Thursday, December 19, 2013
about life, and life on the road. We had finally found the magic land at
the end of the road and we never dreamed the extent of the magic
either. “Think of these cats staying up all hours of the night”
whispered Neal. “And think of this big continent ahead of us with those
enormous Sierra Madre mountains we saw in the movies and the jungles all
the way down and a whole desert plateau as big as ours and reaching
clear down to Guatemala and God knows where, whoo! What’ll we do?
What’ll we do? Let’s move!” We got out and went back to the car. One
last glimpse of America across the hot lights of the Rio Grande bridge.
We turned our back and fender to it and roared off. Instantly we were
out in the desert and there wasn’t a light or a car for fifty miles
across the flats. And just then dawn was coming over the Gulf of Mexico
and we began to see the ghostly shapes of yucca cactus and organ pipe on
all sides. “What a wild country!” I yelped. Neal and I were completely
awake. In Laredo we’d been half dead. Frank, who’d been to foreign
countries before just calmly slept in the backseat. Neal and I had the
whole of Mexico before us. “Now Jack we’re leaving everything behind us
and entering a new and unknown phase of things. All the years and
troubles and kicks---and now this! so that we can safely think of
nothing else and just go on ahead with our faces stuck out like this,
you see, and understand the world as, really and genuinely speaking,
other Americans haven’t done before us---they were here weren’t they?
The Mexican war. Cutting across here with cannon.” “This road” I told
him “is also the route of old American outlaws who used to skip over the
border and go down to old Monterrey, so if you’ll look out on that
graying desert and picture the ghost of an old Tombstone hellcat making
his lonely exile gallop into the unknown you’ll see further…” “It’s the
world! We can go right on to South America if the road goes. Think of
it! Sonofabitch---Gawd-damn!” We rushed on. The dawn spread immediately
and we began to see the white sand of the desert and occasional huts in
the distance off the road. Neal slowed down to peer at them. “Real beat
huts, man, the kind you only find in Death Valley and much
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