Vero whistled low, craning her neck to see through the neon maze that was Hey Joeâs front window. âCheck out those wheels .â
The door was propped open for the seventy-degree weather. In the early-evening dusk, a man in a suit got out of an Audi. Lola and Johnny, crowded behind the bar with Vero, looked at each other.
âLet me handle this,â he said.
âWhatâs going on?â Vero asked. âIs it the money guy?â
Lolaâs gaze snapped between Veronica and Johnny. âYou told her?â
âPersonally, I wouldâve accepted the offer,â Vero said, a teasing smile on her face. âWonder how he feels about redheads.â
âItâs prostitution,â Lola said.
âI prefer to think of it as a trade.â Vero opened her hand toward the door. âYou got something I want,â she pointed at her crotch, âI got something you want.â
âSo you sleep with him then,â Lola said.
âHoney, for that much I would. I donât care how he looks.â She leaned over so Johnny couldnât hear. âBut damn if that man didnât look good.â
Lola shook her head. âHe looked like trouble.â
She laughed throatily. âYou know Vero gives it up to trouble for free all the time.â
Lola willed herself to look away from the door. Itâd been days since Beau had been there. She hated to admit she was still thinking of him. There had to have been a reason he picked her, but she went in circles trying to figure it out. Had there been others? If so, what was the common factor between them?
She tore her eyes away to focus on Johnny. He watched the door with more intensity than heâd looked at her with in days. A few hours earlier, an unusually large table of male customers had ordered round after round. Heâd joked with them that if they doubled their bill by the end of the night, heâd throw in a complimentary lap dance from the waitress of their choice. âCome on, Iâm joking aroundâ had been his defensive answer to her glare. Johnny didnât joke around like that, but he hadnât really been himself since the picnic.
Lola held her breath when the man walked in. She and Johnny exhaled at the same time. âItâs not him,â Johnny said in a way that almost sounded disappointed. Johnny leaned over the bar. âCan I help you?â
In the light, the man was clearly not Beau. His arms were too short for his wrinkled suit jacket and his belly strained the buttons of his dress shirt. âWow,â he said. He narrowed his eyes up and around, stopping at the framed black-and-white photos of musicians on Hey Joeâs stage. âThis is even more authentic than it looked on the Internet. Not like the dives you see in Brooklyn where all the stuff on the walls came from a website or boutique.â
Vero was refilling the bar caddies. Johnny picked up a jar of olives sheâd asked him to open earlier and knocked the lid hard against the edge of the bar. Everyone jumped and turned to him. He twisted off the top and passed it to Vero without removing his eyes from the man. âWhat can I do for you?â
He held out his hand for Johnny, who just stared at it. âHank Walken,â he said, jovial and unaffected by the brushoff.
âJonathan Pace.â
âIâm looking for Mr. Wegley.â
âMitch isnât around right now. Whatâs this about?â
âHeard this place is for sale. You guys worked here long?â
âAbout twelve years,â Johnny said.
âHowâs business?â
The man was smarmy. Lola would set the building on fire before a guy like that got his hands on Hey Joe. âIt sucks,â Lola said. âIn fact, the whole block sucks.â
Hank nodded. âInteresting.â
âInteresting?â Johnny asked.
Hank scanned the wall behind them. âYeah,â he said absentmindedly. âItâs got a lot of potential. Would do well with some sprucing up.â
Johnny and Lola exchanged a look. âSprucing up how?â
âIâve done my homework. This place has history. Foot traffic. Repeat business.â Hank checked under the lip of the bar as if he expected to find something there. âThatâs not showing in the numbers, though. It needs a fresh touch. Something special. Maybe a rooftop bar or a lounge area or something.â
âThis is more of a local joint,â Johnny said.
