Friday, December 27, 2013
said so I saw the great trees in the distance that snaked with the 
riverbed and the great verdant fields around it, and almost agreed with 
him. Then as we were standing there and it was starting to get cloudy 
another cowboy, this one six foot tall with a modest half-gallon hat, 
called us over and wanted to know if either one of us could drive. Of 
course Eddie could drive, and he had a license and I didn’t. He had two 
cars with him that he was driving back to Montana. His wife was sleeping
 at Grand Island in a motel and he wanted us to drive one of the cars 
there, where she’d take over. At that point he was going north and that 
was the limit of our ride with him. But it was a good 100 miles into 
Nebraska and of course we jumped for it. Eddie drove alone, the cowboy 
and myself following, and no sooner were we out of town that he started 
to ball that jack ninety miles an hour out of sheer exuberance. “Damn 
me, what’s the boy doing!” the cowboy shouted, and took off after him. 
It began to be like a race. For a minute I thought Eddie was trying to 
get away with the car---and for all I know that’s what he meant to do. 
But Old Cowboy stuck to him and caught up with him and tooted the horn. 
Eddie slowed down. The cowboy tooted to stop. “Damn, boy, you’re liable 
to get a flat going that speed. Can’t you drive a little slower.” “Well 
I’ll be damned, was I really going ninety?” said Eddie. “I didn’t 
realize it on this smooth road.” “Just take it a little easy and we’ll 
all get to Grand Island in one piece.” “Sure thing.” And we resumed our 
journey. Eddie had calmed down and probably even got sleepy. So we drove
 100 miles across Nebraska, following the winding South Platte with its 
verdant fields. “During the depression,” said the cowboy to me, “I used 
to hop freights at least once a month. In those days you’d see hundreds 
of men riding a flat car or in a box car, and they weren’t just bums, 
they were all kind of men out of work and going from one place to 
another and some of them just wandering. It was like that all over the West. Brakemen never bothered you in those days. I don’t know about 
today. Nebraska I ain’t got no use for. Why in the middle 1930’s this 
place wasn’t nothing but a big dustcloud as far as the eye could see. 
You couldn’t breathe. The ground was black. I was here in those days.
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