18
Engulfed by the crowd, the council members had no choice but to consider the current spot of their cars to be parking spaces. They stepped from the cars and the volume of the chanting immediately increased. It wasn’t violent or ugly, though some of the protestors may have felt that way, but for the most part the crowd was well-behaved in their opposition to the money-grubbing casino proposition under consideration. This wasn’t an issue that elicited the passion of something like abortion or the death penalty. It still obviously touched a number of Ohioans enough to get them to take to the streets. Even with very little threat of violence, the look of fear in the councilmembers eyes was something Sherri and Ben were not likely to forget for a long while.
Inside, Sid was waiting with a group of lawyers, experts and highly politicized and energized citizens ready to send the council a barrage of questions that he hoped would make them realize the magnitude of the error they were about to make. Matty was one of those lawyers. Sid had hated to call her for help, but he decided that at a time like this, resources were more important than feelings. He hoped J would understand.
J would understand, but he had spotted the familiar older couple again and was trying to fight through the crowd to get a closer look. He had a funny feeling in his stomach.
McCormick and Jimmie were getting one side of the crowd riled up while Ben and Sherri led the other side. The chants bounced back and forth like badminton across the parking lot, not that backyard stuff, we’re talking Olympic-level gold medal match badminton chants of, “GREED-Y” from one half and “BAS-TURDS” from the other. The council could hear the rumblings inside the auditorium. Sid couldn’t help but smile at the massive outpouring of opposition. He had never been prouder of anything in his life.
J got within a few feet of the couple and realized that his parents were a part of the protest and his mom was hollering BASTARDS at the top of her lungs. He stopped, hardly believing his eyes. He didn’t know whether it was harder to believe that his parents were here after he hadn’t seen them in years or if seeing his mother scream BASTARDS like she had 40 years of protesting pent up inside of her. She was screaming with so much passion it almost looked like she planned to let it all out tonight. J just watched in awe. His dad seemed to be mouthing “bastards” as well, but there was no way to tell if it was silent or not, not over his mom’s yells.
Inside the council debated, but things seemed to be fairly one-sided against the original casino proposal. The support had crumbled quickly. Only one dissenter remained and even he seemed to sense that he was fighting a losing battle. One of Sid’s concerned energized citizens slipped out the side door and went to tell Ben and Sherri that there was only one dissenter.
As J was reaching out to his parents, to tell them a shocked hello, Ben grabbed the bullhorn and said, “There’s only one dissenter in there. Let’s flush him out with noise.” Only when Ben said “noise” his voice crescendoed into a gargling hollering mash of sound. The crowd followed suit in an eruption. The estimated 1,000 people suddenly hollered like the Bengals had won the Super Bowl, or louder, since no one remembers what that sounds like. It was deafening. J and his parents were in the middle of it. His mother was hugging him. His father was touching his shoulder and the crowd all around them surged with energy and screams. J tried to speak, but nothing he said could be heard.
Inside the council heard the roar and the dissenter gave up his arguments. “Let’s vote,” he said hanging his head. The eruption quieted down and returned to chanting and singing as they waited for the vote. They didn’t know what was going on inside, yet the entire crowd seemed somehow tuned in.
“What are you guys doing here?” J asked with a yell, finally able to get a word in.
“We came to help you move,” his mother replied.
The vote was quick and unanimous. Sid and his group poured out of the auditorium hugging and cheering. The crowd erupted again. This time with more joy and less of the guttural animal sounds. Ben grabbed Sid and hoisted him up. The crowd supported him as he surfed over the heads of the boisterous and victorious protestors. Sid’s smile was so enormous that his face started to stretch and strain under the effort.
J caught a glimpse of him bobbing above the crowd, smiling 5 years of worth of smiles, and J found a smile of his own.
“That’s Sid!” he said to his dad excitedly. “You haven’t heard the last from him.”
The crowd eventually put Sid down and let the council drive away. The party atmosphere stayed for a few more hours. Though the very late arrival of the police dampened the party sooner than it might have otherwise ended. Ben, Sherri, J and J’s parents had long since returned to Sid’s kitchen for celebratory ice cream. Sid arrived much later. The smile still plastered on his face.
For a while everything was three scoops of laughter and two scoops of praise. They heaped accolades on Sid. Even J’s parents said they were impressed by the way Sid had handled the council. Ben and Sherri nuzzled each other’s noses whenever anyone said anything about the chants outside. A lot of spoons flew into the air with triumphant pronouncements. Even J seemed full of energy in his praise of everyone’s work. Still J seemed smaller somehow, he didn’t fill the kitchen like he had before. At first Sid thought that it might be an effect of J’s parents, but they left for a hotel and the promise to meet J in the morning and still J’s stature didn’t grow. It was strange to see J with his parents after hearing so little about them in all the time they knew him. It was also to see J as life-sized instead of larger than life. Someone, probably Ben, suggested they bring out the daquiris to celebrate, but Sid put a stop to that idea. “I want no part of chocolate body art tonight” he said with a laugh.
