Half of Paradise Read Online Free Page A

Half of Paradise
Book: Half of Paradise Read Online Free
Author: James Lee Burke
Pages:
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much young talent and brought some of the major stars of country music into the national spotlight. Also I want to tell you about the big one hundred page color picture book that we have on sale at the entrance. It contains one hundred actual color photographs of your favorite country singers, ready to cut out and put on the wall at home. This big color picture book is selling for the low figure of two dollars and fifty cents, and if you ain’t got the money on you, you can put in your order and it will be sent to you collect. The pages is in bright glossy color, and when you’re listening over the radio to your favorite country entertainer you can look up his picture in the bigprint table of contents and it’s just like he’s in the room with you.
    “Now, I want you to meet somebody that many of you already know. He’s one of the best guitar pickers in the field, and he’s just put out two new records. Come on up here, brother Troy.”
    J.P. stood in the wings and listened to Troy sing and the applause afterwards. Then the brunette came on and sang “I Want to Be in My Savior’s Arms,” and he looked at her short-cut hair and Irish peasant face and her abnormally large breasts. She had a slender waist, flat stomach, and wide hips. He thought about laying her, and then he thought about going to a whorehouse later in the evening with Seth. He hoped he could get the job and the advance on his salary. It had taken all his money to come to town and enter the show, and it had been three weeks since he had slept with a woman; if he lost the contest he would have to hitchhike back home, and it would be another month before he could afford Miss Sara’s house out in the country.
    The band left the stage, and the contest started. The man with the harmonica and washboard went on first. He held the harmonica in his mouth with his lips and played while he beat out the rhythm on the metal ripples in the washboard with his knuckles.
    Three others went on, and it was J.P.’s turn. He walked out on the stage from the wings with his guitar. The lights were hot in his face. The audience was a dark, indistinct mass behind the lights. He sang “Good-Night, Irene,” which had been Leadbelly’s theme song.
I asked your mother for you ,
She told me that you was too young .
I wish the Lord I never seen your face ,
I’m sorry you ever was born .
Stop rambling and stop gambling ,
Quit staying out late at night .
Go home to your wife and your family ,
Sit down by the fireside bright
I love Irene, God knows I do
I love her till the sea runs dry ,
If Irene turns her back on me
I’m going to take morphine and die .
    The crowd liked him and they applauded until he sang it again. They were still applauding when he left the stage.
    J.P. propped the guitar against one of the sets and wiped the perspiration off his forehead on his coat sleeve.
    “You got on my suit,” Troy said.
    “You can have it back. It don’t fit me, nohow.”
    “I told him to take the suit,” Hunnicut said.
    “I had it cleaned yesterday. He got sweat on the sleeve.”
    “Take the goddamn thing back, mister. I didn’t want it in the first place.”
    “Take it easy, Winfield. You did fine tonight.”
    “Do I get a job with you?”
    “You haven’t won the contest yet.”
    “Seth said I already had the job.”
    “All right, you’re working for me.”
    J.P. took a crumpled one-dollar bill out of his pocket and gave it to Troy.
    “This will pay for the goddamn cleaning,” he said.
    “Where are you going?” Hunnicut said.
    “To get my clothes.”
    He went to Troy’s dressing room and changed into his Sears, Roebuck suit. After all the contestants had gone on, Hunnicut announced that the winner was J.P. Winfield, who would soon be appearing on the Louisiana Jubilee with the rest of the band. J.P. combed his hair in the mirror and clipped the comb inside his shirt pocket. He left Troy’s sports suit unfolded on top of the chair. He rolled a cigarette and
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