Journey
to Fear
Winston
Rand
It
was one of those late summer nights when the air weighs heavily
on you. Date night was usually Saturday, so those of us who did
not have steadies would hang out on Friday nights at Bobs
Dairy Bar, cruise up and down Main Street and around the Court
House Square, and make our way back to Bobs. Drinking shakes
or cherry Cokes at Bobs and sitting in or on our cars or
leaning James Dean style against the poles that held up the canopy
were just the coolest things to do. Except on an August evening
like this that was so muggy. And dusty. The humidity and dust
sweetened with the smells of greasy burgers and fries coming from
Bobs grill exhaust conspired to make it almost untenable
at times, even for the ultra-cool among us. Thats when we
would pile in a car, six or eight of us, sometimes more, and cruise
off in search of the excitement we just knew was around the next
corner.
A small rural Tennessee town in the late 1950s offered little
to quench a teenagers appetite for adventure and enlightment
and romance. The old movie theater on the Square showed films
we had all seen in Jackson a year or two earlier, putting it squarely
in the category of why bother. So we became quite accomplished
at improvising. Take a few fifteen-, sixteen-, and seventeen-year-old
kids with uncontrolled floods of hormones seeking fulfillment,
and trouble is never far away. We could stand only so many trips
down Main Street and around Court House Square before we became
bored to the gourd. On nights such as this, the boys might head
out to the long straight bottom of the Paris highway to drag race
with the family sedans and station wagons. Other nights we might
get even more adventurous and make a run over to McKenzie or Bruceton,
sometimes all the way to Jackson, checking out the dairy bars
and looking for girls that might be looking for us. But this particular
night we decided to check out the firetower.
Now the firetower was, well, a firetower. It stood atop a hill
a couple of miles out of town. The little metal framed glass cage
on top was staffed during periods of fire danger, but only in
daylight hours. Never at night. So it was a natural spot for healthy
teens to go parking. On Saturday nights there would typically
be a half dozen or so darkened cars occupied by sweaty teenage
couples engaged in
meaningful conversation, possibly more.
Since it was outside the town boundary, there were no unwelcome
visits by the local gestapo. Friday night was likely to find carloads
of boys or girls, almost never together, up there talking, raising
a mild manner of hell, learning to smoke (gasp
), and plotting
how and where they could get a six-pack without being caught or
recognized.
Winding our way up the gravel road in Martys old DeSoto
junker the one with the back seat removed to make room
for several more of us sitting on the floor or on wooden Coke
cases we could see there was another car at the tower.
As soon as we were close enough to make out details in the dark,
I recognized Cuzs car. Cuz was my cousin Gloria, and her
car was her daddys bigass black and yellow Packard. Seems
it was a '56, loaded with every gadget he could get on it, and
it must have weighed in at 10,000 pounds. Nobody in these parts
had ever seen such a monster of a car. Cuz was there with a carload
of girls they called themselves the Crazy Eight, though
I recall there being nine of them.
For a while we all stood, leaned, or sat around practicing being
cool and trying to impress those of opposite gender persuasion.
Some smoked. Some of the girls wanted to, but didnt
scared of momma smelling it I suppose. The girls decided to leave,
so with Cuz behind the wheel and the other girls fitting comfortably
in her daddys bigass Packard, she told me to get off the
hood. Grinning like the idiot I was about to prove I was, I refused.
She threatened to leave with me sitting there. Grinning like a
'possum that had gotten into some rancid persimmons, I told her
to go ahead. The bigass Packard lurched forward. As the car bounced
and dipped over the rough gravel road that led down the hill to
smooth pavement below, I was holding on for dear life. My butt
started slipping over the polished surface of the hood, forcing
me to lie back on the hood staring up at what was sure to be my
last glimpse of the stars above. I had never before realized just
how rough or how long that gravel road was. That three-minute
eternity taught me the importance of perspective. And the value
of padded seats inside the car.
Slowing to a crawl as the bigass Packard found purchase on blacktop,
Cuz once again yelled out at me to get off. This was so much smoother
than the gravel, and my brain was already fully scrambled from
the last few minutes, so I grinned again and shook my head in
the negative direction. As she accelerated up to 100 or 120
OK, maybe 20 or 30 MPH, I was finding little to hang onto. In
a quick, smooth move that I had never made before and certainly
not since, I flipped myself over, belly down, spread-eagle across
the hood of the bigass Packard, holding onto the windshield wipers,
eyeball to eyeball through the windshield with Cuz and a couple
of others in the front seat. Marty was following close behind
with the carload of boys hanging out the windows, yelling and
cheering me on. Thinking back on it, that was the first and last
time I ever had my very own cheerleading squad.