Ben, Sherri, and J laughed along with him. Sid was too caught up in the moment to be aware of his own change, but Sherri noticed. It was like Sid had filled out somehow, finally grown into his own skin. Sherri noticed that J seemed different too. He had shrunk. It was as if he had grown into his skin too. He wasn’t bursting at the seams anymore. He seemed calmer somehow.
When had that happened? she wondered. Had she and Ben missed something when they were hiding in the sheets? They obviously had, but it wasn’t worth dwelling on. Especially not with J leaving. It was amazing how quickly the party shifted from celebration to farewell.
“How can we let you go?” Ben wailed.
“You’ve got each other,” J said with a laugh. Whether the laugh was uncomfortable or not was not discernible.
Ben and Sherri stayed a little longer to relive some of the good times they’d had. J told Sherri how impressed with Reading Rocks he had been and he told Ben to hang on to Sherri. They both thanked him and made him promise to write. They suddenly felt like they were in summer camp. Ben couldn’t help but wonder if like summer camp he’d never hear from J again.
After the couple had left, Sid and J sat across each other from the table.
“You were amazing, Sid.” J said like a proud father.
“Aw.” Sid replied. “I had a good teacher.”
“I didn’t teach you that stuff. It came from in there.” J said very seriously as he pointed at Sid’s heart.
“I’m going to miss you.” Sid said with tears in his eyes.
“Don’t cry. We’re not crying here.” J said as he held out his hands and pressed them against an imaginary wall. “I’m moving. Not dying. ok?”
“Yea.” Sid wailed.
“Come on.” J said as he held out his arms. He and Sid embraced. “Goodbye,” J whispered.
The night passed quickly and J’s parents returned in the early morning. J felt like he’d slipped back in time and his parents were picking him up from a slumber party. He snuck out before anything resembling breakfast could be served. He snuck out before he’d have to say goodbye again.
The biggest advantage to moving a son that detests materialism is his distinct lack of materials. J had already cleared out his place and tossed the non-essential items. He carried a single bag which contained one change of clothes, “Big Sur”, some beef jerky, and a spatula. His parents were amazed that the move was so small and pleased that they hadn’t brought the trailer. It was going to be a twelve hour drive back to Independence, fourteen if J never took the wheel. They had a lot of time to catch up. J wanted to start with the previous night.
It was a little odd to be riding in the backseat of his parents’ Mazda. He hadn’t been in the back seat of a car in quite a while, but to be riding behind Mom and Dad on a road trip, the urge to ask “Are we there yet?” was almost too great to control, but J controlled it. He remembered growing up and playing Auto Bingo and the way he used to argue with his dad about speed versus fuel economy. He had come down on the side of speed then and despite the many changes he had gone through since those days of Auto Bingo, he still sided with speed when it came to too many hours in the car with the folks.
“I can’t sit back here the whole time.” J announced.
It had to be no less strange for the Jones. They hadn’t had anyone in the backseat since J went to college. They now found themselves with a grown man, a grown man with a goatee and clothes that were in disrepair by her standards. He looks like a hooligan, J’s dad thought but refrained from announcing. This journey back to Missouri was a strange way to continue their already strange reunion. They’d taken on part of his world and now he was returning to theirs. It seemed symbolic somehow, but J was finding it more suffocating than anything else.
“We’ll change at the next stop.” J’s dad replied.
J.afraid to discuss too much of their estrangement for fear that it might stir up feelings he wasn’t particularly interested in dealing with, stuck with the simpler questions. He found out his mom was still puttering and that his dad had taken up woodworking. He’d just completed a lovely spice rack. Mother was quite proud. The smile on Dad’s face seemed to indicate the same, but he was too proud to admit it. Too proud to be proud of woodworking, that was J’s father. They hadn’t traveled much. They had almost everything they needed smack dab in the middle of the heartland, they told J matter-of-factly. They acted part doting parents, part passive agressive children and part brochure for the Midwest. J’s parents had become everything he feared about retirees. They were reckless in their stingy treatment of the purse strings, buying fantastic purchases like RVs and flat screen TVs and then never finding the time to get out on the open road or get rid of the comfortable tube. They had worked so long and hard to accumulate wealth and now that they were no longer accumulating, they felt the need to spend it. Something was terribly wrong, but J couldn’t wrap his mind around what it was. They still lived in the same house and went to the same church. Mom didn’t like the new pastor, but thought she was fine.
“Fine?” J had asked with a wink and that extra syllable that turned fine into foxy.
“Joseph,” J’s mom had replied with an elongated syllable of her own that managed to silence J and his father.
