In
the third or fourth grade I attended IW Evans Elementary in Bonham
and my sister across the street at LH Rather Middle
school. We would meet at Simpson Park everyday after school let out.
It was a large park across the street from both our schools. After
I caught up with her (her school let out before mine) we'd walk the
mile or so home.
I
knew the way home, but I guess I wasn't confident or something. My
sister didn't show up one day and I waited and waited. Where the
Hell was she? At some point a police car pulled into the Town and
Country convenience store across the street from Simpson Park. I went
over and talked to the officer. I told him the situation, my sister
walks me home because my parents work and cannot come and pick me up.
He asked where my mom worked and I told her it was at the Rooster
Club.
The
Rooster Club was a bar in town. Fannin County is a dry county. The
lone liquor store was miles away from Bonham in the shit town of
Ladonia. I guess it got grandfathered in or political donations
allowed it to operate? It's purely speculative on my part. There
were no traditional taverns in town, just clubs. There was some
asinine rule permitting the sell of alcohol provided it was a club
type situation with paid dues annually. As far as I know there were
three places that qualified: the VFW, the American Legion, and the
Rooster Club.
My
mom worked there maybe two years before she moved on to the American
Legion. I remember another bartender that worked there named Fran.
She had a son a year older than me named Jeffrey. We'd hang out
together at the club. Maybe play pool and drink a concoction he
created. If we went to the bar and asked for a Jeffrey Special it
meant mixing coke with sprite. It sounds horrible. Kids at a bar.
And really, it was. But our parents did what they could, we weren't
old enough to leave at home all the time, mom worked there and dad
wanted to unwind a little every day and have a couple drinks. It
wasn't ideal but we weren't witnessing bar fights or drunken
profanity laced tirades.
When
not playing pool I'd play with the dominoes at the tables. I used
them like building blocks creating forts and towers. My hands always
smelled and tasted like salt. Table salt was used to sprinkle on the
table to make shuffling the dominoes easier. My eyes would often
burn and be watery when the place was crowded and smoke filled the room.
This would usually happen at pool tournaments where my dad was a
frequent participant.
The
place, being a Texas bar, was constantly bellowing country music from
the 25 cent jukebox. I can't even imagine how many times I heard
such classics as “I wanna Bop with you Baby” by Don Seals,
“Driving my Life Away” and “I love the Rainy Night” by Eddie
Rabbit, "18 Wheels and a Dozen Roses” by Kathy Mattea or “Mama
He's Crazy” by the Judds. Those songs will forever be seared in my
subconscious. To this day I randomly hum the chorus to “Mama He's
Crazy” or might involuntarily think to myself,
Well the midnight headlights blind you on a rainy night, Steep grade up ahead, slow me down, makin' no time,But I got to keep rollin', Those windshield wipers slappin' out a tempo,Keepin' perfect rhythm with the song on the radio,But I got to keep rollin'
I'm
sure my mom was embarrassed to have the police drop off her latchkey
kid at the bar where she works. I'm sure my sister got in deep
trouble. I didn't think anything of it. There wasn't anything wrong
with the place to me. It was the Rooster Club! It's just where my
mom worked. Yes, I grew up in a bar as a kid. I was exposed to
drunks and a cloud of disgusting cigarette smoke. But my parents did
what they could to bring us up. To put food on the table. No kid
should be exposed to that stuff but I was, and I think I'm okay.
There are no families that are able to be ideal in every way and some
have to be creative to make it work. My parents worked hard and I
never doubted their love for us. We had rough times certainly, and
there were struggles, but I survived childhood. Things could have
been better, but they weren't. I think I'm oddly better for it
though.
###
Me and my dad before mom worked at the Rooster Club. Maybe in Germany? 1985 |
If I were to pick a song to be the soundtrack of this post it would be...
just cause i'm really feelin' this song right now and it's obscenely underrated.
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