Hankâs eyes went to a pool game happening in the corner. âI picked up on that.â
âItâs the complete opposite of a lounge.â
âThereâs your problem.â Hank pointed at Johnny, grinning. âYouâre not thinking outside the box, son. Itâs all about the angle. We give it a cool, hip, rock ânâ roll vibe. Get some young celebrities to make appearances at the reopening. Weâve already got the rep, but a new look and a little rebranding could do wonders.â He nodded thoughtfully to no one in particular. âIâve flipped bars before. Five minutes in here, and Iâm seeing a lot of missed opportunities.â
It was exactly what Lola and Johnny had been saying for years. Mitch wasnât willing to budge on a lot of things to keep the integrity of the bar, but sales suffered as a result. Not that Lola and Johnny had ever once discussed turning it into a lounge. âWhat opportunities?â Lola asked.
Hank looked back at her and narrowed his eyes. âThink I got this far by giving away my secrets, sweetheart?â He laughed good-naturedly but didnât answer her question.
âBusiness really is slow,â she said. âNot sure this place can be saved.â
âI disagree,â Hank said. âIn the right hands, Hey Joe could be at least doubling profits by this time next year.â He dug his sausage-like fingers into his suit jacket. âIâll give you my card. Iâm just going to take a look around. If I donât hear from Mr. Wegley, Iâll try again tomorrow.â
Johnny took the card. âHe wonât be in until Friday.â
âAny way we can get him in here to take a meeting?â
âHeâs out of town.â
âGuess I shouldâve called before hopping on a flight from New York. Thatâs all right. Iâll wait.â
Hank walked away. He swiveled his head, pausing to read the flyers Lola had designed and stuck on a corkboard. He inspected the floors, touched the wallsâgot so close to the pool table, a man nearly twice his size asked him if he knew any surgeons who specialized in pool-cue removal.
Johnny held up the card for Lola, ripped it and dropped it in the trash behind the bar. âAre you kidding me? A rooftop bar?â
Lola shook her head. âCan you imagine if Quartz and the guys heard that?â
âHey Joeâs got history, man,â Johnny said. His eyes narrowed on Hank as he made his slow way to the exit. âSeriously. You canât just flush that down the toilet.â
Vero shrugged. âSomething needs to change. Maybe itâs time, Boss.â
âAnd maybe you go snort some lines,â he said.
âJohnny,â Lola scolded. âWhat is with you?â
He muttered an apology, grabbed a Coors from the mini-fridge and keyed off the top. Vero muttered about checking on her tables. Lola kept her mouth shut and didnât mention Johnnyâs no-drinking-during-work-hours rule.
Vero hadnât put anything away. Lola picked up the jar of olives, but it slipped out of her hands and broke. âDamn it,â she cried, jumping back. âWhy donât you guys ever clean up your own shit?â
âYou guys?â Johnny asked.
Lola glanced up at him. She saw an opening for her frustration and took it. âYes, you guys. Did you not see the basket of clean laundry thatâs been sitting out since Saturday?â
Johnnyâs lips pinched. âI thought you were waiting to put it away.â
âWaiting for what?â Lola asked. âThereâs no law that says you canât do it.â
He held up a palm and the beer in his hand. âSorry. I didnât realize it was a test.â
âIt wasnât,â Lola said under her breath, squatting to clean up the glass. âIt would just be nice if someone else did something once in a while.â Sheâd overreacted. It was second nature to clean up after Johnny and that transferred over to work. But the constantly taking things out and leaving them there annoyed her sometimes.
She dropped the big pieces of glass in the trash, right on top of the two halves of Hankâs card. âJohnny?â
âWhat?â he asked. âI said I was sorry.â
âNo, not that.â She paused. âWhereâs Beauâs card?â
Johnny stopped staring into space and turned abruptly to her. âWhy?â
âI remember him setting it on the bar, but I never threw it out. Just wondering what happened to itâ¦â
Johnny took a long swig of his drink. He inspected the bottle. âI tossed it.â
âThat night?â
âYeah.â
âWhen?â
âLike I said, that fucking night, right after he left. Ripped it in half too. Should I have burned it?â
Lola looked at him as hard as he avoided looking at her. After finding Beauâs card in Johnnyâs pocket, sheâd hidden it in her birth control box under the sinkâand it was in one piece. âAre you sure?â
âYeah, Iâm goddamn sure, Lola,â he said. âWhatâre you nagging me for?â
Vero walked up and set a ticket on the bar. Johnny snatched it to fill the order. Lola tried to convince herself she owed her boyfriend the benefit of the doubt, but that heâd kept the card meant only one thing to her. However small it was, there was a part of Johnny considering Beauâs offer.