J soon found out that the neighbors were well, except for the German Sheperd Marty who had died and the tomato plants that looked unruly. He found out that his cousin Dan had married a nice girl named Clare and settled down in El Paso to start a family. J saw his mother start to ask when he would find a nice girl, he could see the question form in her mind and then race down past her eyes toward her lips. She started to open her mouth and then thought better of it. That’s when he found out that his other cousin was finishing school and hoped to be an art teacher. He was spending his summers at a compound in New Mexico. J’s mother said compound the way most people say cancer; it swirled with death and doubt. They were all terribly worried about J’s uncle, because he hardly ever returned their calls. He just wrote emails. It didn’t seem that strange to J, but he decided not to mention it. This conversation continued long after J was listening. Conversation is the nicest way to say monologue. J was soon caught up with all the goings on of the last 5 years and they weren’t even to Indianapolis yet. His mom was like the CNN of Walnut Ave. He was her 24 hour news channel. His dad chimed in a few times to offer a correction or an opinion or to elucidate a point, but for the most part he was a BMW without all of the pesky connotations of Germans or speed. J sat near silence cramped in the back seat, sometimes nodding, sometimes munching on beef jerky but always staring out the window, watching as the MidWest unfurled before and beneath him. The further West the family sedan creeped the larger the world became. Large in this case was a quart-size Zip-Loc bag and the family sedan was a pebble. Large was barren. Large was empty. J saw the towns, the haystacks, the barns, even the other cars speeding past, but none of it had the life of even Cincinnati. Some of it would, sure. Indianapolis was home to the Motor Speedway and St. Louis was not a village about to be swalllowed by the river, but for the most part this drive was through a field. Charming fields J was sure, but basically unchanging, unpopulated masses of grass and weeds broken up by the gas station and the fast food restaurant. He knew that there were communities, towns, people somewhere off this little ribbon that he was hurtling across, but his focus was only what he could see and far as he was concerned he didn’t see much. The sedan of course was on Interstate 70 by now. J knew that Interstate 70 was a stellar infastructure acheivement and the reason that so many did indeed like Ike even if it meant that tanks could traverse the country more quickly, but pavement and cars were on the move and J was one of them. He was on the move across the plains, generally thought to be flat, and yet he felt so much like he was slipping.
After his mother had quieted, J leaned his head against the window and felt the hum of the road. It sang him softly to sleep. J slept fitfully, as backseat sleepers tend to do. He was comforted by the sun shining in from above, but alternately discomforted by the series of images that ransacked his brain. There was Matty smiling and then laughing, her mouth opened wide so that J was engulfed by the darkness. There he found Sid who was burning incense and chanting “Monogrammed towels. Monogrammed towels.” Sid dissolved and turned into Carl who was pushing a giant mound of paper around in circles. The paper morphed into Ben as Carl turned into Sherri. The two moved into kiss and were blown away by a gust of wind. J stood alone in the darkness until a spotlight and the noise of helicopter called him from above. He woke up to find his mother reaching over him into the trunk to get the pickles. J had forgotten how much his mom loved pickles. It was one of the traits he found most endearing about her. Some woman only grave pickles during pregnancy, but J’s mom was just the opposite. She ate dills in the morning, sweet pickles at night and never had a sandwich without a pickle plopped between the bread and the meat, both sides. Her arm had been moving such that the sun was hitting J in the face and then disappearing behind a cloud of elbow before reappearing again. The helicopter had been two trucks roaring past the sedan on both sides. J’s dad never flinched, he just roared calmly along at 55 miles per hour. The cruise control was off, but the needle never wavered. J watched as they rolled over hills to see if he could catch the slightest twitch, but the needle was still. His father was so focused and patient. It was enough to make J start to itch and twitch and had someone else been in the backseat likely other words that contain the letters i-t-c-h and start with b. He stopped watching the unmoving needle and tried to return to his nap, but he was awake and growing more frustrated by the minute. The salt from the beef jerky started to dry out his mouth and soon his tongue began to beg for a drink.
“Can we stop for a drink?”
His dad let out a long sigh of disappointment. He was in a groove and stops only served to throw off his rhythm. J wondered if one long low note could really be considered rhythm, but in light of the circumstances again chose to keep silent. If he had learned nothing else in his long absence it was when to hold his tongue, dry or wet.
At the very next exit, J’s dad signalled and pulled off the highway. He cruised up the ramp and followed the blue signs to the nearest service station.
“They don’t call them service stations anymore.” his dad said to no one in particular. “You don’t get any service. You get twenty four hours of a man in a glass cage...” he trailed off still to no one in particular.
J darted inside to grab a drink, but decided first to use the restroom. Very few bathrooms anymore have the sort of dilapadated charm they had in the 1980’s. They now come in two flavors- super anti-septic clean and downright broke. There is no longer the rainbow of variety that once dotted the landscape. Graffitti is wiped out by a slop of paint. Character and perverted charm go with it.
