Here's a story I wrote about 10 years ago. This is for you Ray 'Mat' P.
Area 51 and the Dead Cow in the Middle of the Road
By Marcy Green
I
Wanna hear a story? I know what you're thinking. If some
old coot in a hole-in-the-wall bar out in the middle of nowhere -- in
the middle of the desert of Nevada, no less -- asks you if you want to
hear a story, then maybe you'd just better say 'no' and leave it at
that. I wouldn't blame you. But, I got a great story to tell -- well,
maybe 'great' ain't the word, but it's pretty good at the least -- and
if you buy me a beer...or two, I'll tell it. Now, wait. Before you
answer -- I know what you're thinking. Well, prolly I do. You're
thinking, 'What kind of story would this scraggly old geezer have to
tell'? I know, I know. You figure it wouldn't have a kernel of truth and
be filled with all kind of exaggerating and maybe even some hyperbole
-- but, you'd be wrong. In fact, I can prove what I have to say is true.
Well, pretty much prove it -- I guess 'proof' can be faked, everybody
knows that. But, I promise you this: if you buy me a beer I'll tell you
one entertaining story and -- I'll be able to show you proof that what I
told you is true. Whether you believe the proof, well, that's up to
you. Welp, that's my offer. Take me up on it? Wait! -- I'll set things
up better so they got more structure. You buy me a beer, just one beer,
and I'll tell you the first part of the story, and if you don't think
it's worth another beer to hear more, welp, that'll be that. If you do,
you can buy another round and I'll tell you more. Like that, till the
end. That way you're not in too deep up front -- won't feel too scammed
if my story's a dud. Deal? Alrighty, sir! That's just fine. Yep! Just
fine! Lemme call the bartender on over here. Two beers right here if you
would, kind sir!
Thank you! Mmm...good suds. Mmm... I surely
love a nice cold beer on a hot evening like this one is. I thank you
much. Mmm... I'll get right to my story. You like spooky stories? Yeah?
Good, cause this one's kinda spooky -- not in a, whatta you call, bloody
slasher kinda way -- this is more of a psychological, creepy story --
plays with your mind. But, still fun though, like a good old-fashioned
horror movie. Like them old movies we used to see as kids, you know.
Although, there are some elements of gore in it, I'm warning you. Hope
that don't bother you. No? Well, all right then. Mmm...good beer.
This
here is a story about the incident. 'The Incident' me and Joe call it
-- Joe, that's the guy the incident happened to -- he's the one who the
story's about. Not me. Happened to a fella named Joe. Joe first told me
this story a few years back and I remember like it was yesterday. (He
told me a hundred times if he told me once). Anyway, this story is about
what me and Joe refer to as 'The Incident'. Happened out in the desert,
just a short distance from where we are right now. Happened right next
to that secret base in the desert the government has -- you know? Area
51. I see you've heard of it. Most folks have. Most folk don't put no
stock in all them stories about Area 51 that you're always hearing, like
how they got all them spaceships stored out there, and them autopsies
they supposedly done on them aliens -- little green men from outer
space. Well, I ain't saying any of them stories is true and I ain't
saying they ain't true, I'm just saying that's where this incident, this
here story, took place -- out there by Area 51, and, that it might
possibly, just might, have something to do with the events that
transpired.
Well, the incident in question happened on a hot
day -- like most are in the desert, I guess. Joe was out splitting
blacktop -- that's what we call it when you paint the lines -- those
broken white, or sometimes yellow, lines? -- down the middle of the
road. That's what Joe was doing that day -- same thing he'd been doing
for, oh, how long has it been? Forty years...no, forty-five, at least.
Lord, is that how long I've known ole Joe? Guess so. That's a long time.
We've been best friends all that time, too. Good friends -- people say
they was 'best' friends but they don't really mean it, but me and Joe
was. Hasn't been a time when we weren't. I was a year behind Joe in high
school. He was a pretty good fellow back then -- well, I mean he hadn't
got all angry at everything back then like he would later on -- you'll
see what I mean once I get going with this story. Anyway, Joe was normal
back in high school. Regular. Not too smart, not too dumb. Regular,
like me. Happy.
Anyway, back then, like I said, Joe was a
pretty happy guy. See, he had been dating this girl, Delores...can't
remember her last name. But, don't matter. Him and Delores were the
classic high school sweethearts -- the kind of couple they write songs
about -- and they planned to get married right after graduation and
start a family. They even got engaged -- most kids don't bother with
that -- in fact they tend to keep it a secret till it's too late to stop
them. You know what I mean. Anyway, Joe just seemed pretty comfortable
in his own skin -- easy-going -- back then while he and Delores were a
going concern. Makes sense -- she was a pretty girl -- one of the
prettiest at our school. Why shouldn't Joe enjoy dating a girl like
that? Why shouldn't he like to be seen with her? You'd see 'em coming
down the hall, her arm in the crook of his elbow, holding on to him, and
him walking tall trying not to smile real big like a fool, you just
knew they was good for each other and Joe was as proud as a man could
be. People would sorta move out of the happy couple's way when they
walked past, so they could stay side by side like that, pretty as a
picture.
Well, that was when they was together. When Joe was
by himself he was sorta cocky about dating such a pretty girl, and being
engaged. He didn't just walk tall, he kinda strutted everywhere he
went. Rubbed some of the other fellas the wrong way, and, after a while
those guys would shoot Joe a narrow look when they passed him in the
hall. Well, sure enough, between those fellas felling like Joe was being
arrogant about dating Delores and Joe's somewhat uppity nature -- one
day there was a fight. Not one of them shoving matches like what you see
mostly in high school -- you know, where the kids get all red-faced
challenging each other and use cuss words that don't really come natural
to them yet. This was a real fight -- punches were thrown. Joe lost one
of his front teeth. Made him look kinda slow. He always hated that. He
had the sort of face that, well, it didn't look too academic to start
with, if you know what i mean, and that missing front tooth sure didn't
make Joe look any smarter.
Anyway, things were different
between Joe and Delores after that. They just didn't have that spark.
You could see it. Some of us sorta could tell what was coming, and, sure
enough, a coupla months after the fight Delores broke off the
engagement and stopped seeing Joe. Well, he wasn't the same after that.
He sorta dragged his feet and kept his eyes down, and when he walked
past you in the hall he'd keep real close to the edge of the hall, right
next to the lockers, and he'd pass you right by without saying a word. I
guess that's when ole Joe first started carrying a chip on his
shoulder. (It stayed there his whole life -- up until the incident that
is. After that he was a pretty happy fella once again. I'll get to that
momentarily, though).