Mitch returned to work that Friday. Itâd been a long, draining week of mood swings and clipped wordsâoffenses both Lola and Johnny were guilty of.
While Johnny was distracted up front, Lola went back to Mitchâs office and leaned in the doorway.
âWhat is it?â he asked without removing his eyes from his computer.
âHow was your trip?â
âProductive. Barb found a house she likes.â
âI bet her family is happy you guys are moving there.â
âThey are.â Mitch looked up. âBarb is too. Sheâs wanted this for some time.â
âWhat about you?â Lola asked.
âYou know how it is. This place is a grind. Barb always said if it got to be too much, she wanted me out.â
âBut do you have to leave L.A.?â
He held his arms out. âThis is L.A. Things were great when I was out there screwing around with customers all day, but now Iâm back here most of the time, trying to dig myself out of this hole. Barb knows my dadâs place is the only thing keeping me in California.â
âYeah.â Lola picked at some peeling paint. âHave you had any offers?â
âNothing official yet, but it wonât be long.â
âOh.â
âWhat is it, Lola? Iâm kind of busy here.â
âI donât know. I justâ¦Mitch, what do you think this place needs? Whyâs business slow?â
He sighed. âIn the eighties, when my dad handed over the reins, we were already struggling. But then grunge came on the scene and I wasnât letting that anywhere near here. Not after the rock legends weâd seen.â
âSo you lost the young music crowd.â
âYoung and some old. You know all this, Lola.â
âIâm trying to see it from a business perspective.â
âAll right, then you want to know my first mistake? Pay for play. I let my head get too big asking new bands to cough up cash for a spot on our stage. They walked instead. I couldâve made up for it in the nineties, but like I said, I fucking hate grunge. Turns out a lot of people donât, though. When Fredâs went belly up, the block became a carousel of crap. Except us, the only place still standing, but our knees are buckling. Barb says I either sell out or get out, so Iâm washing my hands of it. I canât stick around to see what happens.â
Mitchâs words were hard, but she heard the regret in his voice. âThat Hank guy said something about a lounge. I think he wants to turn this place high end.â
âWeâre meeting later today, so Iâll know more then, but it sounds like he wants to keep the name and image, just make it into something classier. A real scene.â
âBut thatâs not what Hey Joe is.â That wasnât what Johnny was.
He shrugged. âNot really, kid. Sorry.â
âWould you say this place is a good investment?â
âThereâll never not be foot traffic. Just about getting back on the map.â
Lola felt her heartbeat everywhere. In the last week, sheâd struggled more than ever with the pressure to take care of Johnny in a bigger way than she had been. Now it was more than that. Lola could bring herself to walk away from Hey Joe, but that didnât mean it wasnât worth saving for Johnny, for all the other people who loved it and for its history. She might be the only one who could do it. âSo if someone had the opportunity to buy it, they should take it?â
âWhatever youâre thinking, forget it. You donât know anybody with that kind of money.â
âI might.â
âI know Johnnyâs got his heart set on owning a bar and believe me, Iâd love to make that happen for you two. Nobody knows this place like him. But thereâs no way in hell you can even ballpark the offers Iâm hearing.â
âWhatâre the offers, Mitch?â
âAround six hundred grand,â he said.
