Later, in the early afternoon, Eddie came in. I didn’t expect him to, I thought he would avoid me too but there he was.
He walked in, his eyes scanned the room cutting across me like I wasn’t even there, and I immediately changed my mind that I didn’t want him to think I was a racist.
He looked good; worn Levi’s that fit real well (tight in al the right places, loose in al the right places), black cowboy boots, a black, long-sleeved t-shirt that was snug on his chest and biceps, and a big silver belt buckle on his black leather belt. His black hair was kind of messy from something, the wind, his hand running through it, whatever.
He made my mouth water.
I was behind the espresso counter with Tex and Indy was behind the book counter. Eddie saw Indy and walked right to her, ignoring everyone else.
I was terrified Indy would say something, even more so when Tex elbowed me.
“You should go talk to him,” Tex stage whispered.
“I’m not going to talk to him!” I hissed back.
“You’re loopy-loo,” Tex told me.
Then the bel over the door rang again and as I was concentrating on semi-arguing with Tex, I didn’t look up.
At first.
Then I heard someone sing.
“Jet! Jet!”
I looked up.
Tex looked up.
Indy looked up.
Al y walked to the front from the back where al the bookshelves were.
Eddie turned around.
And there was Ray McAlister, my Dad, standing in the middle of Fortnum’s, banging his head and playing air guitar while he hummed, loudly.
My mouth dropped open.
Then Dad went on, singing the Paul McCartney and Wings song “Jet”.
He was real y going at it. Dad was. Singing al the lyrics, the “oo-oo’s”, jamming on his air guitar like there was no tomorrow, snapping his head around so hard I thought he’d give himself whiplash.
When the lyrics included the word “father”, he got a big, goofy grin on his face, put his hands on his heart and, I couldn’t help it, I started around the counter toward him.
“Dad,” I whispered.
Everyone was staring. Tex in avid fascination with a huge grin on his face. Indy was giggling. Al y was nodding her head. Eddie’s arms were crossed on his chest, watching, blank-faced, with his hip leaned against the book counter.
Dad wasn’t quite done. More air guitar. More “oo-oo’s”.
Then, when I made it to him, he grabbed me in his arms, pul ed me close and started dancing with me, flipping me around, stil singing, but louder this time.
In fact, he was at the part where McCartney begs Jet to love him and Dad was kind of yel ing (as he always did when he sang this song to me, which was a lot, in fact, it was every time he came back to town and first saw me).
He did the catcal and I started laughing, I couldn’t help it.
My Dad may have been a crap Dad but he was crazy and he was funny and even though he’d only been in my life for what amounted to hours in the past fourteen years, he was stil my Dad.