Anyway, after Delores broke up with
him, Joe up and quit high school. Said he didn't believe in it no more.
Said 'Spending your day earning a wage beat the hell out of sitting in a
dumb class any day'. That's what he'd say. Every chance he got. But, I
knew it was because the break up. I knew he couldn't stand going to that
school no more, what with being whupped in a fight and losing his girl.
Everybody did. Just too much for a man's pride to bear -- especially at
that age. Yeah, we all knew.
After he dropped outta high
school Joe went to work at this local burger joint. Small place that was
owned by a friend of Joe's dad -- that's really the only reason he got
hired. Joe worked there a coupla years, hating every minute of it. Used
to try and hide in the back when me and some of our pals came by on a
Friday night. Sometimes we'd talk to him through the little hole in the
window where you placed your orders, tell a few stupid jokes, yammer on,
trying to let him know we was still friends. Later after he'd get off
work we'd meet up someplace, usually out in somebody's field, and have
us a few beers and smoke some cigarettes. Talk shit. You know, normal
stuff.
I graduated and got a job at the DOT -- Department of
Transportation -- and was able to get Joe on at the Division of
Highways. He was glad he could stop flipping those burgers, I'll tell
you. Took to his new job pretty well. He had a truck and spent all day
out fixing traffic lights or them lights at railroad crossings. He'd
change the bulbs or other such work. Sometimes, he'd adjust the timing
settings for the lights at intersections according to what some traffic
engineer had figured out -- so the traffic would flow right. Joe loved
it cause it was 'real work' and it wasn't in an office or, heaven
forbid, a burger flipping grill, where the boss was always looking over
your shoulder. Joe says, 'They're just waiting for you to screw up so
they can ream you'. That was his attitude back then. Defensive. Guess I
can't blame him.
Mmm...good beer. Welp, ole Joe was doing
fine. Had become pretty much a go-to guy the Division of Highways -- got
sent all over this part of Nevada. Pay was good, especially for a
single guy that lived the way Joe did -- simple. He bought himself a
place out in the desert where property's real cheap. He saved up a lot
of money, too. Didn't have nothing to spend it on. Didn't date, not
hardly. About all he spent money on was his TV -- regular at first, back
in the day with rabbit ears and all, then cable, then what you call
high definition plasma. That, and and a constant supply of tall cans of
Budweiser. That's all he spent his money on. Like I said, 'simple'.
Well,
just when it looked like Joe might be getting on the right track he
suffers a set-back. Got caught driving on the job with a open container.
Now, I knew Joe would keep a few beers in his pack up under the seat
but, hell, I figured he'd never be so stupid as to drink one while
driving. I mean, I thought he was downing a couple with lunch, maybe on a
break. Not that that would make it right, I suppose. But, what was I
supposed to do? Turn him in? Hell no! Anyway, Joe's headed out to this
interstate interchange to install one of them traffic monitors -- you
know? The kind with that tubing that lays across the road and counts
every time a car goes by? Yeah, those. Welp. Joe's headed out and misses
a stop sign while making a right turn. Dumb. Cop pulls him over. Just
doing his job, really. Yep...cop smelled the beer, and all that cop had
to do was crane his neck a little and he saw that beer can wedged in
between Joe's hip and the center console.
Well, luckily, Joe
only had the one beer -- he had drunk the other two with lunch, but that
had been a few hours earlier. And, that's what saved him. He'd thrown
those two cans out and had just cracked the one he had left -- was a
Friday afternoon and he wanted to get started on the weekend before
returning his truck at five, which was just about half an hour or so.
Can't blame him, I guess -- I get me an early start right around five or
so, but it don't matter whether it's Friday cause I been retired for
some time! Mmm...
Anyway, Joe passes the, what are they
called? Those tests? The Field sobriety test. That's right. He passed it
-- easy. Said it weren't nothing. Nothing at all. All that leaning back
and touching the tip of your finger to the tip of your nose, and
whatnot. Hell, Joe prolly coulda passed one of them after four, maybe
even five tall Buds -- he's built up a immunity of sorts to alcohol over
the years. Guess I have, too, come to think of it -- truth be told. So,
Joe -- he passed the test so the cop couldn't write him up for no DUI,
especially since Joe had just cracked that last tall boy and there
weren't but one sip taken. Hell, the cop couldn't even have proved a sip
had been taken, so the cop, he just gives ole Joe a ticket and has him
pour the remainder of that beer out right there in the gutter. So, Joe's
pouring out that beer onto the hot pavement, and Joe says that dumb ass
cop says to him, honest truth -- 'If I see you take even one sip of
that beer I'm writing you up for DUI'. What the hell? Joe's pouring the
beer out into the gutter and he's supposed to take a sip of it. Joe
always says, when he tells the story -- and he told me a hundred times
if he told me once -- 'If I'd a leaned over and taken a sip of that damn
beer as I was pouring it into the gutter -- right in front of that cop
-- after he'd given me a ticket for having an open container -- I'd a
deserved a ticket for being a dumb ass!' Ain't that the truth. Can you
imagine? -- taking a sip of a beer that a cop done told you to pour out
-- while you're pouring it? I always agreed with Joe on that point: that
was one dumb ass thing for that cop to say. One dumb ass thing for
sure. Mmm...
Joe says he was so mad at himself because he'd
been driving his truck for thirty some-odd years, the whole time with a
sixer of tall cans of Bud under the seat, and not once had he even come
close to failing to come to a complete stop at a stop sign. Hell, Joe
says he was so mad at himself in the first place for not coming to a
complete stop at that stop sign, and, so mad at that cop in the second
place for saying such a dumb ass thing, that he (Joe that is) almost did
take a sip of that beer while he was pouring it out into the gutter
just to spite that stupid ass cop. Says he almost did lean over and take
a sip outta that stream of foamy beer coming outta that can before it
hit the gutter. Ha! Can you imagine?! Joe says it woulda been worth it
-- in a way. Always makes me laugh -- that part. Lean over and take a
sip from that stream of beer... Love the way Joe tells that part. Can't
help it, laugh each time. Can you imagine? Mmm...good beer.
Well,
I'll tell you who wasn't laughing -- that was Joe's boss, that's who.