Every so often between slops, between perverted charm-erasing paint, a lucky toilet patron can find the adages of old. It’s not that the poopers have given up their pursuit of wall wisdom, it’s just that they have found other outlets, for what is the Internet if not a giant bathroom wall? and the watchers have grown more vigilant. Both have spelled near extinction for the poop proverbs of yesteryear, at least in middle America. J was lucky, for two poopers had gone undetected with their pens and their bowels moving. The first wrote classic prose,
“here I sit all broken hearted
tried to shit but only farted”
The second writer was feeling more philosophical, “GET OUT WHILE YOU STILL CAN!”
The first gave J a chuckle, the second pause.
He left the toilet, washed his hands and headed for the land of overpriced drinks in cold glass cages.
Back in the car, he tried to talk to his parents about bathroom graffiti but met with strong resistance.
“That’s vulgar,” said his mother from the backseat.
“Joseph,” his father said sternly. He was at the wheel. It had been years since he’d shared driving responsibilities and he wasn’t ready to give up the pilot seat just yet. He would have been even less likely had he known that J was unlicensed.
The hands of childhood tightened on J’s neck, the weight of his decision to return home weighing heavily on his torso and pressing against his lungs.
“Can we call me J?” he announced. “I know you named me. I respect that, but I’m 27 years old. And I go by J.”
“It’s just a letter” his mother whispered.
“It will be an adjustment, but it does not seem unreasonable,” his father replied with a glance in the rearview mirror at his wife.
“Thank you.” J said with a sigh.
How his parents could cause him so much angst at this age after the things he’d been through was very much a mystery to J. He was an adult. He had nearly starved and survived. He had been beaten and survived. He had battled intelluctually with the nation’s leaders, well intellectually might be a stretch since when it came to nation’s leaders he had mostly been part of a screaming mob, but he had certainly battled intelluctually with local leaders. He had fought for peace. He had voted. He had avoided criminal prosecution. What, J wondered, did it take for his parents to see him as a grown up. He wondered if they could ever see it. He wondered if he could be around when they did. Even the front seat seemed small at the moment. It seemed crowded. He glanced back to see if he was close to his mom’s legs. He tried to push the seat back, but it went no further. His arms started to itch again. He took a swig of his YooHoo, folded his arms and pouted silently.
They rolled slowly through Illinois and into Missouri. The Arch, the gateway to the West, waved hello beneath the twilight sky. J nodded his hello. He’d always been a little suspicious of the Arch. It was big and metal and symbolized something that was neither big nor metal. It didn’t quite make sense. Was it a giant straw near its breaking point? Was it one of the bendy things in a stage coach heading to the new frontier? Was it manifest destiny brought to bear by Eero Saarinen? J had no idea, and it bothered him just a little bit.
As they cruised beyond the city life and back into the plainness of the Plains, darkness blanketed them. The needle remained at 55. The radio was playing Oldies and J was slipping in and out of sleep. Somewhere about Kingdom City, he saw a hitchhiker that looked a lot like Jimmie. Men in ragged clothes in the dark have a tendency to look a lot like men that wear ragged clothes, but the shape, the thumb, something had caught J’s eye.
“Can we pick up a hitchhiker?” J asked sincerely.
“Those murderers and perverts,” his mother gasped.
“I don’t think so.” his father said unamused.
J turned and looked at his mother. She had just generalized and insulted a whole group of people who J wasn’t readily able to separate himself from (the hitchhiker, not the murderer or the pervert, that would be a very different story).
He turned to look at his focused and driven driver of a father. He didn’t care where they were going at 55 miles per hour, he had to get out in a hurry.
He grabbed his bag from the backseat.
“Mom. Dad. This isn’t my life.” J said as calmly as he could. “I have to get out.”
As J reached for the car door handle his father slammed on the breaks and skidded toward the shoulder. All three of them were thrown forward in shock.
“Walter!” his mother hollered when they slid to a stop.
J’s dad got out of the car and walked around to the passenger side. He opened the door slowly.
“Kiss your mother goodbye,” he said.
J reached back and gave her a peck on the lips. He turned back around and his father stepped back from the door. J stood. His father reached out his hand to shake J’s, but as J reached out to shake it, the hand continued around J’s back where it met its partner as Mr. Jones hugged J quickly, coldly, but firmly.
He let go and said, “It’s ok to call once in a while.”
J stood stunned by the stop, by the hug, by the words.
His father shut the passenger door, walked briskly around to the driver’s side door and got in. The brake lights went off and the mazda drove off, no doubt reaching 55 miles per hour as it headed on into the darkness.
