Chapter Twelve
Highway 66 is the main migrant road. 66โthe long concrete path across the country, waving gently up and down on the map, from the Mississippi to Bakersfieldโover the red lands and the gray lands, twisting up into the mountains, crossing the Divide and down into the bright and terrible desert, and across the desert to the mountains again, and into the rich California valleys.
66 is the path of a people in flight, refugees from dust and shrinking land, from the thunder of tractors and shrinking ownership, from the desertโs slow northward invasion, from the twisting winds that howl up out of Texas, from the floods that bring no richness to the land and steal what little richness is there. From all of these the people are in flight, and they come into 66 from the tributary side roads, from the wagon tracks and the rutted country roads. 66 is the mother road, the road of flight.
Clarksville and Ozark and Van Buren and Fort Smith on 64, and thereโs an end of Arkansas. And all the roads into Oklahoma City, 66 down from Tulsa, 270 up from McAlester. 81 from Wichita Falls south, from Enid north. Edmond, McLoud, Purcell. 66 out of Oklahoma City; El Reno and Clinton, going west on 66. Hydro, Elk City, and Texola; and thereโs an end to Oklahoma. 66 across the Panhandle of Texas. Shamrock and McLean, Conway and Amarillo, the yellow. Wildorado and Vega and Boise, and thereโs an end of Texas. Tucumcari and Santa Rosa and into the New Mexican mountains to Albuquerque, where the road comes down from Santa Fe. Then down the gorged Rio Grande to Los Lunas and west again on 66 to Gallup, and thereโs the border of New Mexico.
And now the high mountains. Holbrook and Winslow and Flagstaff in the high mountains of Arizona. Then the great plateau rolling like a ground swell. Ashfork and Kingman and stone mountains again, where water must be hauled and sold. Then out of the broken sun-rotted mountains of Arizona to the Colorado, with green reeds on its banks, and thatโs the end of Arizona. Thereโs California just over the river, and a pretty town to start it. Needles, on the river. But the river is a stranger in this place. Up from Needles and over a burned range, and thereโs the desert. And 66 goes on over the terrible desert, where the distance shimmers and the black center mountains hang unbearably in the distance. At last thereโs Barstow, and more desert until at last the mountains rise up again, the good mountains, and 66 winds through them. Then suddenly a pass, and below the beautiful valley, below orchards and vineyards and little houses, and in the distance a city. And, oh, my God, itโs over.
The people in flight streamed out on 66, sometimes a single car, sometimes a little caravan. All day they rolled slowly along the road, and at night they stopped near water.
In the day ancient leaky radiators sent up columns of steam, loose connecting rods hammered and pounded. And the men driving the trucks and the overloaded cars listened
apprehensively. How far between towns? It is a terror between towns. If something breaksโwell, if something breaks we camp right here while Jim walks to town and gets a part and walks back andโhow much food we got?
Listen to the motor. Listen to the wheels. Listen with your ears and with your hands on the steering wheel; listen with the palm of your hand on the gear-shift lever; listen with your feet on the floor boards. Listen to the pounding old jalopy with all your senses; for a change of tone, a variation of rhythm may meanโa week here? That rattleโthatโs tappets. Donโt hurt a bit. Tappets can rattle till Jesus comes again without no harm. But that thudding as the car moves alongโcanโt hear thatโjust kind of feel it. Maybe oil isnโt gettinโ someplace. Maybe a bearingโs startinโ to go. Jesus, if itโs a bearing, whatโll we do? Moneyโs goinโ fast.
And whyโs the son-of-a-bitch heat up so hot today? This ainโt no climb. Leโs look.
God Almighty, the fan beltโs gone! Here, make a belt outa this little piece a rope. Leโs see how longโthere. Iโll splice the ends. Now take her slowโslow, till we can get to a town.
That rope belt wonโt last long.
โF we can onโy get to California where the oranges grow before this here olโ jug blows up. โF we onโy can.
And the tiresโtwo layers of fabric worn through. Onโy a four-ply tire. Might get a hunderd miles more outa her if we donโt hit a rock anโ blow her. Whichโll we takeโa hunderd, maybe, miles, or maybe spoil the tube? Which? A hunderd miles. Well, thatโs somepin you got to think about. We got tube patches. Maybe when she goes sheโll only spring a leak. How about makinโ a boot? Might get five hunderd more miles. Leโs go on till she blows.
We got to get a tire, but, Jesus, they want a lot for a olโ tire. They look a fella over.
They know he got to go on. They know he canโt wait. And the price goes up.
Take it or leave it. I ainโt in business for my health. Iโm here a-sellinโ tires. I ainโt givinโ โem away. I canโt help what happens to you. I got to think what happens to me.