Come that following Monday morning, Joe's supervisor finds out about the
ticket. Now, you can't drive a truck for the State Division of Highways
if you had a moving violation. You see? So, as soon as Joe's supervisor
gets the news he calls Joe into his office and tells him he's got a
choice: start splitting blacktop or leave. Well, somebody's got to do
it, Joe says. And with all the roads, there's always some stretch of
highway that needs them broken lines painted. That was the deal they
offered. Take it or leave it, they said. Nothing could be done. Hell,
Joe was lucky he was offered that much. If he'd gotten a DUI instead of a
plain ole ticket for a open container he wouldn't be able to drive
nothing for them Highway Boys. No, sir! But, there's a loophole...of
sorts: if you get a, what they call 'Class 1' infraction you can still
qualify to drive, or operate, certain types of vehicles or machinery,
but not a regular State truck. But, if you got a 'Class 2' or worse,
well, you can't drive nor operate nothing for the Division of Highways.
Welp, open container is a 'Class 1' infraction so, just because of that
and because Joe had been such a good employee, he got a second chance.
So, Joe decided to lay down them broken lines because he knew that, if
kept his record clean for a period of five years, he'd be eligible to
get his truck back.
And, that's how Joe ended up painting
them broken white lines (sometimes yellow lines) down the middle of
state highways in Nevada. One of the worst jobs in the whole Division.
But, what was he supposed to do? Couldn't say no. Besides, he figured he
could keep his nose clean for five years. Hell, any idiot could do
that, Joe says. And, that's what he decided he'd do.
He
didn't stop drinking on the job. Oh, no! He kept right on stashing tall
Buds under the seat just like always, and he kept right on drinking 'em
-- even while splitting that blacktop. Oh, yeah! He didn't care. He
said, 'Those damn line-painting rigs move so slow you couldn't hit a
damn thing if there was a cash prize for doing it'! Hell, I laugh at
that every time. Not, that I condone that sorta thing, mind you. Nope.
But, he had a point. See, they only gave Joe the 'out-of-the-way' jobs.
Out of populated areas. I mean, it weren't a secret that he enjoyed
himself quite a few beers. But, the Division couldn't prove anything,
and sure wasn't going to pull no surprise inspection to see if they
could find his stash. I mean, you just don't do that sorta thing. How
could you look a man in the eye if you did? I mean, it ain't like Joe
was selling drugs, or anything. Right? Plus, with him driving one of
them slow-ass line-painting rigs in the middle of nowhere, nobody really
cared anyway. So, the Division, they was happy just giving ole Joe
assignments out in the desert, where he couldn't possibly hurt nobody --
and, he couldn't -- not out there. Between crawling along at fifteen
miles an hour -- that's how fast those rigs can go with the rollers down
painting them lines -- and working roads that was out in the desert
where, sometimes, you don't see another car all day, sometimes for a
coupla days! Yeah! There's some roads out here that don't get used
sometimes for two days and nights! Well, Joe wasn't likely to have
another infraction, if you see what I mean.
And, that's how
it went for a few years -- I'd say at least four years, or so. Until a
coupla years ago -- when 'The Incident' happened. And, here's what
happened. One day, Joe gets this assignment way out -- way out in the
middle of no damn where. He and his driver head out early in the morning
-- it takes two people minimum to split a blacktop. See, one guy, Joe's
partner (I forget his name) drives the truck which is towing the
trailer that's carrying the line-painting rig out to the location, and
the other guy, Joe in this case, he's the one that actually paints them
lines with that rig. So, Joe's partner drives them both out to the
starting point and Joe backs that rig off the trailer and then Joe's
partner drives the truck and the trailer off -- with the understanding
that he'd pick ole Joe up at the end of the line and take the whole kit
and kaboodle back to the shop at the end of the day.
So, they
get out there -- State Route 375 was the job site that day -- and, Joe
takes his pack with his lunch (which was a bag of Ruffles barbecue
potato chips) and his sixer of tall cans of Bud, and he fires up the
line-painting rig and backs it off the end of that trailer and his
driver waves and leaves. So, now Joe's out there all alone -- which he
liked just fine.
Now, it's important you understand, SR 375
ain't just any stretch of road. Naw! No, sir. First of all there ain't
nothing out there. That highway runs from Crystal Springs up north to
Warm Springs (down south). Just almost exactly one hundred miles through
the flattest, most barren desert in Nevada. And...it also happens to
run right past a part of that secret government installation, Area 51.
That's right! Right past where they say they got all them aliens and
their spaceships. Same place. The 'Extraterrestrial Highway' is what us
locals call SR 375. And, we call it that cause there's been lots of
strange stuff seen out thata way. Lots. Lights in the sky, some say.
Some say they seen ships in the sky, like big silver metal cigars,
zooming by real low, not making a sound, then just turning in a way no
plane can turn and flying away. Zoom! Gone in a coupla seconds. Yep!
That's what folks say. Sure, some are old coots like me -- booze hounds
that live way out away from people, prolly a little crazy. Not that I'm
crazy, mind you, but I sure am a old coot, that's for sure. But, some
people that say they seen strange stuff out there on that highway,
they're regular folks -- young, college educated, city folk, people you
could believe when they say they saw something. I guess that don't prove
nothing, anyhow. But, that's what people say.
Anyway, Joe
hated that stretch of SR 375 because it went past that secret base --
Area 51. If he had known he was gonna paint lines out there that day he
might have called in sick and let some other schlub do it. See, Joe's
real superstitious. He don't like black cats, the number thirteen, any
of that stuff. And, not only is he superstitious, hell, he even claimed
to have heard strange howls at night from time to time. Out near his
house -- he lives right out in the desert, like I said. Says them sounds
ain't right -- natural. Well, there's a lotta creatures out there,
coyotes mostly, I says to him. 'These ain't no coyotes', Joe say, making
sure I can see that he means what he's saying. Well, I just let it go.
Hell, I figured he was just yammering on. That is, until one day I went
out to his place for a few burgers and beers -- we do that maybe coupla
times a month -- and I seen this bunch of garlic up on the wall next to
the door -- Joe calls it a wreath. A whole bunch of it -- whole cloves
of garlic -- all bundled together in a big circle. He said he kept it
there so no supernatural beings could get in his house while he slept.
'No supernatural beings!', I says. Couldn't hardly believe my ears. Like
what? I ventured. He just shrugs. Well, I figured he meant like
vampires or werewolves or something so I says, 'Joe, there ain't no such
a thing out here -- nor anywhere for that matter', that's what I said.
Well, he just looked me right in the eye real level and calm but didn't
say anything. Back then, I kinda rolled my eyes, took a good swig of my
beer and asked about the burgers being done or not on the grill. Well
sir, that was the way I was -- back then. But, now, after the incident, I
ain't so sure. I had thought he might of been yammering on at one time,
but not so much since I seen how serious he took it, what with all that
garlic next to the door -- and not since I seen that video tape. No,
sir. I reckon just because I ain't seen nor experienced a thing ain't no
reason for me to judge too harshly those that say they have.