J continued to watch the taillights as they faded away. He was nowhere on Interstate 70. He was rideless, homeless, jobless, but not quite family-less. J stared up at the speckles in the sky. He stared across the highway and then across the dark hills around him. He looked to the West and then he looked to the East. Checking the traffic once more, he darted across the highway, all four lanes, looked back for any oncoming headlights, popped his thumb into the air and settled into a brisk walk.
Inside, Sid was waiting with a group of lawyers, experts and highly politicized and energized citizens ready to send the council a barrage of questions that he hoped would make them realize the magnitude of the error they were about to make. Matty was one of those lawyers. Sid had hated to call her for help, but he decided that at a time like this, resources were more important than feelings. He hoped J would understand.
J would understand, but he had spotted the familiar older couple again and was trying to fight through the crowd to get a closer look. He had a funny feeling in his stomach.
McCormick and Jimmie were getting one side of the crowd riled up while Ben and Sherri led the other side. The chants bounced back and forth like badminton across the parking lot, not that backyard stuff, we’re talking Olympic-level gold medal match badminton chants of, “GREED-Y” from one half and “BAS-TURDS” from the other. The council could hear the rumblings inside the auditorium. Sid couldn’t help but smile at the massive outpouring of opposition. He had never been prouder of anything in his life.
J got within a few feet of the couple and realized that his parents were a part of the protest and his mom was hollering BASTARDS at the top of her lungs. He stopped, hardly believing his eyes. He didn’t know whether it was harder to believe that his parents were here after he hadn’t seen them in years or if seeing his mother scream BASTARDS like she had 40 years of protesting pent up inside of her. She was screaming with so much passion it almost looked like she planned to let it all out tonight. J just watched in awe. His dad seemed to be mouthing “bastards” as well, but there was no way to tell if it was silent or not, not over his mom’s yells.
Inside the council debated, but things seemed to be fairly one-sided against the original casino proposal. The support had crumbled quickly. Only one dissenter remained and even he seemed to sense that he was fighting a losing battle. One of Sid’s concerned energized citizens slipped out the side door and went to tell Ben and Sherri that there was only one dissenter.
As J was reaching out to his parents, to tell them a shocked hello, Ben grabbed the bullhorn and said, “There’s only one dissenter in there. Let’s flush him out with noise.” Only when Ben said “noise” his voice crescendoed into a gargling hollering mash of sound. The crowd followed suit in an eruption. The estimated 1,000 people suddenly hollered like the Bengals had won the Super Bowl, or louder, since no one remembers what that sounds like. It was deafening. J and his parents were in the middle of it. His mother was hugging him. His father was touching his shoulder and the crowd all around them surged with energy and screams. J tried to speak, but nothing he said could be heard.
Inside the council heard the roar and the dissenter gave up his arguments. “Let’s vote,” he said hanging his head. The eruption quieted down and returned to chanting and singing as they waited for the vote. They didn’t know what was going on inside, yet the entire crowd seemed somehow tuned in.
“What are you guys doing here?” J asked with a yell, finally able to get a word in.
“We came to help you move,” his mother replied.
The vote was quick and unanimous. Sid and his group poured out of the auditorium hugging and cheering. The crowd erupted again. This time with more joy and less of the guttural animal sounds. Ben grabbed Sid and hoisted him up. The crowd supported him as he surfed over the heads of the boisterous and victorious protestors. Sid’s smile was so enormous that his face started to stretch and strain under the effort.
J caught a glimpse of him bobbing above the crowd, smiling 5 years of worth of smiles, and J found a smile of his own.
“That’s Sid!” he said to his dad excitedly. “You haven’t heard the last from him.”
The crowd eventually put Sid down and let the council drive away. The party atmosphere stayed for a few more hours. Though the very late arrival of the police dampened the party sooner than it might have otherwise ended. Ben, Sherri, J and J’s parents had long since returned to Sid’s kitchen for celebratory ice cream. Sid arrived much later. The smile still plastered on his face.
For a while everything was three scoops of laughter and two scoops of praise. They heaped accolades on Sid. Even J’s parents said they were impressed by the way Sid had handled the council. Ben and Sherri nuzzled each other’s noses whenever anyone said anything about the chants outside. A lot of spoons flew into the air with triumphant pronouncements. Even J seemed full of energy in his praise of everyone’s work. Still J seemed smaller somehow, he didn’t fill the kitchen like he had before. At first Sid thought that it might be an effect of J’s parents, but they left for a hotel and the promise to meet J in the morning and still J’s stature didn’t grow. It was strange to see J with his parents after hearing so little about them in all the time they knew him. It was also to see J as life-sized instead of larger than life. Someone, probably Ben, suggested they bring out the daquiris to celebrate, but Sid put a stop to that idea. “I want no part of chocolate body art tonight” he said with a laugh.
