I weren't gonna get there now, but leastways, I was
lookin' at the ocean, and I'd pretty much given up on ever doing
that. But that was before I took up with Louie. Shoot the moon
and goose the cow! That man had opened up doors for me!
"Let's go on into the town and park the car," Louie
said. "We'll walk down to the beach and let you get those
pretty little toes wet. It don't count unless you actually step
into the ocean. Can't say you been there."
Just as I opened my mouth to agree, I saw the police
car coming at us. And something inside me crawled. I don't
know how I knew it, but somehow, I did. Trouble, with a
capital T had found us. I saw the policeman give us the eagle
eye as he passed. And even afterward, I sensed him looking in
his rearview mirror, memorizing our license plate, I guess.
And sure as shittin, that old revolving light came on, and he
started to do a U-turn right in the middle of the road.
"Louie...." I said, my hand grabbing onto the
dashboard. "I don't think we're gonna make it to the ocean."
But Louie had seen him, too. His jaw tightened, and
his blue eyes grew chilly as a outdoor faucet in the Minnesota
winter. "Oh, yes, we are, Velma. Yes, we are."
And before I could say rappin' Jack, Louie
sash-shayed that Corvette into the next street leading to the
beach, even though there was a big old mean-looking sign that
said: Residents Only. His foot crunched down on that
accelerator, and I swear to God, we were flying at fifty mph
down that little street toward one of those crissy-crossed road
blocks aimed to stop folks from driving on the sand, I guess.
"Watch out!" I yelled.
Louie slammed on the brakes, and I was right glad I
had my seatbelt on good and tight, 'cause although my head is
about as hard as they come, I don't think it stood a chance
against a Corvette's windshield. He brought the car to a stop
just inches away from that blockade. Before I could even fuss
at Louie for his recklessness, he threw open his door and
yelled, "Come on, Velma! Let's go see the ocean!"
I scrambled out of the car and hurried as fast I
could to catch up with Louie. For a seventy-five year-old, that
man could move! From back on the street, I heard the siren.
Good God! What in blazes did they think we'd done? I knew my
mind wasn't as sharp as it used to be, but I didn't recollect
murdering anybody or stealing the national treasure from Fort
Knox. Then it hit me. Jarvis. He'd told 'em I was a raving
maniac. Senile. Suicidal. Didn't know if I was coming or
going. And those two blonde bimbos. They'd probably told the
police the same thing. After all, how many senior citizens take
off from an old folk's home driving a red Corvette through the
mountains, stopping on the way to white-water raft, (because of
course, by now, they knew about that, too.) We're old. We
ain't supposed to enjoy things like that. Well, I got news for
all you yuppie baby boomers and snippy glamour-girls and boys
who think your shit don't stink because you're young and
beautiful--I like to enjoy life, too. I like riding in a red
Corvette and white-water rafting and being in love and putting
my old gnarled feet...yeah, the same feet that Louie thinks is
so purty...puttin' them in the ocean for the first time. And
I'm damn well gonna do it.
I reached the sand, and took a great big breath of
the fresh salty sea air. Lordy, it smelt good! With a wild
laugh, I kicked off my shoes. "Hold your horses, Louie!" I
called. "If I'm a gonna jump in the ocean, I'm gonna take these
stockings off."
Louie paused and looked back, the breeze from the
ocean pushing his bristly white hair forward. "Well, hurry up
your buns then. We ain't got much time."
I rolled the stockings off, jumping back and forth
from one leg to the other. I felt sprightly, I tell you that.
Like that old ocean had taken ten years off my age. I flung the
stockings down into the sand and took off toward Louie. When I
caught up with him, I grabbed his hand and yelled, "Come on!
Let's go for it!"
We reached the cool wet sand and waited for the
first wave to roll in. When it did, it caught me about
ankle-high and I squealed as the cold water squeegeed between my
toes. Louie yelped and splashed forward, heading for the deeper
waves.
"Wait for me!" I called.
He grinned and dipped his hand into the water and
splashed me. I squealed like a stuck pig. "You awnry devil!"