Mmm...that's
a good beer. Anyway, I guess I mentioned that video enough times I
ought to explain it some. See, Delores -- that was Joe's girl back in
high school, the one that married that fella she met in college -- she
and her husband, I don't know his name, sent Joe a video camera one year
for his birthday.
Well, at first, Joe had a mind to just throw that camera away, he
was so indignant at getting such a gift from Delores and her husband,
especially as they hadn't really been in touch much at all since she got
married. Why she sent Joe that camera I'll never know -- guess she was
trying to patch things up. Anyway, Joe had a mind to throw it out but
instead he got himself a better idea -- at least that's what he thought.
He was gonna make a video of a day at work -- that is, what he seen
painting lines all day -- from his point of view. Don't that beat all!
He told me that video would be so boring it would make Delores and her
husband feel...well, Joe didn't know, not exactly, but it seemed like a
good joke to him at the time. So, Joe took the video camera with him to
make his mind-numbing movie.
Well, as it happened, Joe's
birthday was right before the incident, just a coupla days before, and,
so, in a way it was real lucky for him that Delores and her husband sent
that camera when they did cause otherwise I don't reckon Joe woulda had
no camera, video nor otherwise, with him the day of the incident, and I
don't figure he woulda gotten no record of what happened to back up his
story. And, that woulda been a damn shame! -- as you'll see once I get
to the good part. If Joe hadn't had that video camera and made a movie
of what happened out there, well, I reckon he'd be pissing into the wind
if he tried to get anybody to believe him. Oh, I woulda humored him I
suppose, at least some, to be polite. But, hell, he couldn't get nobody
else to even listen -- all things considered.
Anyway, the
driver of the truck and trailer drops Joe and the line-painting rig off
right outside of Warm Springs where US 6 and the north end of SR 375
meet, and he says he'll pick Joe up outside Crystal Springs, where the
south end of 375 hits SR 318, and then he takes off, leaving Joe out
there all alone to paint them lines -- almost exactly one hundred miles
of them between Warm Springs and Crystal Springs -- all in one day, and
all by himself. Well, not counting a lunch, that's almost seven hours of
line-painting if you're doing fifteen miles an hour -- way I figure it.
Well, Joe don't mind. You might think he woulda seeing as he was such a
hot-head back them, but he don't. He had his barbecue Ruffles potato
chips and his tall Buds, and no boss looking over his shoulder, and
so...he's a happy camper. He goes to work.
So, there's ole
Joe, driving that rig, laying down those broken white lines -- well, I
guess the line-painting rig is doing all the work, but Joe's keeps her
centered nice. And, every now and then he'd have a coupla chips and wipe
the orangey powder -- you know -- on the leg of his cover-alls. (You
could always tell what flavor of chip Joe had for lunch) -- if his
cover-all leg was just greasy it had been plain potato chips, but if the
cover-all leg was all orangey and greasy, it had been barbecue chips
that day. 'Why use a napkin', Joe would say, 'when you got a perfectly
good pair of cover-alls to wipe your hands on'. Myself, I couldn't take
it -- having my pants all greasy and orangey like that all day --
especially out in the hot sun -- would make me uncomfortable. Mmm...good
beer. Anyway, Joe was driving that painter, painting them lines and
eating them chips, and he would wash it all down from time to time with a
swig of beer. Like I said, he was a happy camper.
Welp,
according to the Division of Highway's policy, once it gets to a certain
temperature, you got to stay hydrated. It's policy, don't bother
asking. If you don't drink enough water and you have a heat stroke or
something, they'll write you up with a disciplinary action -- all
official. Get enough of those and you might get your pay docked. Have
that happen a coupla times and you might get suspended. Like that. Don't
bother asking.
So, you got to drink a minimum amount of
water per hour -- according to policy. Anyway, as you prolly figured by
now, Joe ain't the kind to follow policy too close -- especially policy
that says something as 'stupid as "you got to drink water"' -- his
words, not mine. That and the fact he ain't gone a day without drinking
at least a sixer of Bud -- not for the last thirty, maybe forty years --
that's why Joe just ignores the policy and drinks beer all day. Hell,
he don't get drunk -- a little happy maybe, but not drunk. Plus, there
ain't nobody out there to run into anyway. Why, these roads out here --
you could watch 'em all day and not see a single car go by. Joe used to
say it was a damn waste of taxpayer's money to build roads out in the
middle of the desert in the first place, and it sure as hell added
insult to injury to pay someone to split 'em with broken white lines
once every ten years or so. 'Like people don't have sense enough to stay
on their side of the road unless it's split by them lines', Joe would
say. He used to get bent out of shape pretty bad about that. Of course,
Joe would get bent out of shape pretty bad over most anything back then
-- not so much now, after the incident. But, back then he did. Yessir!
Mmm...good.
So, Joe's splitting that lonely stretch of two-lane road, not twenty
miles from where we are now, and he's gone maybe a quarter-mile when he
comes up to 'The Fence'. Now, everybody around here knows what The Fence
is. It's a double fence really: two ten-foot high hurricane fences,
each one topped with razor-wire. And, them fences are watched by cameras
placed every coupla hundred yards or so. It's the fence that goes
around Area 51 -- all the way around. Real ominous looking, like what
you might expect to see at a prison or something.
And, as if
that fence wasn't scary enough they got these signs. Every coupla
hundred yards or so there's a big yellow sign with black print. 'KEEP
OUT. NO TRESPASSING. VIOLATORS WILL BE PROSECUTED TO THE FULL EXTENT OF
THE LAW'. Yeah! I know. Not too subtle. Joe and me, we always joked the
signs read: 'Tress passers will be violated'. I know, it's a dumb joke
-- play on words. But, it goes with the territory seeing how all them
folks claimed they was abducted...and probed, and such on board them
spaceships. 'Tress passers will be violated' -- by space aliens. I
know...dumb. But, Joe and me -- we always laughed -- dumb though it may
be. Mmm...good. Good beer. This one's almost done. So, you make the
call. You think this here story's worth hearing more of? Yeah?! Well,
that's great. Bartender! Another round here.
Thank you much.
Mmm...love a fresh beer -- got more pop. I'm glad you're liking the
story so far. I know it gets off to kind of a slow start but it gets
going after a while. Mmm...good. Anyway, them 'no trespassing' signs...
Every damn coupla hundred yards -- the entire length of that fence.