Ben, Sherri, and J laughed along with him. Sid was too caught up in the moment to be aware of his own change, but Sherri noticed. It was like Sid had filled out somehow, finally grown into his own skin. Sherri noticed that J seemed different too. He had shrunk. It was as if he had grown into his skin too. He wasn’t bursting at the seams anymore. He seemed calmer somehow.
When had that happened? she wondered. Had she and Ben missed something when they were hiding in the sheets? They obviously had, but it wasn’t worth dwelling on. Especially not with J leaving. It was amazing how quickly the party shifted from celebration to farewell.
“How can we let you go?” Ben wailed.
“You’ve got each other,” J said with a laugh. Whether the laugh was uncomfortable or not was not discernible.
Ben and Sherri stayed a little longer to relive some of the good times they’d had. J told Sherri how impressed with Reading Rocks he had been and he told Ben to hang on to Sherri. They both thanked him and made him promise to write. They suddenly felt like they were in summer camp. Ben couldn’t help but wonder if like summer camp he’d never hear from J again.
After the couple had left, Sid and J sat across each other from the table.
“You were amazing, Sid.” J said like a proud father.
“Aw.” Sid replied. “I had a good teacher.”
“I didn’t teach you that stuff. It came from in there.” J said very seriously as he pointed at Sid’s heart.
“I’m going to miss you.” Sid said with tears in his eyes.
“Don’t cry. We’re not crying here.” J said as he held out his hands and pressed them against an imaginary wall. “I’m moving. Not dying. ok?”
“Yea.” Sid wailed.
“Come on.” J said as he held out his arms. He and Sid embraced. “Goodbye,” J whispered.
The night passed quickly and J’s parents returned in the early morning. J felt like he’d slipped back in time and his parents were picking him up from a slumber party. He snuck out before anything resembling breakfast could be served. He snuck out before he’d have to say goodbye again.
The biggest advantage to moving a son that detests materialism is his distinct lack of materials. J had already cleared out his place and tossed the non-essential items. He carried a single bag which contained one change of clothes, “Big Sur”, some beef jerky, and a spatula. His parents were amazed that the move was so small and pleased that they hadn’t brought the trailer. It was going to be a twelve hour drive back to Independence, fourteen if J never took the wheel. They had a lot of time to catch up. J wanted to start with the previous night.
It was a little odd to be riding in the backseat of his parents’ Mazda. He hadn’t been in the back seat of a car in quite a while, but to be riding behind Mom and Dad on a road trip, the urge to ask “Are we there yet?” was almost too great to control, but J controlled it. He remembered growing up and playing Auto Bingo and the way he used to argue with his dad about speed versus fuel economy. He had come down on the side of speed then and despite the many changes he had gone through since those days of Auto Bingo, he still sided with speed when it came to too many hours in the car with the folks.
“I can’t sit back here the whole time.” J announced.
It had to be no less strange for the Jones. They hadn’t had anyone in the backseat since J went to college. They now found themselves with a grown man, a grown man with a goatee and clothes that were in disrepair by her standards. He looks like a hooligan, J’s dad thought but refrained from announcing. This journey back to Missouri was a strange way to continue their already strange reunion. They’d taken on part of his world and now he was returning to theirs. It seemed symbolic somehow, but J was finding it more suffocating than anything else.
“We’ll change at the next stop.” J’s dad replied.
J.afraid to discuss too much of their estrangement for fear that it might stir up feelings he wasn’t particularly interested in dealing with, stuck with the simpler questions. He found out his mom was still puttering and that his dad had taken up woodworking. He’d just completed a lovely spice rack. Mother was quite proud. The smile on Dad’s face seemed to indicate the same, but he was too proud to admit it. Too proud to be proud of woodworking, that was J’s father. They hadn’t traveled much. They had almost everything they needed smack dab in the middle of the heartland, they told J matter-of-factly. They acted part doting parents, part passive agressive children and part brochure for the Midwest. J’s parents had become everything he feared about retirees. They were reckless in their stingy treatment of the purse strings, buying fantastic purchases like RVs and flat screen TVs and then never finding the time to get out on the open road or get rid of the comfortable tube. They had worked so long and hard to accumulate wealth and now that they were no longer accumulating, they felt the need to spend it. Something was terribly wrong, but J couldn’t wrap his mind around what it was. They still lived in the same house and went to the same church. Mom didn’t like the new pastor, but thought she was fine.
“Fine?” J had asked with a wink and that extra syllable that turned fine into foxy.
“Joseph,” J’s mom had replied with an elongated syllable of her own that managed to silence J and his father.
