There were no seats for our guests. Clyde folded his arms, seemed content to root there and let the crowd navigate around him.
Ruby knelt next to Garrett, draped one arm around his neck, then slipped a tiny silver camera out of her pants pocket.
She smiled at Maia and me. "Got to get this for the scrapbook."
The flash left me blinking black amoebas.
"We are so indebted to you for coming, Miss Lee," Ruby said. "Your advice so far—well, we wouldn't be here today, would we?"
"You want to blame somebody—" Garrett started.
"No blame," Ruby protested. "Of course, I hope Miss Lee won't mind—just this once—if we don't invite her to our meeting tonight. I really think it should be just the company's principals. Those of us who are still left."
Maia started to get up. "I'll see you later, Garrett. Tres."
"Oh, Miss Lee. Don't leave on my account!"
"I've got to go to the little girls' room," Maia said. "Repair my hairspray and stuff. You understand, Miss McBride."
Once she was gone, Ruby said, "I love that woman."
"She's good looking," Clyde grumbled. "You made her leave."
Ruby waved her camera like she was dispelling smoke. "You have bad taste, Clyde."
"You make me talk to Pena and Hayes again," Clyde warned, "I'll show you taste. I'll murder them."
Ruby rolled her eyes. She slid into Maia's chair, aimed the camera at me diagonally. I held my hand in front of the lens until she gave up. "Spoilsport. I'm not excluding you from tonight's meeting, Tres, honey. After all, you have some direct interest in the capital at stake, don't you?"
"You mean he's likely to side with you," Garrett complained.
Ruby said cheerfully, "That too."
Over at the bar, the argument between Pena and Hayes was escalating, some of the words even cutting through the bar noise. She. Sell. No.
From the back patio, Kinky Friedman let out a loud aiyyaiyy aiyy! There was a spattering of applause, then Kinky launched into "Waitress, Please Waitress." The perfect romantic wedding song.
Clyde was glaring at the fight between Pena and Dwight Hayes, which was now beginning to stop the conversations around them.
"Somebody should kill that guy," Clyde groused.
"Now, now," Ruby said. "That guy is our next paycheck, dear."
Then Dwight Hayes pushed his boss. Maybe Dwight didn't mean to push as forcefully as he did. Maybe he caught Pena off balance. But Pena toppled backward, right off his barstool, flat on his ass.
There were two seconds of frozen surprise at the bar, then bemused looks, then catcalls. Somebody started clapping.
Matthew Pena got slowly to his feet.
Dwight was apologizing, his arms raised, and Pena nodded reassuringly that everything was okay, then picked up a beer bottle and slammed it into the side of Dwight Hayes' face. It was Dwight's turn to go down.
A woman shrieked. The crowd surged back.
Clyde Simms said, "That's fucking it."
Ruby tried to call after him, but Clyde was hearing none of it. He plowed through the crowd, toward the bar.
There were two Travis County deputies working the wedding party's security by the back door, but they weren't moving yet— probably trying to decide if their duties included breaking up a nonweddingparty bar fight.
Clyde tapped Matthew Pena's shoulder, got his attention, and decked him.
Another surge backward from the crowd.
I stood, but it was still hard to see.
Dwight Hayes had just gotten up, and some misguided sense of loyalty or guilt prompted him to grab another beer bottle, which he brought down in a shipchristening manoeuvre on top of Clyde Simms' skull with a loud, hollow POCK.
That just made the big man mad. Clyde swung around, bellowing "Fucking motherfucker!" and slashing three or four drinks off the bar.
He tried to lift Dwight by his shirt, but that only works in the movies. All Clyde managed to do was yank fabric into Dwight's armpits, showing us all his skinny, tan midriff. Clyde slammed Dwight against the bar, slipped on something, and both men went over onto the floor, crushing Matthew Pena, who'd just been trying to get up.
Garrett was cursing at me to wheel him the hell out of there before he got trampled.
Ruby had her hand over her mouth. Whether she was amused or mortified, I couldn't tell.
Across the room, the two deputies were finally trying to push toward the fight, but the crowd kept pushing them back. Maia Lee had come out of the bathroom? she wasn't having much luck moving, either.
Clyde came up for air like a breaching whale, holding Dwight sideways by one leg and his neck. Dwight had found another bottle on the floor and was swinging it desperately, occasionally hitting Clyde, more often swiping somebody in the crowd. Someone yelped. Clyde started wading across the room, toward the bathrooms. People scrambled to get out of his way.
Kinky Friedman was playing "We Reserve the Right to Refuse Service to You." The tuxanddress folks were pressing their faces against the patio windows, watching us lower classes partake in our quaint amusements.
It was now an easier matter for me to get close to Clyde, although the deputies still had the bulk of the crowd in their way. One of the guys at a nearby table yelled, "Hey, that's Dwight! Fuck that!" and tried to jump Clyde. The guy missed and slid out of sight.
Another guy picked up a chair. Dwight kept swinging the bottle and hitting people, causing a chain reaction of pissedoff drunks.
I'm not sure where Clyde thought he was taking Dwight, but when he got to the booths on the opposite side of the room, between the Damen and Herren rest room doors, he decided the trophy case of German bier steins on the wall was as good a spot as any.
He stepped onto the platform of the first booth, the people at the table cringing away from him, and he heaved Dwight into the glass. It broke with a mighty crash. Dwight didn't fit in the cabinet, so he fell onto the booth table, his knees straddling a woman's blond hairdo, glass and broken bier steins showering on his back and into the diners' plates of sausage and sauerkraut.
The deputies yelled for people to get out of their way. The music on the back patio was finally unravelling to a stop.