Vexation Lullaby Read Online Free Page B

Vexation Lullaby
Book: Vexation Lullaby Read Online Free
Author: Justin Tussing
Tags: General Fiction
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tour. He played sold-out shows at Wrigley Field on back-to-back nights in October, a feat that the hapless Cubs hadn’t managed since the 1940s. In the next three years, he would marry the eldest daughter of a Sacramento artichoke king, father a son, Alistair Doyle Cross, and release two more iconic albums.
    Then he disappeared, again.
    W HEN R OLLING S TONE sent a stringer out to Cross’s Texas ranch in ’83, it was clear that they weren’t interested in rescuing him. The profile opened: “For two hours I sat on a silk damask sofa beside Jim Cross and watched TV while the legend sipped RC Cola from a can. I had a speech prepared for the occasion. I wanted to tell him that I believed Midnight at the Bazaar and Double Ditz to be more important than the Declaration of Independence and the Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk, combined. At some point—we were watching St. Elsewhere— he began to snore. A woman who may have been his wife came into the room and removed his crocodile boots. She carried the boots upstairs. His feet smelled like rotting meat. It occurred to me 1.) I might snuff him with a throw pillow and 2.) that he might want me to.”
    In ’86, with his fan base dwindling and without a new album to promote, Cross announced his plans to play sixty-three dates with a newly formed band. Critics likened the tour to the public viewing of a funeral; promoters guaranteed that the math wouldn’t add up. Before the tour launched, The Atlantic ran a story called “Jimmy’s Bad Idea.”
    After twenty-four years and twenty-three hundred performances, the “public viewing” continues. Magazine editors believe he’s only got one more good story in him and they’re going to wait until his body is cold before they stuff him in a box of words.
    Maybe they’re right. Then again, people have underestimated him his entire life.
    Though it’s getting late, I decide to drive on to Buffalo. It’s only an hour farther west and I have a friend there who’s offered to let me stay in an empty apartment above his garage. “Stay as long as you want,” my friend said, knowing perfectly well that I can’t stay later than Thursday—since after Buffalo, Jimmy hops down to Pittsburgh, then there’s a quick detour into the South before the tour plays connect-the-dots with capital cities and university towns across the Midwest.
    On my way to my car, I receive a text from a source on the tour.
    The Big Man has a visitor!
    Tell me.
    He replies almost immediately: +:-)
    A priest?!
    LOL doctor
    My heart is a fist . He’s seeing a doctor?
    IDK.
    It’s hard to make a big deal about one doctor. The tour attracts all sorts of hangers-on—when Cross hit Europe in ’93 he brought three semis’ worth of gear, fifteen roadies, two makeup people, a stylist, a personal trainer, and a twelve-person gospel choir. It was less a tour than an occupation.
    I T FEELS GOOD to be on the road, especially in the fall. In these moments, when winter seems to be lurking over the next hill, I sense the real end of the tour is inevitable and nigh. I especially like it when the tour takes a jog across the upper Midwest, after the combines have trimmed the fields and the winds have stripped the leaves from the trees. Out there it’s hard to forget that when Jimmy sings “ the grain elevators stand / prouder than our churches ,” he’s talking about his home.

6
    No one kept vigil outside Cross’s room. Peter padded down the dim and empty hallway. He found his way back to the parking garage and his crappy car. Numbers stenciled on the parking garage columns counted down: 4, 3, 2, 1. At the entrance to the garage, the endomorph in the yellow Windbreaker held a phone in front of his face; the light of the screen made it appear as though the man was peering through a peephole at a sunny day.
    The spectral photographer had disappeared.

7
    Even without

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