J soon found out that the neighbors were well, except for the German Sheperd Marty who had died and the tomato plants that looked unruly. He found out that his cousin Dan had married a nice girl named Clare and settled down in El Paso to start a family. J saw his mother start to ask when he would find a nice girl, he could see the question form in her mind and then race down past her eyes toward her lips. She started to open her mouth and then thought better of it. That’s when he found out that his other cousin was finishing school and hoped to be an art teacher. He was spending his summers at a compound in New Mexico. J’s mother said compound the way most people say cancer; it swirled with death and doubt. They were all terribly worried about J’s uncle, because he hardly ever returned their calls. He just wrote emails. It didn’t seem that strange to J, but he decided not to mention it. This conversation continued long after J was listening. Conversation is the nicest way to say monologue. J was soon caught up with all the goings on of the last 5 years and they weren’t even to Indianapolis yet. His mom was like the CNN of Walnut Ave. He was her 24 hour news channel. His dad chimed in a few times to offer a correction or an opinion or to elucidate a point, but for the most part he was a BMW without all of the pesky connotations of Germans or speed. J sat near silence cramped in the back seat, sometimes nodding, sometimes munching on beef jerky but always staring out the window, watching as the MidWest unfurled before and beneath him. The further West the family sedan creeped the larger the world became. Large in this case was a quart-size Zip-Loc bag and the family sedan was a pebble. Large was barren. Large was empty. J saw the towns, the haystacks, the barns, even the other cars speeding past, but none of it had the life of even Cincinnati. Some of it would, sure. Indianapolis was home to the Motor Speedway and St. Louis was not a village about to be swalllowed by the river, but for the most part this drive was through a field. Charming fields J was sure, but basically unchanging, unpopulated masses of grass and weeds broken up by the gas station and the fast food restaurant. He knew that there were communities, towns, people somewhere off this little ribbon that he was hurtling across, but his focus was only what he could see and far as he was concerned he didn’t see much. The sedan of course was on Interstate 70 by now. J knew that Interstate 70 was a stellar infastructure acheivement and the reason that so many did indeed like Ike even if it meant that tanks could traverse the country more quickly, but pavement and cars were on the move and J was one of them. He was on the move across the plains, generally thought to be flat, and yet he felt so much like he was slipping.
After his mother had quieted, J leaned his head against the window and felt the hum of the road. It sang him softly to sleep. J slept fitfully, as backseat sleepers tend to do. He was comforted by the sun shining in from above, but alternately discomforted by the series of images that ransacked his brain. There was Matty smiling and then laughing, her mouth opened wide so that J was engulfed by the darkness. There he found Sid who was burning incense and chanting “Monogrammed towels. Monogrammed towels.” Sid dissolved and turned into Carl who was pushing a giant mound of paper around in circles. The paper morphed into Ben as Carl turned into Sherri. The two moved into kiss and were blown away by a gust of wind. J stood alone in the darkness until a spotlight and the noise of helicopter called him from above. He woke up to find his mother reaching over him into the trunk to get the pickles. J had forgotten how much his mom loved pickles. It was one of the traits he found most endearing about her. Some woman only grave pickles during pregnancy, but J’s mom was just the opposite. She ate dills in the morning, sweet pickles at night and never had a sandwich without a pickle plopped between the bread and the meat, both sides. Her arm had been moving such that the sun was hitting J in the face and then disappearing behind a cloud of elbow before reappearing again. The helicopter had been two trucks roaring past the sedan on both sides. J’s dad never flinched, he just roared calmly along at 55 miles per hour. The cruise control was off, but the needle never wavered. J watched as they rolled over hills to see if he could catch the slightest twitch, but the needle was still. His father was so focused and patient. It was enough to make J start to itch and twitch and had someone else been in the backseat likely other words that contain the letters i-t-c-h and start with b. He stopped watching the unmoving needle and tried to return to his nap, but he was awake and growing more frustrated by the minute. The salt from the beef jerky started to dry out his mouth and soon his tongue began to beg for a drink.
“Can we stop for a drink?”
His dad let out a long sigh of disappointment. He was in a groove and stops only served to throw off his rhythm. J wondered if one long low note could really be considered rhythm, but in light of the circumstances again chose to keep silent. If he had learned nothing else in his long absence it was when to hold his tongue, dry or wet.
At the very next exit, J’s dad signalled and pulled off the highway. He cruised up the ramp and followed the blue signs to the nearest service station.
“They don’t call them service stations anymore.” his dad said to no one in particular. “You don’t get any service. You get twenty four hours of a man in a glass cage...” he trailed off still to no one in particular.
J darted inside to grab a drink, but decided first to use the restroom. Very few bathrooms anymore have the sort of dilapadated charm they had in the 1980’s. They now come in two flavors- super anti-septic clean and downright broke. There is no longer the rainbow of variety that once dotted the landscape. Graffitti is wiped out by a slop of paint. Character and perverted charm go with it.