Forty, maybe fifty miles along that stretch of SR 375. Joe was always
bothered by them signs. Said they affected him somehow -- gave him the
creeps. Joe says they reminded him of the secrecy of what they was doing
-- or supposedly doing -- in Area 51. Real hands-off stuff...supposedly
-- you know what I mean. Said they, each one of them signs, made him
think of aliens ships and autopsies. It seemed like, to Joe, every
coupla hundred yards there was a sign that said 'ALIEN BODIES INSIDE.
CRASHED ALIEN SPACESHIPS KEPT HERE. KEEP OUT'. And them signs keep
coming. As soon as the effect of the last one wears off, here come the
next. ALIENS IN HERE. STAY OUT! Over and over. Sorta like Chinese water
torture.
Not only that. It wasn't just the signs. It was the
surveillance cameras. You see, each one of them signs had a camera right
above it. Well, not just a camera, but one of those domes, you know? --
the kind with a round metal case and a dome of tinted glass over it?
The kind you see in department stores and such. Well, inside each one of
them domed cases there's three cameras. One facing either way and one
facing straight out at the road -- so they got all the angles covered.
Those cameras used to give ole Joe the heebie-jeebies. He said he hated
the effing government types watching him come and go. Said it wasn't any
of their business watching a public road. Of course, if you tried to
explain to him they wasn't watching the road, not really, they was
watching for people trying to get over that fence -- or whatever
criminal activity that might be going on -- Joe wouldn't have any of it.
'Fuck that' he'd say -- you'll excuse me -- his words. Well, I always
just let it go. Anyway, Joe says that every time he passed one of them
signs, he'd read it, even though it said the same thing as the last one
-- couldn't help himself, he said -- and that would make him think of
the little green men and the autopsies and spaceships and such, all over
again. And he'd look at the camera above the sign, watching him come
and go, and it seemed to him like he was going in slow-motion when what
he wanted to do was to speed up. Can you beat that?! He says, after
crawling past them signs and cameras for a few miles real slow on that
line-painting rig out there in the middle of nowhere in that heat, it
about made him lose it -- go a little nuts, you know? Me too -- makes me
laugh, too. Every time I think about it. Funniest thing. Mmm...
Welp,
anyway, Joe's crawling along and looking at each one of them signs and
cameras as he passes them, and sweltering in that hard black plastic
seat they got on them line-painters -- just like the ones in the back of
police cars, you know -- and he's broiling, and sweating, and drinking
tall cans of Bud to stay cool, not eating too many barbecue chips cause
it's too damn hot, so the pant leg of his cover-alls ain't too orangey
-- not yet. And it goes like that for a coupla hours -- take a sip of
beer, read a 'ALIEN IN HERE' sign and look at the camera go by in
slow-motion, getting all creeped out, then, as soon as he's passed the
sign he calms down a little (with the help of another sip of beer), then
he passes another sign and it starts up all over.
Well,
Joe's finishing up his second or maybe third tall can of suds when he
thinks he sees something up ahead in the blur zone. 'Blur zone' --
that's on the horizon on a hot day. See, the heat rising up from the
ground is so fierce you get those ripples -- you know. And, the sky is
so plain out here -- it's a real clear blue sky, not hazy like you get
in the city -- that when you mix the two you get nothing but blur. Just
sort of a wavy gray-blue. You can't see nothing but a blur. 'The Blur
Zone'. Starts up about ten in the morning, and keeps going till the sun
sets. And, it's worse if you're headed south -- which Joe was, toward
Crystal Springs you'll remember -- and you're looking into the glare of
the sun. So, all in all, Joe was having a hard time seeing what was up
the road.
Anyway, he sees something in that heat ripple maybe
four or five hundred yards on. Just a blob at first. Grayish-brown
sorta thing in the middle of the road. 'What the fuck' Joe says right
out loud. He used to do that -- cuss right out loud on account of he
didn't care what people thought or who he might offend. Don't do that no
more, though -- not since the incident. Anyway, Joe empties that beer
real quick, drinks it down, and crushes the can and stuffs it in his bag
up under the seat, you know, in case that blob up ahead is a State
Troller making random pull-overs. Joe sure as hell didn't need another
mark on his driving record. Anyway, after a bit he's getting closer and
now he can tell it ain't no car, regular or police, and it ain't no
accident neither. It's just some kind of lump, big one, right in the
middle of the black top. And that's when Joe's temper starts a boiling
over some. See...whatever the thing is, it's right in the middle of the
road. That means it's right where ole Joe is planning to paint them
lines. Get it? Yeah! Joe's gonna have to deal with the situation one way
or the other in order to get his day's work done. Oh, boy -- let me
tell you, that's the kind of thing Joe hates...well, hated -- he gets
along okay now. But, back then Joe had a pretty short fuse. Anything out
of the ordinary or anything that would cause him extra work would set
his clock to ticking.
Welp, anyway, just for a second, during
a break in the heat ripple, Joe thinks he sees what looks like a cow.
When he told me that the first time I just had to laugh. I mean...a cow?
In the middle of the road? Out in the desert? Mmm...good...good beer.
You got to admit that sounds pretty funny. Mmm... Well, anyway, Joe says
after just a second or two the heat ripples come up and again and since
he's looking south into all that glare all he can see is that blob
again, maybe a hundred-fifty yards up. Funny thing, though. As soon as
Joe thought he saw a cow his tempered got dialed way down. He wasn't
worried about no State Trollers nor accidents no more, and thinking it
was a cow was just such a funny thing it put him in a pretty good mood
again, so he just gets him another beer out of his pack under the seat,
pops it, and gulps back a good swallow. Right about then, Joe lifts them
rollers -- they're what apply the paint to the road, you know -- and he
puts that rig into normal driving gear, and gives her some gas -- gets
up to about thirty, I guess -- so he can get up there and see what kind
of predicament he had to deal with.
Well, Joe gets up closer
and sure enough, it is a cow. He hadn't been seeing things after all.
Right there in the middle of the effing road. A big dead, bloated cow.
II
Well,
how are you liking it so far? The story, that is. Well, good. I'm glad.
Then you figure another round is in order? Well, good! I thank you.
Bartender! Two more, please.
I'll tell you. Truth be told, I
enjoy telling this here story so much, I'd prolly keep on telling it
even if you didn't buy another round. Here comes our beers. Mmm...good.
Love a frosty one. Thank you bartender, and thank you too, mister.
Mmm...
Well, Anyway. Where was we? Oh, Yeah. So, Joe's
sitting there about fifty feet or so from that dead cow just a staring,
wondering what to do. Well, he cuts the engine of that line-painting rig
and listens to that heavy silence -- the kind you get out in the desert
-- for a bit to clear his head.
