Saturday, July 16, 2011

The Four Amigos

We never planned on riding with other people. It just happened. Several times, really. With the programmers we met in Vallejo, Simon the Kiwi in Nevada. But the ones who we stuck with, of course, are Matty and Johnny. It just worked out that way. Same maps, same ability, same miles. But, there is an unspoken agreement with people we have met on the road: If you get ahead of us, don't wait. We make no promises to stay behind for you in the same regard.

But I suppose the part that I am missing from the equation is the desire. If they had decided we were intolerable assholes, they would have made sure to spend an extra day spinning out, just to lose us. But they haven't. Rather, they have become our real friends. They are no longer just people we met on the road. When we look back, they were strangers for such a brief time.

The day after we met, we thought we had lost them. We had all planned to meet up in Baker. When we arrived there, we discovered that we had no cell service. We had no meeting spot planned so we had resigned to return to our tandem mission on Highway 50. When I walked back from the RV park showers that night, there they were, sitting on the picnic table at our campsite. The two of them smiling, all cleaned up with the old fashioned mess kit sitting on the table and fire pit dust blowing around their feet, they looked like a Norman Rockwell painting.

We have been on the road together for nearly one month now. Like young orphans braving the pony express. The struggle of being on the road has bonded us, irrevocably. When Matty doesn't make it in before dark, we all pace and repeat, "I hope Matty is okay" over and over to ourselves or each other. When Johnny insists we push on while he stays to fix a flat, we crank slow, wondering what he would do if his "American phone" runs out of juice.

We do one another's laundry, share fruits and vegetables and cans of chili, lament the pain in our joints and the longing for home. We bounce stories and ideas off one another just to stay awake on a night ride through Kansas.

In a state or two, we will part ways. I will try not to cry. But I can't make any promises.

3 comments:

  1. I am having a bit of a hard time reading this now. But I guess if you can live it, I can at least read it.
    I miss you too and am in awe of your strength and determination.
    LOVE YOU LOTS,
    Ma
    PS Who should play you in the movie?

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  2. Uncle Ernest and I are learning a lot about the country from your blog. About Kansa,, we thought you would like to see this poem by Martha Baird.
    http://bit.ly/jcthfm
    Martha Baird was born in Dodge City, Kansas. and after graduating from the University of Iowa, moved to New York City in 1943 where she began to study Aesthetic Realism with its founder, Eli Siegel.  In 1944, she and Eli Siegel were married.  Ernest says: "Keep peddling." And I say:  We're pulling for you!  
    Love,
    Aunt Maureen

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  3. Glad that the Four Amigos are such a competent team! A fortunate situation.

    As you continue your journey through Kansas, we thought of these lines from Vachel Lindsay's Santa-Fe Trail.

    "Ho for Kansas, land that restores us
    When houses choke us, and great books bore us!
    Sunrise Kansas, harvester's Kansas,
    A million men have found you before us."

    Vachel Lindsay lived from 1879 to 1931 and was born in Illinois. Here's the entire long poem, which we love.

    http://poemhunter.com/poem/the-santa-fe-trail-a-humoresque/

    Love,
    Aunt Maureen and Uncle Ernest

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