Every so often between slops, between perverted charm-erasing paint, a lucky toilet patron can find the adages of old. It’s not that the poopers have given up their pursuit of wall wisdom, it’s just that they have found other outlets, for what is the Internet if not a giant bathroom wall? and the watchers have grown more vigilant. Both have spelled near extinction for the poop proverbs of yesteryear, at least in middle America. J was lucky, for two poopers had gone undetected with their pens and their bowels moving. The first wrote classic prose,
“here I sit all broken hearted
tried to shit but only farted”
The second writer was feeling more philosophical, “GET OUT WHILE YOU STILL CAN!”
The first gave J a chuckle, the second pause.
He left the toilet, washed his hands and headed for the land of overpriced drinks in cold glass cages.
Back in the car, he tried to talk to his parents about bathroom graffiti but met with strong resistance.
“That’s vulgar,” said his mother from the backseat.
“Joseph,” his father said sternly. He was at the wheel. It had been years since he’d shared driving responsibilities and he wasn’t ready to give up the pilot seat just yet. He would have been even less likely had he known that J was unlicensed.
The hands of childhood tightened on J’s neck, the weight of his decision to return home weighing heavily on his torso and pressing against his lungs.
“Can we call me J?” he announced. “I know you named me. I respect that, but I’m 27 years old. And I go by J.”
“It’s just a letter” his mother whispered.
“It will be an adjustment, but it does not seem unreasonable,” his father replied with a glance in the rearview mirror at his wife.
“Thank you.” J said with a sigh.
How his parents could cause him so much angst at this age after the things he’d been through was very much a mystery to J. He was an adult. He had nearly starved and survived. He had been beaten and survived. He had battled intelluctually with the nation’s leaders, well intellectually might be a stretch since when it came to nation’s leaders he had mostly been part of a screaming mob, but he had certainly battled intelluctually with local leaders. He had fought for peace. He had voted. He had avoided criminal prosecution. What, J wondered, did it take for his parents to see him as a grown up. He wondered if they could ever see it. He wondered if he could be around when they did. Even the front seat seemed small at the moment. It seemed crowded. He glanced back to see if he was close to his mom’s legs. He tried to push the seat back, but it went no further. His arms started to itch again. He took a swig of his YooHoo, folded his arms and pouted silently.
They rolled slowly through Illinois and into Missouri. The Arch, the gateway to the West, waved hello beneath the twilight sky. J nodded his hello. He’d always been a little suspicious of the Arch. It was big and metal and symbolized something that was neither big nor metal. It didn’t quite make sense. Was it a giant straw near its breaking point? Was it one of the bendy things in a stage coach heading to the new frontier? Was it manifest destiny brought to bear by Eero Saarinen? J had no idea, and it bothered him just a little bit.
As they cruised beyond the city life and back into the plainness of the Plains, darkness blanketed them. The needle remained at 55. The radio was playing Oldies and J was slipping in and out of sleep. Somewhere about Kingdom City, he saw a hitchhiker that looked a lot like Jimmie. Men in ragged clothes in the dark have a tendency to look a lot like men that wear ragged clothes, but the shape, the thumb, something had caught J’s eye.
“Can we pick up a hitchhiker?” J asked sincerely.
“Those murderers and perverts,” his mother gasped.
“I don’t think so.” his father said unamused.
J turned and looked at his mother. She had just generalized and insulted a whole group of people who J wasn’t readily able to separate himself from (the hitchhiker, not the murderer or the pervert, that would be a very different story).
He turned to look at his focused and driven driver of a father. He didn’t care where they were going at 55 miles per hour, he had to get out in a hurry.
He grabbed his bag from the backseat.
“Mom. Dad. This isn’t my life.” J said as calmly as he could. “I have to get out.”
As J reached for the car door handle his father slammed on the breaks and skidded toward the shoulder. All three of them were thrown forward in shock.
“Walter!” his mother hollered when they slid to a stop.
J’s dad got out of the car and walked around to the passenger side. He opened the door slowly.
“Kiss your mother goodbye,” he said.
J reached back and gave her a peck on the lips. He turned back around and his father stepped back from the door. J stood. His father reached out his hand to shake J’s, but as J reached out to shake it, the hand continued around J’s back where it met its partner as Mr. Jones hugged J quickly, coldly, but firmly.
He let go and said, “It’s ok to call once in a while.”
J stood stunned by the stop, by the hug, by the words.
His father shut the passenger door, walked briskly around to the driver’s side door and got in. The brake lights went off and the mazda drove off, no doubt reaching 55 miles per hour as it headed on into the darkness.
J continued to watch the taillights as they faded away. He was nowhere on Interstate 70. He was rideless, homeless, jobless, but not quite family-less. J stared up at the speckles in the sky. He stared across the highway and then across the dark hills around him. He looked to the West and then he looked to the East. Checking the traffic once more, he darted across the highway, all four lanes, looked back for any oncoming headlights, popped his thumb into the air and settled into a brisk walk.