What a sight. That carcass in the
middle of the road -- weirdest thing I ever saw -- I mean Joe ever saw
-- sometimes, I feel like the story happened to me -- Joe tells it so
good. He's told me a hundred times if he told me once -- I just feel
like it coulda happened to me, is all. Anyway, Joe can't hardly believe
his eyes. Blinks a few times like that might help -- make that cow up
and go away, like a desert mirage or something. But, it don't go away.
Stays right there in the middle of the road -- a big dead, bloated,
full-grown bessy cow. Been dead at least one full day from the look,
maybe two.
Well, ole Joe, he takes him a coupla sips of that
Budweiser, and he realizes he can't do nothing about it. Can't move it
-- didn't have a length of rope. Plus, even if he did have some rope, he
wouldn't move it. That is -- Joe ain't the type to put forth that kind
of effort. Besides, policy says you can't do stuff like that. Yep. If it
ain't in your job-description and you ain't been trained and approved
to do it, you don't do it. According to policy. Can't. Plus, they got
people trained to do that sort of stuff, removing dead animals in a safe
manner. Official State people with vans and trucks and special tools.
Hell, let them do it! Anyhow, Joe ain't about to try to move no damn
cow. Thing must weigh two-thousand pounds, stink like hell, and, and!,
be a host to all kind of germs and viruses just crawling around inside
waiting to get inside you, make you sick. Naw. Joe just sits there a
tick or two -- figures he'll take himself a break on the clock -- drink
some beer.
Prolly a mistake, if you ask me. Cause, before you know it Joe's
killed half that tall can of Budweiser. Well, he'd already had two,
maybe three (he never can remember when he tells it), and, even if he
didn't want to admit it, the heat was fierce and you can get dried out
real fast. And, drinking beer don't count cause it just dehydrates you
faster -- most people don't know that about beer. Joe hadn't had any
water that day. No sir, not a drop -- not since breakfast. Normally, it
wouldn't mean anything cause, usually, you go for a burger or something
at lunch and you have yourself a glass or two of water, or at least a
Coke or something. But, out there in the desert there ain't no burger
joints, not on that stretch of SR 375 there ain't, and, sure enough Joe
was a bit dehydrated.
Well, most city folk don't have to deal
with it, but folks out in these parts know when you get dehydrated your
judgement gets funny -- gets harder to make decisions, at least good
ones. Sometimes you get tipsy, too -- have balance issues (which of
course would be worse if you was already tipsy from drinking). And, (and
this is important), you get skittish -- paranoid -- about almost
anything. Don't know why, just goes with it. Well, Joe had to admit, he
was showing a little bit of all them symptoms. Said he was feeling
woozy, was having trouble thinking, and, well, he was getting spooked
again. 'Freaked out', like the kids say. So, bottom line was, Joe was a
bit looped on those beers, had a good case of the heebie-jeebies, and
was just plain dried out -- needed water. And all that's made worse by
the fact that Joe had stopped that line-painting rig of his directly in
front of one of them signs and one of them surveillance cameras. Right,
directly in front. 'ALIENS IN HERE! SCARY STUFF INSIDE! DON'T YOU DARE
COME IN! DON'T MAKE US ZAP YOU! OH, AND WE'RE WATCHING EVERY MOVE YOU
MAKE WITH THESE HERE CAMERAS'! Sheesh. Put Joe in a state.
Well, anyway. Joe's trying to choke back the skitters and feeling
dumb about it. He's already decided he ain't going to do anything about
that cow, per se, but now he's wondering what to do in general. Just sit
there? Turn around? Call it in? That's when he looks, can't help
himself -- one more time -- at that sign, 'ALIENS IN HERE'... Then up at
the camera right above it -- like a big bug's eye watching him. That
decided it for him. Without taking his eyes off that sign Joe reaches
for the radio mic and keys it. Figured he'd call it in -- which is
proper procedure -- but, it also gives Joe a chance to talk to another
human being and tell 'em what he'd seen -- which he was feeling the need
to do about that time.
Well, Joe keys the mic, and lo and
behold, there ain't no answer. Just static. Now, this gets him sorta
panicky. He tries again, and again -- nothing, just static. Then he
thinks he hears MaryAnn's voice -- MaryAnn, she's the girl that runs the
dispatch desk for the Division of Highways -- Joe thinks he hears her
voice, just for a second, but he can't be sure cause it's so weak and
weird sounding -- what Joe calls 'distorted'. Well, you can imagine.
Joe's already jumpy about them signs and cameras, and the big double
fence with razor-wire -- not to mention that damn dead cow -- he's
already so worked up about them things that when he couldn't reach
nobody on the radio it just about pushed him over the edge! Yessir, it
did! And, not only that, but hearing, or barely hearing, what he thought
was MaryAnn's voice real faint on the radio made it worse! He says that
-- every time he tells it -- Joe says the same thing: 'It woulda scared
me less if I hadn't heard MaryAnn's voice all distorted and broken up'
-- that's what he says...every time. Yep, as if hearing nothing at all
woulda been better.
So, now Joe has to admit it -- he's a
little drunk, a little scared, and more than a little dehydrated. So,
level-headed kinda guy he is he figures there's one solution to all his
problems -- water. So, he gets his water bottle out and drinks half of
it right down -- which ain't a smart thing if you're dried out, but he
does it. Well, in just a few seconds his eyes get wet again and he can
see better, his stomach unclenches, the wooziness goes away -- he just
plain feels better. Said it cleared his head pretty good -- he felt like
he could deal with the situation.
So, Joe gets out of his vehicle and starts to walk toward the cow.
But, then he stops when he remembers the video camera -- the one Delores
and her husband gave him for his birthday a coupla days earlier -- the
one he was going to use to shoot that long boring movie of the two-lane
unspooling in front of him. He always tells me the same thing right
about here -- he always says he was glad to have that damn video camera
-- even though he felt it was a lousy gift and he pretty much disdained
Delores and her college-educated husband for giving it to him. That's a
funny thing, you know -- how you can feel happy and angry about a thing
at the same time. Anyway, Joe was glad to have that camera -- figured
he'd have a hard time getting anybody to believe such a crazy story if
he didn't have pictures to prove it. Says folks might just laugh at him.
So,
Joe goes back to the rig and gets the camera. Well, he ain't no Steven
Spielberg, but he was able to get that thing working. (All he had to do
was press 'record'). So, it's going and Joe's looking at the little TV
on the back of the camera at a shot of his dirty work boots. He pans up
and points the camera at the cow. Then, he stops it and replays the
video, you know, to make sure it's working. Then, he says something
funny. And, this part always gives me the creeps. Every time, even
though I know it's coming. Joe says the camera worked fine -- the
picture looked just fine -- and when he looked at those few seconds of
video of that dead cow it was scarier than any horror movie he ever saw.