Now, there comes a time in even the bravest lads life, that
no matter how macho he wants to appear to be with the girls, it
is time to give up, to wallow in the agony of defeat. This was
not such a time. With floods of adrenaline now forming an explosive
mixture with the vast pool of testosterone that had welled up
inside me, I was determined to ride it out literally. It
took every ounce of strength I had to hang on while making a herculean
effort to make my grimace, my mask of fear, appear to be a confident
smile. Thankfully, Cuz took the shortest route to Court House
Square. We were indeed fortunate that our teachers and parents
and friends of our parents were all safely tucked away in darkened
houses and missed this awesome display of teenage bravery and
stupidity.
As we rolled onto the Square and came to a stop, I slid, slithered,
hopped off the hood of the bigass Packard, glad to have lived
to start getting my land-legs back. Thats when Calvin greeted
us. Calvin was the town cop. Big man. Big heart. Rough voice.
Probably not Rhodes Scholar material, if you know what I mean.
He had probably not been issued a bullet for the pistol hanging
from his belt. Think Barney Fife in a bigger body and with a deeper
voice. He hung out around the Square in his black-and-white patrol
car, a sure deterrent to high crime. Must have worked, too, because
the town had never seen anything more serious than petty theft,
a few beer induced fisticuffs over at the poolroom, and, of course,
mischievous hijinks by teenagers juiced on cherry Cokes and testosterone.
Calvin had been taking in the whole scene as we rolled onto the
Square with me plastered across the hood of the bigass
Packard.
As he sauntered over, he looked at Cuz and said, Your daddys
not gonna be real pleased with the way youre treating his
brand-new biga
uh, great big Packard, Miss Gloria.
As she tried in vain to hide behind the cloud of darts her eyes
were throwing my way, Calvin turned to me and said, Whadda
you think youre doing riding up on the hood of that biga
uh, big Packard, boy? Looking around for support, I realized
that Marty had stopped a good distance away so as not to be charged
with complicity, no doubt. All I could muster was a weak I
dunno.
Seeing my pitiful condition, Calvin softened up a bit, which I
could tell by his voice sliding up an octave or so as he said
in a mournful whine, Lord, boy, I dont want to have
to go down and tell Miss Louise about this. Shell kill me
and you, too! The plea in his voice was so clear that I
regained a bit of poise and looked him straight in the eye for
the first time. If he knew my momma well enough to know that she
would not just tear into me, but to him also, just for being the
carrier of bad news
oh, my, Im in deep doo-doo.
Still in his voce falsetto, Calvin whined, That was a mighty
dumb thing you did, riding up there on the hood of that biga
uh, big Packard. You coulda been kilt. With all the humble
sincerity I could find at the moment, I came back with, Yes
sir, it was. I learned my lesson and Ill never do that again.
Looking at me askance and thankful all at the same time, Calvin
said, Well, Im gonna take your word on that, and we
wont go down and wake up Miss Louise tonight. Well
just keep this right here between us. Regaining his usual
gruff voice, as if to convey the authority his badge should have
afforded him, Officer Calvin closed with But if I ever see
or hear of you pulling a stupid stunt like this again, were
marching down the street to see yo momma, boy. You understand
me?
Yes,
sir.
That was one promise I have kept for forty-some years now. But
you know, its strange. Packards long ago vanished from the
American motoring scene, but every time I see a bigass automobile,
I have this odd urge to throw myself prostrate across the hood
for one more joyride.
DEDICATION:
This essay is dedicated to Bettye Margaret, one of the Crazy Eight
group, who left this world on January 22, 2007, in search of new
adventures in the great beyond.
***
Winston
Rand, BSEE, MBA, provides network support for small businesses
around the Nashville area. His blog, nobodyasked.com, displays
a pleasing balance of serious and humorous material covering a
wide range of topics, from politics and war to observations in
a local pub, from religious roots to rooting for the Tennessee
Vols and Titans.
©
Winston Rand