Friday, December 27, 2013
who had money to buy food. We all shambled after them to a restaurant
run by a whole bunch of women and sat around over hamburgers while they
wrapped away enormous meals just like they were back in their mother’s
kitchen. They were brothers: they were transporting farm machinery from
Los Angeles to Minnesota and making good money at it. So on their trip
to the Coast empty they picked up everybody on the road. They’d done
this about five times now; they were having a hell of a time. They liked
everything. They never stopped smiling. I tried to talk to
them---actually it was a kind of dumb attempt on my part to befriend the
captains of our ship and there was no reason to, because they treated
the crew with equal respect---and the only response I got were two sunny
smiles and large white cornfed teeth. Everybody had joined them in the
restaurant except the two hobo kids, Gene and his boy. When we all got
back they were still sitting in the truck forlorn and disconsolate. Now
the darkness was falling. The drivers had a smoke; I jumped at the
chance to go buy a bottle of whisky to keep warm in the rushing cold air
of night. They smiled when I told them. “Go ahead, hurry up.” “You can
have a couple shots!” I reassured them. “Oh no, we never drink, go
ahead.” Montana Slim and the two high school boys wandered the streets
of North Platte with me till I found a whisky store. They chipped in
some, and Slim some, and I bought a fifth. Tall sullen men watched us go
by from false-front buildings; the main street was lined with square
box-houses. There were immense vistas of the plains beyond every sad
street. I felt something different in the air in North Platte; I didn’t
know what it was. In five minutes I did. We got back on the truck and
roared off, same speed. It got dark quickly. We all had a shot, and
suddenly I looked, and the verdant farmfields of the South Platte began to
disappear and in their stead, so far you couldn’t see to the end of it,
appeared long flat wastelands of sand and sagebrush. I was astounded.
“What in the hell is this?” I cried out to Slim. “This is the beginning
of the rangelands, boy. Hand me another drink.” “Whoopee! Yelled the
high school boys. “Columbus so long! What would Sparkie and the boys say
if they was here. Yow!” The drivers
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