Take A Sip by Mark Anthony GivenA Story by The King of MontanaHitchhiking journal of wanderlust in America where ever your at you want to be somewhere else; or getting there is better than being there.NOT A CLOUD in the aquamarine,
powder blue sky as usual along the Gulf Coast all year round. The Interstate is
built above the marshy flat no mans’ land until finally leveling out at about
the twenty six mile marker, and the quarter mile length exit ramp ends where I
begin. Standing across at the Entrance Ramp hitchhiking with just a simple day
pack in flip flops and T-shirt, I looked like the kid next door with a Florida
tan and light brown hair streaked by the Sun. I never waited ten minutes anywhere
it seemed, I had people wrecking their cars pulling over for me. As long as I
kept my self clean and new clothes and a big smile, the party never stopped
when you’re young, hot and rambunctious….not to mention a set of “Balls of
Atlas”. I wanted to be a writer since I
read The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, when I was ten, and I
knew I needed characters. Where do you get characters? Like many great writers
before me, I Hit the Road. Kerouac, Jack London, Charles Dickens, I could go on
and on. I hitchhiked from one end of this country to the other a half a dozen
times. I can walk into any town in America, maybe most places, without a penny
in my pocket or a friend or foe, and I’ll be just fine. That is a very rare and
marvelous ability. I could fill volumes with the stories of the hundreds of
rides I have had, a couple come to mind when I look back on this time in my
life; and Ride #77 is at the top of the list. Ninety nine percent of what I
write is true, but to tell you the truth, Mark Twain said, “When I was younger
I could remember anything, whether it happened or not.” I heartily subscribe to
that as well, because I can hardly divide what happened from what I made up….
it is otherwise known as “Literary license,” and I invoke it here… I WISH THIS GUY never stopped for me
as soon as I got in the car but it was so hot outside, I was hoping for some
blowing air at least. I was excited to jump in this ragged out, 1963 Chevrolet
Bel Air like it was a new Lincoln but that didn’t last long. An Old Man in a
farmers bib with no T-s**t about sixty years old. It looked like a work car
with tools laying everywhere and fast food rappers, he pulled back onto the
long Entrance Ramp, and by the time we got to the Interstate he was doing all of
forty five miles an hour and never went any faster. Cars were blowing right
past us at sixty or seventy miles an hour and I thought I was in a time warp.
He had an old fashioned small Coke Bottle with the white lettering worn off
between his legs with what looked like water. He asked me where I was going and
I told him the same thing I told them all, “As far this way as you want to
carry me. I’m just traveling.” Often they’d just look straight ahead in silence
a few minutes, having never heard of that place…. “You
ever drink any Moonshine boy?” I glanced down at that bottle
and say, “No
Sir.” “You
want some?” he said excitedly. “Not
really….” I seen a look of disappointment
comes over his face and he stared straight ahead like he had been slapped. After
a long moment he glanced at me fiercely and leaned forward and started fumbling
around under the front seat, just barely looking over the dashboard between the
steering wheel and he was all over the road. I kept looking behind us thinking
we were going to get rear ended by a barreling tractor trailer hauling a*s.
Finally he whip’s out the biggest damn pistol I ever seen. It was a Smith
& Wesson 22 Model of 1917, and looked like Target Pistol with a long
barrel. Time stopped and I thought I could hear the Atomic Clock Seconds
ticking away as he swung that big b*****d up over the front seat and pointed it
right between my eyes. “Take a
sip, boy.” He took his other hand off the
wheel to hand me the little faded green bottle and I suddenly remembered all the
admonitions I heard when I was a kid about hitch hiking… I looked at it for a
second and then looked around to see if anyone was looking in case this was my
last swig... I TOOK JUST A SIP of this stuff that
looked like water and tasted like it could have melted the chrome of a car
bumper and burnt a path south in my intestines. Just then the “Balls of Atlas,”
part kicked in and I took another good swig off this nasty s**t like I meant
it. Time to Man up… I thought I seen a slight ember of happiness dim his fierce
blue eyes and he started to lower the big gun that look like it covered the
length of the bench seat in the old car. A sense of warm recognition came over
me and I felt like I was in my grandfather’s old car going fishing. A sudden whiff
of Gulf of Mexico, this might not be a bad ride after all even with sitting on
toolls and a screw driver sticking in my back. The old guy nudged me with the
barrel of the big gun bringing me back to reality and handed me the gun and
said, “Now you hold it on me while I get a sip!” http://homelessinheaven.blogspot.com/2012/12/take-sip-by-mark-anthony-given.html © 2013 The King of Montana |
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Added on March 29, 2013 Last Updated on March 29, 2013 Tags: hitchhiking, hitch hiking, mississippi, interstate, mark anthony given, moonshine AuthorThe King of MontanaHelena, MTAboutMark Anthony Given (born April 27) is an American writer, adventurer and raconteur. Born in Sanford, Florida, raised in New York and in the South. Fine food chef, paralegal, roughneck, heavy equipment.. more..Writing
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