laughed.
âYou finished or what?â asked the boy behind them.
âWeâre finished.â Murphy rubbed her hands together. âIâm cold, Jack. Give him a couple of bucks and letâs go inside. Sunâs going down anyway.â
Jack pulled three ones out of his pocket and handed them to the teenager. He set his gun next to his wifeâs.
âYou sure the chamberâs empty?â she asked.
He picked up his gun and checked. âChamber empty. Safety on.â
âGood.â
He set the gun back on the rack. âIâm a quick study.â He shoved his glasses and plugs into his vest pocket.
âYeah. Right. Donât quit your day job.â
He smiled and followed her into the South St. Paul Rod and Gun clubhouse, a building that resembled a ranch-style house with a deck attached. The Mississippi River snaked in front of it and railroad tracks cut behind it. It was a block off Concord, a long street connecting the city of St. Pauland the suburb of South St. Paul. The gun club shared the neighborhood with a furniture liquidator, a used-car lot, a beauty shop and a Dairy Queen.
Murphy checked the bulletin board inside the clubhouse door. Covered with handwritten index cards and flyers: âBeretta AL390 Gold Mallard 20 GA. $725.â âCustom Docks. Call for an estimate.â â4Ã10 Utility Trailer made by Cargo. ALMOST NEW . Drop down ramp. $900.â âLab choc. M. AKC Exc. bird dog. $2,500.â â FOR SALE . Remington 870. Nice clean gun. $450.â âGerman Wire-Haired Pups. AKC. Exc. Blood Lines. MAKE GOOD HUNTERS / FAMILY PETS . $500.â
âDecent price,â Murphy muttered. She grabbed a bar napkin and wrote down a phone number.
âShopping for a gun?â asked Jack, looking over her shoulder.
âA dog.â
âSince when? Youâre not home enough. Your place is too small. A dog would go stir-crazy on that dinky houseboat. Itâd chew the shit out of everything.â
âStop hyperventilating.â She shoved the napkin into the pocket of her jeans. âWeâll discuss it over a beer.â
It didnât take much to turn their discussions into arguments, and thatâs why they periodically separated. In their eight years of marriage, theyâd lived apart as much as theyâd lived together. Jack stayed in the house theyâd bought together when they first got married. She had a houseboat on the Mississippi River, moored across from downtown at the St. Paul Yacht Club. They kept trying to make their marriage work and were most successful in the bedroom; they never argued about sex.
All the tables were taken; they found two stools next to each other at the bar. âWhat can I get you?â asked the bartender. He was a big man with curly red hair, a red beard and a red flannel shirt. He could have passed for a lumberjack.
âGrain Belt,â said Murphy.
âSt. Pauli Girl,â said Jack.
âNo imports.â
âGrain Belt then.â
The bartender set two cans on the bar. âSign up for the big shoot?â He thumbed toward a flyer behind the bar: MINI JACKPOT TRAP SHOOT .
Murphy took a bump off her beer. âYou betcha.â
He eyed Jack. âYou that ringer she been threatening to bring in?â
Murphy laughed and then coughed and held a napkin to her face; she felt beer coming up her nose. Jack glared at her. She cleared her throat. âNo,â she said. She blew her nose and took another sip of beer. âThis is my husband, Jack. Jack, this is Gunnar.â
âGunner?â
âGunnar,â said the bartender, without smiling. He walked to the other end of the bar.
âIsnât that what I said?â
âNo. Gunnar is Norwegian or something. Gunner is . . . I donât know . . . a good name for a hunting dog maybe.â
âBack to the dog, are we?â
âIâm the only one in my family without