That's what he says! He says he looked at that cow on the little TV on
the back of the camera like he was expecting it -- the cow, that is --
to move, turn and look at him, or just get up and walk away. And it was
the fact that it was on video that made it worse. Not what you'd expect
-- Joe said he could look right at that cow with his own eyes and not be
so affected, not be so scared of it. But, he says that when he looked
at the video of it, well, there was just something about that picture
that made it scarier than the real thing. Yessir!
Now, if you
never saw a dead beast, I mean one that's died out where the sun's hot,
then you might not know what they look like and, well, this next part
might gross you out a bit. See, when a animal dies out in the desert the
gasses start building up and it bloats up -- real big, sometimes so
much you'd think it's a gonna pop. After a day or two it looks like
someone stuck a air hose in it and blowed it up -- sorta like one of
them big balloons shaped like cute animals and cartoon characters in
that parade they got every year in New York City. Sorta like that. But,
the real thing, laying next to the road, ain't funny -- it's just gross.
The legs, see...they spread -- wide -- from the bloating. It's, um...a
bit obscene, if you ask me. And the skin is stretched tight -- real
tight -- from all the gasses built up inside. Like it might bust any
second. Nasty.
Joe says he remembers that puffed up dead cow
like it was yesterday -- it was laying there with its hind legs --
spread wide from the bloating -- they were on Joe's left, you see. And
the front legs -- also spread wide -- they was on Joe's right. And the
cow's belly was facing him. He couldn't see the face nor even the head
cause of the angle the neck was twisted at.
Anyway, Joe
buckles down and gets his mind under control. Takes a few deep breaths.
Then, he starts shooting video again now that he's sure he can work the
camera right. Starts walking toward the cow -- like I said it was maybe
fifty feet away from where he stopped the line-painting rig. Well, he
don't have to walk more than a few seconds before he smells it. Whew!
Nasty -- hell, that kinda stench almost gives the word a whole new
meaning. I've smelled it a coupla times -- once was a horse that got hit
by a eighteen-wheeler, other time it was a just a dog -- but both times
that meat had been laying out in the sun for a coupla days -- yessir! I
know how fierce bad a smell it is. A ton of fetid cow...
Mmm...good
beer. Still cold. Anyway, Joe says he liked to gag on that smell. Had
to stop and get used to it a bit -- breathe through his mouth some.
Then, he gets this unusual notion -- unusual, but I'll be damned if it
didn't make sense. Joe figured that if he took some really big whiffs of
that smell, his nose would get used to it, and that way he could get
closer for some better video. (Why the hell he wanted to get closer I'll
never know, but he was driven by something, that's for sure). So, Joe
just stands there -- he's maybe twenty feet away now -- and he starts
taking real deep breaths through his nose. In and out, in and out. Said
it worked! Didn't smell as bad. Said his nose musta got used to it some.
Can you beat that? Then he moves closer -- maybe six, or, ten feet
closer -- now, he's right on top of the thing practically, and he
commences to taking even deeper breaths through his nose -- to acclimate
it to the stench -- which is quite a bit stronger now. Well, Joe says
it worked pretty good. Not great -- that cow still smelled like a
dumpster full of month-old hamburger on a summer day -- but, Joe says he
didn't feel quite as sick -- not no more -- and he didn't mind the
smell as much.
Well, now, this next part you're gonna think is just something a
coupla old codgers got together and made up over a few bottles of suds,
but, there's proof -- that video. Like I said. And, if you want to you
can see it I'll tell you where you can find it on the internet -- If
you're interested, that is. Anyway, here's what happened next. Now that
Joe's up good and close and can get a better angle on that cow, he
starts that video camera going again. Well, Joe always gets a little
embarrassed about this next part, but, he decided maybe there wasn't
enough information on that video for anyone who might be watching, later
that is, to fully understand what was going on. So, he turns around and
shoots some footage of his line-painting rig and the road back thata
way, then he turns and points the camera out at the desert -- ain't a
damn thing out there -- then, he turns all the way around and points it
at that double fence and razor wire on top of it, then he points the
camera at the sign on the fence, and then he zoomed in close so you
could read it good, then he gets a shot of the surveillance cameras.
Then, he points that camera right back at the cow so now you got a good
idea of the setting. Joe calls it his 'Master Shot' -- I don't know for
sure what that means but Joe said it put a smile on his face. But then,
it occurred to Joe that he was missing a shot of the sky, so he pans up
and shoots that beautiful clear blue sky, and it dawns on him that
something's missing. Joe takes his eyes off that little TV and looks at
the sky -- crystal clear and empty as can be. And, that's what strikes
him as wrong. He realizes there ain't no buzzards. He says that's when
his smile went away.
I can see you don't get it. Lemme explain. See, you can't, and I
mean can't, have a dead thing out in the desert without having every
vulture for miles come swooping in for a meal. See? There ain't no food
to spare out here and survival of the fittest is the hard rule, and the
fittest don't miss a meal -- not for any reason. Now, them buzzards can
see for miles -- ten, maybe even twenty. They'll see a dead rat off a
coupla miles no problem -- I've seen 'em come in outta nowhere and pick
at a dead rat or a dead rabbit, or whatever. Seen it myself. And, it
ain't but a coupla minutes before a more join in the meal. And, that's
with something small -- there ain't no way, out here where the air's so
clear, that a buzzard could fail to spot a dead cow, especially one
that's laying out in plain sight in the middle of a two-lane road. No
way in hell. No sir.
Now, Joe knew this, and the sight of that clear beautiful sky sent
chills down his spine. It was just too weird. Well, by now, Joe's
journalistic instincts were getting pretty good so he figures he should
get a shot of the entire sky, so he pans the camera from horizon to
horizon. There ain't not even one buzzard circling. Not one. Totally
empty sky from one side to the other. Now, at first Joe is just
perplexed. Why in the hell wouldn't there be any buzzards circling this
cow waiting for him, Joe that is, to get outta there so they can go back
to feeding on it? Then, he takes a better look at the carcass, now that
he's only a few feet away from it, and he notices it ain't been picked
at by buzzards. Not at all. The skin is stretched tight, and it ain't
been pecked.
