Thursday, December 19, 2013
somewhere off the road in front of a campfire with Ginger and perhaps a
handful of anthropologists and as of yore he too was telling his life
story and never dreamed we were passing at that exact moment in the
hiway headed for Mexico telling our own stories. Oh sad American night!
Then we were in New Mexico and passed the rounded rocks of Raton and
stopped at a diner ravingly hungry for hamburgers, one of which we
wrapped in a napkin not to eat till over the border below. “The whole
vertical state of Texas lies before us Jack” said Neal. “As before we
made it horizontal. Every bit as long. We’ll be in Texas in a few
minutes and won’t be out till tomorrow night this time and won’t stop
driving. Think of it.” We drove on. Across the immense plain of night
lay the first Texas town, Dalhart, which I’d crossed in 1947. It lay
glimmering on the dark floor of the earth fifty miles away. The land by
moonlight was all mesquite and wastes. On the horizon was the moon. She
fattened, she grew huge and rusty, she mellowed and rolled, till the
morning-star contended and dews began to blow in our windows---and still
we rolled. After Dalhart---empty crackerbox town---we bowled for
Amarillo, and reached it in the morning among windy panhandle grasses
that only a few years ago, (1910) waved around a collection of buffalo
tents. Now there were of course gas stations and new 1950 jukeboxes with
immense ornate snouts and ten-cent slots and awful songs. All the way
from ’Marillo to Childress, Texas, Neal and I pounded plot after plot of
books we’d read into Frank, who asked for it because he wanted to know.
At Childress in the hot sun we turned directly south on a lesser road
and continued across abysmal wastes to Paducah, Guthrie and Abilene,
Texas. Now Neal had to sleep and Frank and I sat in the front seat and
drove. The old car burned and bopped and struggled on. Great clouds of
gritty wind blew at us from shimmering spaces. Frank rolled right along
with stories about Monte Carlo and Cagnes-sur-Mer and the blue places
near Menton where dark-faced people wandered among white walls. Texas is
undeniable: we burned slowly into Abilene and all woke up to look at it.
“Imagine living in this town a thousand miles from cities. Whoop,
whoop, over there by the tracks, old town
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