c. 2025 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(6-25)
After my second conversation with Kookshow Baby, what I had learned from the transplanted, southern belle was still eclipsed by questions about her broader interests, day-to-day lifestyle, and career direction. I had not even gotten a straight answer about her living situation. Was she in a mobile home on the DuFoe property? If so, was she cohabitating with a love interest or roomie? Was she helping as a caretaker for the abandoned drive-in, when not on the air? I had originally guessed that speaking to her directly would clear up these mysteries. Yet now, I felt even more puzzled than ever.
Only one solution seemed to fit my needs. I needed to visit her in person.
A visit to the Mapquest website revealed that we were approximately 2,390 miles apart. A trip that they estimated would take just over 33 hours. A challenging adventure for any younger, more agile individual, but with my own age and physical condition, likely to be overwhelming. Traveling via an airline, or commercial rail, were two options that a sane mind might choose to accomplish such a task. Yet for myself, crawling along on a household budget of disability funds and book royalties, neither could be termed as easily affordable.
I needed a third option. Some method of transportation that could be had for free.
While drinking on my porch, later in the week, I pondered this perplexing situation. I had become more and more infatuated with the radio personality as days and months passed, to the point of replaying all her saved shows on the Internet Archive site. Dreams about meeting her expanded in scope and size. I could feel her pigtailed hair bouncing as we embraced, and taste her wet lips, in between rants about Green Acres episodes, and Hee Haw reruns. We watched old movies and TV shows while feasting on fried okra and bottles of Ski, the lemon-orange delight originally from Tennessee. We snuggled on a vintage waterbed in her Schult doublewide, a trailer probably even older than her mother, or myself. She would tease me with tidbits about Country Music history, and whisper related trivia questions in my ears. All delivered with a rural twang of cornbread culture. It was an odd sort of relationship that somehow seemed alluring and desirable. But as a fantasy while I slumbered, it worked.
This yearning for her companionship had me so restless, that satisfying sleep was out of the question. But as I teetered on my wooden bench outside, the roar of a diesel rig blew away clouds of mental fog in my head. Suddenly, I was fixated by the massive roadliner, and its capacity to haul freight from coast to coast.
Carter Polk III had been running a route between Cleveland, Chicago, and more western cities, for several years. As a park resident, he was virtually anonymous. Being on the road for long periods of time kept him out of the local stream of consciousness. But at Evergreen Estates, that meant a sort of peace and tranquility not afforded to others. He was blunt, covered with tattoos, and very direct in social situations. A privilege afforded by his general absence from the crowd. He did not frequent bonfires held over the summer. Few seemed to know much about his life, family, or personal routine.
While watching his smokestack behemoth roll past the driveway, I heard a tune beginning to play on my cell phone, through the Spotify app. Specifically, a recording by the Rolling Stones that had been a childhood favorite. A song interpreted many times over, by various artists and performers.
“Now if you, ever plan to motor west
Just take my way, that’s the highway that’s the best
Get your kicks on Route 66
Well it winds from Chicago to L.A.
More than 2000 miles all the way
Get your kicks on Route 66
Well it goes from St. Louie, down to Missouri
Oklahoma City looks oh so pretty
You’ll see Amarillo and Gallup, New Mexico
Flagstaff, Arizona, don’t forget Winona
Kingman, Barstow, San Bernadino
Would you get hip to this kindly tip
And go take that California trip
Get your kicks on Route 66...”
Enlightenment struck me like Newton’s apple. I realized that my truck-hustling neighbor might be someone who could provide transportation across the country, at a minimal cost. This made me slosh brew excitedly, while cheering.
“DAMMIT MISS KOOKSHOW, I MIGHT GET TO SEE YOUR PRETTY FACE AFTER ALL!”
I must have waved with a sort of insistence not usually communicated. As he returned, going in the opposite direction, the professional driver stopped in front of my yard.
“Hey there, neighbor! Ya look sunburned from sittin’ on that damn porch all day. What the eff, dude? Don’t ya ever go inside?”
We rarely engaged in conversation. So, his greeting was unexpected.
“This is my entertainment, you might say. I write and drink coffee in the morning. Maybe do some household chores if I’m feeling motivated. Then I start to get thirsty. It’s like watching a parade out here, the park never stays quiet. Dogs barking, people up and down the street arguing and getting drunk, others making noise with their ratty cars...”
Carter opened his door, and stood teetering on a steel footplate, used for access to the multi-wheeled beast, from ground level. He was very tall and burly, with a greasy crop of gray hair cut short on the sides, but longer in the back. A classic Mullet style that I hadn’t seen in years.
“See, I don’t know about that shit. Don’t wanna know, either. I’m movin’ damn near every day of the week. When I get home, all I do is sleep!”
I was well-lubricated by many rounds of brew, and felt emboldened enough to seize on that small observation.
“Moving, yes, I get it, my brother used to drive like that. He worked for Marten Trucking at one point. Anyway, here’s a question – how far does your work take you? Iowa? Nebraska? Colorado? Arizona? New Mexico? Maybe even California?”
He pondered my query for a moment. Then snorted and laughed.
“Yeah, all of them places. I run right to the Pacific Ocean sometimes, whatever pays the best. We call it bein’ an owner-operator. Straight-up, I’m a privateer! Money keeps the wheels turnin’! Pay me and I’ll do tha job!”
I gulped a mouthful of cold beer, wiped my face, and then leaned forward on the bench.
“Well then, here’s a proposition for you. How about taking on a passenger, for a trip to the west coast and back? I want to see someone who lives in the area of Los Angeles. A woman I’ve never met, and couldn’t identify if I saw her, face-to-face. Call her a mystery date. I need someone to cut me a deal. I can’t walk right, can barely see, and my wallet is empty. I don’t drive any farther than the corner store, for snacks and refreshments, or maybe to see a doctor about pills. Otherwise, I’m a hermit and a loner. But I’d be obliged to accept a favor from a friend. How does that sound for an offer?”
Polk frowned, went blank, then started chortling from the pit of his belly. His pockmarked, leathery face contorted into a wide grin.
“Yeah, okay! I like yer honesty, man! No bullshit, that’s the way to roll! Let’s do it!”