18 Feb 2008 04:53:24 | Tom Hale
This is a true story. It was told to me by a guy I met on a
Riverboat. That’s how I know it’s true; who could doubt the
veracity of a River Rat? He didn’t use any backup singers when
he told it to me, but I thought since this is going out on the
Internet and all, I should shine it up a bit.
I spared no expense to fly these women in from Nashville. They
are, I am proud to tell You, the same backup singers who did all
that “Wah-ooo” stuff on C.W. McCall’s records.
I am laboring under a serious deadline, so the singers and I
haven’t had much time to practice. We will do the best we can.
I’ll play the part of the Trucker (imagine a Red Sovine-ish,
Tex-Ritter- On-Acid kind of thing). It goes a little somethin
like this:
Singers: It was a Truck Stop Christmas, With a light snow fallin
down, In Penciltucky, but it could have been In any other town.
The miracle that happened We may never understan, But, here to
tell the story Is a Truck Drivin Man...
Trucker: Well, I'z—
Singers:
A Truck Drivin Maa-aan. Wah-ooo.
Trucker:
Skewz me. I'z drivin down a stretch of Interstate, an' I'z
really gettin hungry. Every time I'd hit them airbrakes, I'd
hear 'em sayin, "Peeech Pie!" And my air horn was tellin me how
I like my coffee: BLAAAAAK! BLAAAAK! Oh, I know I shouldn of
been barrelin down the Interstate, hittin my airbrakes and
blarin the horn like Judgment Day—that’s what too much
marijuana’ll do to a man. Prob’ly why I was so hungry, too.
Yeah, I’d of given a month’s pay for a big ol’ piece of “Peeech
Pie!” I was tryin to remember if there was a Truck Stop on this
p'tickler stretch of Interstate; that big diesel motor kept
tellin me that there "Wudden! Wudden! Wudden-Wudden-Wudden!"
Singers:
Just a homesick gear jammer Runnin low on love and luck, Thinkin
'bout his woman, And talkin to his truck...
Trucker:
I was 'bout to—
Singers:
Talkin to his truu-uuck. Wah-ooo.
Trucker: I'm sorry...just kind of wave at me or somethin when
it’s my turn, okay? I was 'bout to wet my pants when I came
whizzin into town; the lights of an unfamiliar Truck Stop caught
my eye. When I walked in, there was this old waitress draggin a
dirty rag across the novelty mud flap display. She smiled at me
and said, "Merry Christmas, Son." I said, "Lordee, ma'am, is it
Christmas already?" She said that yes, yes it was, and I bet my
jaw must of hit the floor. Seemed like only yesterday it was
October—that's what too much crystal methadrine'll do to a man.
She looked at me for a long time, then said, "You know, I had a
son who'd be about your age. He took off drivin trucks and I
never did hear from him again. I kept hopin he'd stop in here
one day—preferably at Christmas, so I'd get a double dose of the
willies."
Well, I put my coffee back in the cup and said, "Ma'am, you can
call it coincidence if you want to, but I had a mother who'd be
about your age. I talked to Daddy the day before he died, and he
told me Mama had missed me so bad, she went out and got a job at
a Truck Stop, hopin someday I'd stop in."
Singers: A Truck Stop Christmas— Don't it make you weep? The
snow continued fallin; It was really gettin deep...
Trucker: She said she—
Singers:
Really gettin dee-eeep. Wah-ooo.
Trucker:
Damnit! She said she knew her boy was never gonna walk in at
Christmas or any other time, for it was on this p'tickler
stretch of Interstate, ten years ago, that her son was toppin a
hill and had to swerve to miss a bus load of kids. After he'd
plowed through a ditch and nearly turned over, he stuck his head
out the window to cuss at the bus driver and his hat blew off.
So he jumped out to get it. He should have stopped the truck
first, because he was goin 90 miles an hour when he jumped out.
Yeah, he was in movin violation of the law of gravity.
She said she hoped I wasn't too disappointed about her not bein
my mother, and I said, "Naw, I figured as much since I was only
four years old when my mama started workin at a Truck Stop." I
told her about a driverless truck that had passed me a few miles
back: it was goin 90 miles an hour. I didn't think much about it
at the time—that's what too much Night Train'll do to a man—but,
after hearin her story, I got a case of the hee-bee-gee-beez
like you wouldn believe. I leaned across the counter and held
onto her tired old hand. I said, "Ma'am, you may not be my
mother, but I'll bet you five dollars against the price of the
pie and coffee that you can't name all 8 reindeer."
She started to cry and said this was the first time in ten years
that Christmas had any meanin for her—she hadn even bothered to
put up any decorations. Now that it felt like Christmas, and she
knew it would be her last one, all she wished for in the whole
wide world was somethin to make it look like Christmas. Well, it
just so happened that I was haulin a hot load of cheap, plastic
Nativity scenes to Chicago for an eleventh-hour trainload sale.
I made up my mind right then an' there that this old woman was
gonna have one of 'em if it drove every dime store in Chi Town
out of business. I said, "You wait right here, Ma'am; this is
gonna be the best Christmas you ever had!" Well...that's when I
woke up. [military-drums-in-the-distance]
I woke up in a foxhole...about 15 miles from White Sands Missile
Range. The First Sergeant was shakin me. When I looked up at
him, there was a look of curiosity and concern in the narrow
eyes that so resembled elongated lug nuts, chiseled into the
weather-beaten leather that was his face—two eyes, one on either
side of his nose. He told me that I'd been yellin in my sleep,
somethin 'bout drivin a truck.
I said, "But, Sarge! I am a Truck Driver!" The curiosity and
concern melted into a combination of compassion and sarcasm—with
just a touch of amused weariness. He said, "Son, you are not a
Truck Driver, for you see, that would be impossible." "Why do
you say that, Sarge?" "For two reasons," Sarge said: "One, you
are a chimpanzee. Two, you don't even have a driver's license."
Well, I thought about that for a moment. My disappointment
turned to resignation. I quietly asked Sarge, "If…if I'm not a
Truck Driver, then what am I?"
Sarge said, “Speak up, son, I can’t hear you.”
So I says out loud, I says, “If…if I’m not a Truck Driver, then
what am I?”
He said, "You are an Astronaut. You just got back from a 5-year
trip around the Planet, Pluto. I don't know what happened to you
up there, but I do know this: you are not a Truck Driver." I sat
there, chewin on that one for a good long while. Sarge poured us
both some coffee. The long silence was broken when I said,
"Sarge, what month is this?" He told me it was August. "Well," I
said, liftin my cup, "Feliz Nuevo Año, Sarge."
Sarge grinned, and raised his cup. "Happy Halloween, Kid." I
poured coffee all down the front of my flight suit—that's what
too much weightlessness'll do to a man.
Singers:
It was a Truck Stop Christmas With magic in the air; It was the
nightmare of a monkey, And a Mother's answered prayer. A
mystery, a miracle, We'll never understan; But it's notarized
and witnessed By a Truck Drivin Man... A Truck Drivin Maa-aan.
Wah-ooo.
About Author :
In God’s Trombones, James Weldon Johnson tells of an old-time
preacher who announces, “Brothers and sisters, this morning—I
intend to explain the unexplainable—find out the
undefinable—ponder over the imponderable—and unscrew the
inscrutable.” This author seeks to do all that, plus take it a
step further and eff the ineffable. Tom Hale is a featured
author at wizardboys.com.