Lola looked at the floor. More than Beauâs propositionâbut people took out small business loans all the time, didnât they? Maybe not for that much, but the difference? She cleared her throat. âIf Johnny and I could come up with the moneyââ
âHey,â Mitch said, shaking his head. âCome on. You and Johnny are good kids. Youâve always been straight. Donât tell me thatâs changed.â
âHypothetically.â
Mitch bit the end of his pen and reclined in his seat, studying her. âIf you can make me a decent offer, and if youâre upfront with yourselves about the hard work ahead of you, then you should. Hypothetically? Buying this bar would be easier than Johnny starting his own, but not much considering the state of things. Itâs not like I want to see my dadâs place destroyed, but I canât feed myself off my principles anymore. Once I get my check, itâs out of my hands.â
Lola returned to the front of the house. Johnny poured three shots in his bartenderâs rhythm, one at a time and without stopping. Lola stayed off to the side. He said something to the three girls in front of him as he patted his beer gut and laughed. That beer gut had been a valley nine years ago when sheâd started dating a tall, skinny, twenty-four-year-old Johnny with darkish hair past his earsâhair that was now down to his shoulder blades and always in a ponytail. The valley was now a small hill. That beer gut had history. She liked it and what it stood for.
Johnny wouldnât survive a new owner. Heâd been doing things his way for too long. And she sure as hell wouldnât stick around without him. Nobody liked change, especially not Johnny, and it was on the horizon, speeding their way.
The ride home that night was quiet. Lola went over the numbers in her head again and again. If Walken bought Hey Joe, she figured they could be out of their jobs within weeks. She listed alternatives. Theyâd both have to hustle, because even though Lola had been thinking lately she might like to try something new, they couldnât survive on Johnnyâs wages alone. Sheâd have to work while she figured her shit out. Fall classes had already started, so school was out of the question for a few months at least.
She looked over at Johnny as he pulled into their apartment complex. Heâd been preoccupied, but not about losing their jobs. It was as if he expected everything to just figure itself outâthe way he expected getting married, having kids and owning a business would happen on their own. He was thirty-three. Theyâd been driving through a tunnel for the last eight years, and they were about to come out of the darkness. She couldnât see what was on the other side, but at least she was trying.
âJohnny?â she asked when theyâd parked and he reached for the handle.
He looked back. âYeah?â
âYouâre my best friend.â
âItâs late, babe.â
She smiled, a little resigned. âI know. But you are. When weâre young, we think weâre invincible. Then we get older, and itâs like we realize not everything works out all the time. If you want certain things, you have to put in the effort for them. Or even make sacrifices.â
Johnny put his hand over hers on the seat. âWhatâs bringing this on?â
She squinted out the windshield. âMoney was a big deal to my mom. She would say âThe toasterâs broken. We got no money, so we have to live with broken toasters and ripped screen doors that wonât even keep out a fly, forget about a robber.â I had no idea whoâd want to rob us. We had nothing. She said that was naïve and stupid, because desperate people were everywhere.
âShe told me money was the reason my dad left. There wasnât enough. So I believed money and happiness were inextricably linked until I met you and decided love was more important. I was in a dark place, but you came in and saved me. Since then, Iâve tried hard to convince myself money isnât important at all.â
Johnny sniffed. âNow you realize it is.â
âMitch said something to me today. He said, âI canât feed myself off my principles anymore.â Itâs kind of the same with love. Those things are so much, Johnny, but they arenât everything like I wish they were. Money can give us stability and freedom. It can give us choices.â
Johnny released her hand and ran his palms down his pants to his knees. âLife is easier with working appliances,â he said flatly.
âIf someone buys the bar, weâll probably lose our jobs.â
âI know.â
âDo you know? Youâre more concerned about Hey Joe being glamorized than you are about how weâll survive.â
âI donât see the point in worrying about it until we know more,â he said. âSomething could still happen.â
âSomething like what?â Lola asked. If Johnny said it out loud, she wouldnât have to. Not knowing if he wanted her to accept the offer was almost worse than if heâd just come out and tell her to do it. She was stuck, and she had no idea which door would lead to their happiness.