How farโs the nexโ town?
I seen forty-two cars a you fellas go by yesterday. Where you all come from? Where
all of you goinโ?
Well, Californiaโs a big State.
It ainโt that big. The whole United States ainโt that big. It ainโt that big. It ainโt big enough. There ainโt room enough for you anโ me, for your kind anโ my kind, for rich and poor together all in one country, for thieves and honest men. For hunger and fat. Whynโt you go back where you come from?
This is a free country. Fella can go where he wants.
Thatโs what you think! Ever hear of the border patrol on the California line? Police from Los Angelesโstopped you bastards, turned you back. Says, if you canโt buy no real estate we donโt want you. Says, got a driverโs license? Leโs see it. Tore it up. Says you canโt come in without no driverโs license.
Itโs a free country.
Well, try to get some freedom to do. Fella says youโre jusโ as free as you got jack to pay for it.
In California they got high wages. I got a hanโbill here tells about it.
Baloney! I seen folks cominโ back. Somebodyโs kiddinโ you. You want that tire or donโt ya?
Got to take it, but, Jesus, mister, it cuts into our money! We ainโt got much left.
Well, I ainโt no charity. Take her along.
Got to, I guess. Letโs look her over. Open her up, look aโ the casingโyou son-of-a- bitch, you said the casing was good. Sheโs broke damn near through.
The hell she is. Wellโby George! How come I didnโ see that?
You did see it, you son-of-a-bitch. You wanta charge us four bucks for a busted casing. Iโd like to take a sock at you.
Now keep your shirt on. I didnโ see it, I tell you. Hereโtell ya what Iโll do. Iโll give ya this one for three-fifty.
Youโll take a flying jump at the moon! Weโll try to make the nexโ town.
Think we can make it on that tire?
Got to. Iโll go on the rim before Iโd give that son-of-a-bitch a dime.
What do ya think a guy in business is? Like he says, he ainโt in it for his health.
Thatโs what business is. Whatโd you think it was? Fellaโs gotโ See that sign โlongside the road there? Service Club. Luncheon Tuesday, Colmado Hotel? Welcome, brother.
Thatโs a Service Club. Fella had a story. Went to one of them meetings anโ told the story to all them business men. Says, when I was a kid my olโ man give me a haltered heifer anโ says take her down anโ git her serviced. Anโ the fella says, I done it, anโ everโ time since then when I hear a business man talkinโ about service, I wonder whoโs gettinโ screwed. Fella in business got to lie anโ cheat, but he calls it somepin else. Thatโs whatโs important. You go steal that tire anโ youโre a thief, but he tried to steal your four dollars for a busted tire. They call that sound business.
Danny in the back seat wants a cup a water.
Have to wait. Got no water here.
Listenโthat the rear end?
Canโt tell.
Sound telegraphs through the frame.
There goes a gasket. Got to go on. Listen to her whistle. Find a nice place to camp anโ Iโll jerk the head off. But, God Almighty, the foodโs gettinโ low, the moneyโs gettinโ low. When we canโt buy no more gasโwhat then?
Danny in the back seat wants a cup a water. Little fellaโs thirsty.
Listen to that gasket whistle.
Chee-rist! There she went. Blowed tube anโ casing all to hell. Have to fix her. Save that casing to make boots; cut โem out anโ stick โem inside a weak place.
Cars pulled up beside the road, engine heads off, tires mended. Cars limping along 66 like wounded things, panting and struggling. Too hot, loose connections, loose bearings,
rattling bodies.
Danny wants a cup of water.
People in flight along 66. And the concrete road shone like a mirror under the sun, and in the distance the heat made it seem that there were pools of water in the road.
Danny wants a cup a water.
Heโll have to wait, poor little fella. Heโs hot. Nexโ service station. Service station, like the fella says.
Two hundred and fifty thousand people over the road. Fifty thousand old carsโ wounded, steaming. Wrecks along the road, abandoned. Well, what happened to them?
What happened to the folks in that car? Did they walk? Where are they? Where does the courage come from? Where does the terrible faith come from?
And hereโs a story you can hardly believe, but itโs true, and itโs funny and itโs beautiful. There was a family of twelve and they were forced off the land. They had no car. They built a trailer out of junk and loaded it with their possessions. They pulled it to the side of 66 and waited. And pretty soon a sedan picked them up. Five of them rode in the sedan and seven on the trailer, and a dog on the trailer. They got to California in two jumps. The man who pulled them fed them. And thatโs true. But how can such courage be, and such faith in their own species? Very few things would teach such faith.
The people in flight from the terror behindโstrange things happen to them, some bitterly cruel and some so beautiful that the faith is refired forever.