Sometimes you just get lucky.
I ran out of gas in Paiper Machet, Louisiana, on my way to a
convention for freelance bumper sticker writers. My "Watch Out
For The Idiot Behind Me" had become an industry classic and I
was to be the keynote speaker.
This was in the days before there was an all-night convenience
store with self-service gas pumps on every corner. There was one
gas station in Paiper Machet and it would not open until 7:30
the following morning. That would get me to the convention
thirty minutes into late registration, provided my luck held out
and my tires held air.
After I shut off my headlights, the only other illumination in
this little corner of the bayou was a thin ribbon of green and
red, riding a greasy fog that I traced back to a juke joint just
over the tracks.
As I drew closer, the smell of bar-b-q sang like a Siren in my
brain and hastened my apprehensive footsteps.
The creaking door betrayed my attempt at a quick, clandestine
peek at the place. All eyes rolled in my direction. It was
readily apparent that these good people were not accustomed to
seeing an apologetic grin wearing a Hawaiian shirt and moccasins.
Relying on raw survival instinct, I sought out the bartender.
That gave me an excuse to turn my back on the somnambulant
stares of the stoned citizenry, but there they were again in the
huge, spotless mirror. They had me surrounded.
I knew how to feign fortitude and present myself as a cool
customer. After all, I was a keynote speaker, for cryin out
loud. My body was inexplicably overtaken by the spirit of what
sounded like Zippy the Pinhead on helium as I eked out, "Ya’ll
got ‘nee beer?" I cast quick, accusatory glances around the
room, trying to pin down the offending Voodoo Queen.
The barkeep silently drew a tall glass of Jax beer and sat it in
front of me. I put a five on the bar. He put it in the cigar box
that served as a cash drawer and flipped the lid shut. The ghost
of Barney Fife politely inquired about my change.
"Cover charge."
"Oh, is there to be entertainment?" (Kermit The Frog)
Was there to be entertainment? Were there to be alligator dreams
tangled in the Spanish moss long about four a.m.? Entertainment?
Oh, yes. Yes, indeed. Tonight, at this inauspicious watering
hole, just north of who-flung-the-chunk, and due west of Bum
Fox, Egypt, there was to be entertainment. Blues legend, Blind
Lemon Furniture Polish was to give his farewell performance.
I may have looked and acted like a total dork, but I knew my
Blues. I knew what this event meant and I silently thanked God
for allowing me to be present on this, this night of nights.
My eyes adjusted to the dark and revealed a most welcome site:
Danny Aykroid sitting in a corner booth, gnawing on a possum
sandwich (or was it beaver?). I caught his eye and waved,
probably a little too enthusiastically. He quickly looked away,
his eyes darting down and right, pretending not to know
me—which, of course, he doesn’t.
A crisp harmonica fanfare drew our attention to the wide, low
stack of wooden R.C. Cola cases.
If I live to be a hundred—which Blind Lemon had accomplished a
decade ago—I’ll never forget the leathery majesty of the man who
slowly mounted the makeshift stage. It was dangerous to cram
that much dignity into so cheap a suit. He only did one song
that night. If you know your Blues, you know which one. His
signature song.
The languid lids lowered over haunted, eyes—eyes that had looked
out over a century of sadness, heartbreak, and futility. The
lids crept open, revealing happy eyes that had experienced
merriment and a defiant victory in spite of it all.
Nothing was forced from the diaphragm; he just opened his mouth
and the words fell out—like a trusty mule that knows its way
home when the rider is too drunk, or when it’s too dark to see.
Words as familiar to the Blues aficionado as "The Star Spangled
Banner" is to a Boy Scout:
My woman is a cyclone: Lawd, she blew me to my knees.
There go the neighborhood, my heart, and the magnolia trees.
As soon as I fell, she got downgraded to a tropical breeze.
My lady, she the sunshine: she warms me with a life-givin ray.
She too hot to handle, and Lawd, I used to like it that way.
But she never went down, and baked me hard as a ceramic ashtray.
Weather Woman—the prognosticators ain’t got a clue.
Nobody can affect my pressure and dew point like you do.
Unseasonably spiteful (HEY!), indescribably delightful (YEAH!),
Cool breeze summer night-ful (HAH!) stentorian and frightful
(WOO!)
It’s clear a storm is startin to brew.
My baby is a sandstorm; my soul is a wild tumbleweed.
Our love, a towering windmill, supplyin all the power we need.
But she sho screwed up my paintjob—she gritted up my nitty,
indeed.
My Mama is a monsoon, WAW! she soak her man to the core.
Replenishin the river ‘till the banks shake, rattle, and roar.
Then she flooded my house, leavin snakes and mud all over the
floor.
I never made it to the convention. Somehow, after what I’d
witnessed, it just seemed pointless and stupid. Kind of like
this story. I’m working for Aykroid now; I’m assistant manager
at one of his Danny’s Dixie Possum (or is it beaver?)
franchises. And I have the paper hat to prove it—made it out of
my college diploma. It just feels more like home somehow.
Yeah, sometimes you just get lucky.
About Author :
Tom Hale is a featured author on wizardboys.com. He writes
mostly about New Age topics, but cannot take anything too
seriously for too long.