Monday, December 23, 2013
buck off her.” “Right! Fine! Let’s go!” We were in Dunn in an hour, at
dusk. We drove to where the kid said his aunt had the grocery store. It
was a sad little street that dead-ended at a factory wall. There was a
grocery store but there was no aunt. We wondered what the kid was
talking about. We asked him how far he was going; he didn’t know. It was
a big hoax; once upon a time, in some lost back-alley adventure, he had
seen the grocery store in Dunn, N.C., and it was the first story that
popped into his disordered feverish mind. We bought him a hotdog but
Neal said we couldn’t bring him along because we needed room to sleep
and room for hitch hikers who could buy a little gas. This was sad but
true. We left him in Dunn at nightfall. This wasn’t the only young kid
with an aunt owning a grocery store that we were going to find this
trip; there was another haunting our track two thousand miles along the
road. I drove through South Carolina and all the way beyond Macon,
Georgia, as Neal, Louanne and Al slept. All alone in the night I had my
own thoughts and held the car to the white line in the holy road. What
was I doing? Where was I going? I’d soon find out. I got dog tired beyond
Macon and woke up Neal to resume. We got out of the car for air and
suddenly both of us were stoned with joy to realize that in the darkness
all around us was fragrant green grass and the smell of fresh manure
and warm waters. “We’re in the South! We’ve left the winter!” Faint
daybreak illuminated green shoots by the side of the road. I took a deep
breath; a locomotive howled across the darkness, Mobile bound. So were
we. I took off my shirt and exulted. Ten miles down the road Neal drove
into a filling station with the motor off, noticed that the attendant
was asleep at the desk, jumped out, quietly filled the gas tank, saw to
it the bell didn’t ring, and rolled off like an Arab with a five-dollar
tankful of gas for our pilgrimage. Otherwise we would never have made it
to New Orleans and Bill Burroughs’ rickety old house in the Algiers
swamps. I slept and woke up to the crazy exultant sounds of music and
Neal and Louanne talking and the great green land rolling by. “Where are
we?” “Just pass’t the tip of Florida, man, Flomaton it’s called.”
Florida! We were rolling down to the
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