And I splashed him back. It was during our horse-play when out
of the corner of my eye, I saw the police car pull up next to
the Corvette.
"There he is," I said, watching the policeman get
out of his car.
Louie shook his wet head, sending droplets of sea
water over me. "Well, we can either stay here and let him come
to us, or we can go see what he wants."
Before I could answer, another car pulled in after
the police car. And I saw two platinum-blond heads pop out.
"Well, shit a brick!" I muttered. "Looky who's here."
"And looky who else is here," Louie said.
I stared, bug-eyed, at Jarvis's shaggy grey head as
he got out of the same car. Loretta was right behind him.
Slowly, I turned and gave Louie the evil eye. "Do you mind
telling me how in a blue moon that carload of jack-asses got
word of where we were?"
Shame-faced, Louie dropped his eyes away from me.
"Well, the only person I told where we were heading was
Gareth...you know...my grandson out in L.A. They must've got it
out of him." As I stared at him in sheer disbelief, he
protested, "Well, somebody had to know where we were! What if
we got into trouble?"
"You are trouble," I said. But I could no
more stay mad at him than I could spit in the wind. He's just
so damn cute! "Oh, nevermind! We'll just have to turn and face
the music!"
"Papa! Oh, my God!" It was Geneva who screamed
out, or was it Genovidene? I couldn't tell from that distance.
Both were running pell-mell toward the water.
"Don't do it, Daddy! It's not..."
"...worth it! We'll work something out,
we'll..."
"...find a way for you and Velma..."
"...to live together!"
"The girls are (yip) right, Mama!" That was my
Jarvis screaming now. He was runnin' through the sand, Loretta
right behind him. "Bastard butt-head. (Yip) committing suicide
ain't the answer!"
"He's right, Mama," Loretta huffed. "Our dear Lord
won't forgive you if you take your own life. Come on in. We'll
find a place for you and Louie to be together. We promise!
Just don't kill yourselves."
Slowly, Louie and I looked at each other. I saw
that twinkle in his eyes, and it was as if I could read his
mind. It took all I could do to hold back a big old grin. He
grabbed my hand, and together, we turned and faced our family.
Louie's face took on the appearance of an old
toothless bloodhound who'd just been given a big raw steak.
"We've made up our mind," he said mournfully. "And there's not
a thing you can do to stop us. Just leave us alone and let us
spend eternity together."
I nodded solemnly. "That's what we want."
And we turned our backs on our children and hand in
hand, took a step forward into the ocean. Well, you shoulda
heard the screams. Sounded like a pack of alleycats who'd
lapped up a saucerful of milk laced with Jim Beam.
"No! Don't do it!"
"Please, Mama!"
Louie and I looked at each other and grinned.
Then, wiping the smiles off our faces, we turned around.
Louie's face was as sober as a mortician's in a roomful of
grieving relatives. "We just want one thing understood. If we
can't be together..."
And then, the most amazing thing happened. I
finished his sentence for him. "...we don't wanta live."
***
Well, as you can see, it all worked out. Geneva and
Genovidene and Jarvis and Loretta stuck to their promise. We
all went back to Charleston, the four of them in Geneva's car,
and me and Louie in the red Corvette. They rented us a little
house on the banks of the Kanawha River (which, coincidently,
turns into the New River a further piece on down near Beckley)
not far from where Geneva lives. We got ourselves hitched in
September because Louie didn't want anyone to say I was a fallen
woman, as if I cared a fig about what folks thought of me. You
don't care to enter no popularity contests after being around
seventy-three years, I always say. Anyhow, he made an honest
woman of me, and I think that's sweet. But that's Louie. Sweet
as a chocolate-covered cherry cordial in a bowl of butter-brickle
ice cream.
Well, there you have it. That's the story of "Velma
and Louie." Now, tell the truth. Ain't that a lot better than
that "Thelma & Louise" piece of fluff?
Oh, yeah. Forgot to tell ya. They let us keep the
red Corvette.