âI donât know,â he admitted. âBut thereâs still time.â
âThere isnât any more time,â Lola said. âAre we stupid not to take the only exit weâll ever get? Buying the bar isnât just keeping our jobs. Itâs following your dream. Itâs building a life and having a steady income and saving a legacy. All in one night.â
âSo whatâre you saying?â Johnny asked. He wouldnât look at her. âYou want my permission to sleep with another man?â
Lola turned in her seat to face him. âI donât look at it that way,â she said. In fact, she had been very good about not looking at it that way. When she thought of Beau, she didnât let her mind stray too far to the man sheâd thought he was before heâd tried to buy her. That was the man sheâd thought about during sex with Johnny. Just as sheâd had his attention, heâd had hers. But that wasnât the man heâd turned out to be. âAll I see is what that money could do for our future. I could do this, for us, and it would never mean a thing because you are whatâs important to me.â
He was quiet for a few tense seconds. Suddenly, he slammed his fist against the steering wheel.
She bit her lip. âItâs not that I want toââ
âI know,â he said. âItâs not you Iâm mad at. Itâs the situation. Itâs me.â
âYou?â He didnât continue. Lola looked at her hands in her lap. She assumed he was mad at himself for even considering the offer, but she was afraid to ask. âJust please tell me what youâve been thinking this last week. Youâve been so hot and cold. I canât figure out what you want, so you have to tell me, and you have to be honest.â
Johnny ran a hand over his face and blew out a breath. âYou want honesty?â
âYes.â
âI keep thinking about that life,â he said. âI want something of my own. We canât live paycheck to paycheck forever, but I donât know how to get out of it. I canât ever seem to catch up.â
Lola took his hand again and squeezed it. âIâm relieved that youâre also worried. Sometimes I feel like I have to be the one to fix it.â
âI want to fix it, Lola, but I donât know how.â
Suddenly she wanted to go back to ignoring the problem. She almost wished she hadnât dragged them into this conversation. âMaybe we donât have to,â she said. âYouâll keep on managing Hey Joe. It wonât be the same, but youâll learn to love it. Iâll graduate from bar wench to cocktail waitress. Or maybe we get new jobs in a different dive bar. Things would be tight while we transitioned, but theyâd settle and weâd get back to where we are now.â Lolaâs voice softened with defeat as she spoke, but she hoped Johnny wouldnât pick up on it.
âBecause where we are now is the best option,â he said. âYou donât think Iâll ever be able to give you more than this. Not without someone elseâs money.â
âThat isnât what I said.â
âYou might as well say it. Iâll never be more than what I am in this moment.â
âIâm trying to be realistic,â she said. âIf we want more, then I have to do this. If I donât, then this is how things will be. It was enough before Beau came along, but is it enough now? I donât know, Johnny. I donât know the answer to any of this.â
He threw open the car door, jumped out and looked back at her. âYou want to do this because you think itâs our only chance.â
Lola also got out of the car. Their doors slammed at the same time. âDonât turn this around on me because I have the guts to say what weâre both thinking,â she said, hurrying to keep up with him. âThis could be our only chance. Itâs not like I want this.â
He kept walking.
âI know you want me to do it,â she said, raising her voice. âWhy donât you man up and tell me the truth?â
He turned around and pointed a finger at her. âYou want truth so goddamn bad? The moneyâs all I think about. And the things I could finally do. Iâm six-foot-two, two hundred pounds, but Iâm half a man because I canât take care of you.â
Lola reached for him. âBut you do take care of me.â
âNo, I donât,â he said, stepping back. âFive nights a week we get off work while the rest of the world sleeps. We work our asses off, and weâre still struggling to get by. If I lose this job, Iâll have to start all over somewhere else. I have no other skills. You think you have nothing now? Itâs about to get a lot worse.â
âWhen did I say I had nothing? Would I like a washer and dryer of my own so I donât have to schlep down the street? Would I like to quit this job one day and try something else? Yes. But that doesnât mean I have nothing. If I do this, itâs for the things that canât be boughtâlike our future.â
âIf this, if that. Iâm tired of this shit. Just make a decision.â
âI canât, Johnny,â she said, shaking her head. âYou have to do it.â
âThis has to be your choice. Iâm not going to send you into another manâs bed no matter what I want.â
She put her hand to the base of her throat. âWant?â she choked. âAre you saying you want me to do this?â
âNo.â They narrowed their eyes on each other in the dark as the silence thickened. âIâm saying I wonât stop you.â