That's when poor ole Joe goes from being
perplexed to outright befuddled. Now, it's already noonish, or
thereabouts, and them birds shoulda been eating on that cow all morning,
and probably woulda been eating on it the previous day. Hell, there
shoulda been most of the buzzards in this part of the state fighting for
their share of that flesh. But, weren't none. Anyway, the point is,
between vultures during the day, coyotes at night, and every kind of
beetle, bug, worm, and fly in the meantime, that cow shoulda been
stripped down to the bone. But, it weren't. Weren't even touched. No,
sir!
That's when curiosity got the best of Joe and he went
around to the front end of ole bessy and looked at her head -- her face.
Well, damn if that cow still had both its eyes. The eyes hadn't been
pecked out. Not only that, they was open and staring at Joe, and they
had this terrified look. That cow was mighty frightened right as it
died. Yessir. Chilled poor Joe to the bone to look into them. Now, the
eyes -- it ain't so much the expression in 'em that's important -- a lot
of animals will have a scared look when you find them dead. The thing
about the eyes that's important is they is what buzzards will go for
first. Usually, it's the dominant alpha-type that'll have dibs on the
eyes. He'll peck them right out and gobble 'em down while the other
buzzard keep their distance and watch -- or maybe go around the other
side and settle for some other part. Don't know what's so special about
eyes, but a dead animal usually loses them first thing. Nothing's
missing from that cow's face. It's the same as the day it was born. That
bessy had a face as pretty as a bloated ole dead cow's face can be.
Well,
about this time Joe's mind is all a swirl and he can't make heads nor
tails of the situation. But, he's still got enough sense about him to
make another observation about that carcass. There weren't no flies.
Yep. Not a one. No flies, fleas, flesh eating beetles, nor grubs a
burrowing -- nothing. And that's when poor ole Joe has to wonder if he's
seeing things. See, maybe, somehow, you might could keep a dead cow a
secret from buzzards -- who knows...maybe if the wind's blowing just
right. But, there ain't no way you can keep such a thing from insects.
Why, you so much as spit in the desert and before you know it there's
flies and bugs a drinking up it up. Just nature's way. And, Joe was
about losing his wits wondering about the strangeness of it -- 'how
something can be dead out here in the desert without Mother Nature
finishing the process' -- when it dawns on him that there's only one
thing that can keep them buzzards and the flies and insects away --
radiation. Yessir! That's what Joe figures.
Well, you can
imagine how that made his blood run cold. It scared Joe more than any
other thing that had happened. He starts wondering how much of a dose of
atomic poisoning he might already have soaked up and whether it was too
late to get medical help and whether he might die a gory death, all
coughing and spitting with tubes coming out his body every which way,
and nothing the doctors can do. Well, he was just about green in the
gills, when reason kicked in and saved the day. Joe figured, what the
hell, a buzzard can't tell if something is radioactive or not. All a
buzzard cares about is whether a thing's dead -- and if it stinks a bit,
that's prolly fine too. So, if the cow was radioactive the buzzards
still shoulda pecked at it. They might have died themselves from eating
poisoned meat, but they woulda gnawed on that cow. Well, no buzzards had
gnawed on it. So, Joe figured that cow wasn't radioactive after all.
No, sir! And, that surely came as a relief.
Mmm...good beer.
Well, Joe stops the camera and he walks around the carcass until he's
back where he started -- at its belly. He just stands there. Still
perplexed as to what killed that cow. So, he figures he'll look around
for clues. No broken glass -- like from a car's windshield after a crash
-- no skid marks, no footprints. Just weren't any indication as to what
might have happened or how that cow had come to be there. Joe turns the
video camera off and turns around and looks back at his line-painting
rig. He was starting to formulate the opinion that, if he couldn't reach
MaryAnn on the radio, he might as well start thinking about driving
that rig around that cow and painting them lines on the other side of it
and head on to Crystal Springs and meet up with his partner for a ride
back to the station. (Figured he'd just skip lunch considering how much
time the incident had already cost him).
Well, ole Joe had
just about decided that was what he was going to do when he heard this
sound -- from behind him, coming from that dead cow. Lemme take a little
break here and get a coupla swigs in me. Mmm... Sorry, but this
part...I can't help it, it just gets me. Like one of them old black and
white creep shows that come on TV real late when I was a kid. Mmm...
Used to scare the hell outta me. Mmm... So, there's this sound and Joe
doesn't whirl around like most folks would. Naw. See, Joe's a pretty
good hunter and all hunters know that you don't make any sudden moves
when you hear something, so Joe just stands there real still, facing his
rig -- his back to that cow, and he listens. It's a strange sorta ugly
sound, like a slick, wet thing being dragged or picked up -- like a rag
in Jello, or something. Well, Joe turns around real slow and looks at
that cow and there ain't nothing changed. Now, Joe's looking right at
the cow and he hears the sound again -- slick and wet -- except this
time there's another sound -- more of a slurping sound, like maybe a dog
drinking water, or someone taking a long draw on a slurpy or slushy
that's just about empty, you know.
Well, Joe figures it must
be gas -- from the decomposition -- moving around inside that cow that
was making the noise. A simple, if gross, explanation. So, Joe's pretty
amused, and he's listening for the next of them slurpy sounds -- like a
kid waiting to hear a fart -- when he says he sees something move inside
that cow's belly. Or, he thought he did. Damnedest thing. Well, he
waits, and after a few seconds he sees it again -- a protrusion or bump,
Joe says, moving from one side of that cow's belly to the other. You
could see it -- like someone moving the end of a baseball bat back and
forth inside that cow's belly. Joe says he couldn't help himself, he
just jumps back about two or three feet and has to clamp his mouth to
keep from yelping. Well, shit. I don't blame him. I'd be freaked out,
too. Wouldn't you? I mean, can you imagine? Some...thing moving inside
the stomach of a dead cow? That would make most people jump, I reckon.
Well,
Joe gets his mental focus back (by now he's been in so many weird
situations and figured out a explanation for all of them...well, he's a
pro by this time). Joe gets his mind focused and he figures out what it
was. A Gila monster. Sure! (Uh, 'Gila' is spelled with a G but
pronounced 'Heela'). Gila monster. Ugly lizard that lives in the desert.
Poisonous, but real slow moving so you don't have to worry about being
bitten by one unless you're dumb enough to pick it up. Anyway, cause the
Gila monster is so slow its diet's mainly made up of eggs. They got
such a good sense of smell the can find eggs whether they're buried in a
burrow under ground, or in a nest up in a cactus. Well, also because
it's so slow, the Gila lizard don't chase after prey -- couldn't never
catch its dinner! But, they will feed on carrion. Almost anything as
long as it's dead and, therefore, not running away. Anyway, that's what
ole Joe figured it had to be -- a Gila monster swishing around inside
that cow just a gorging itself on all that flesh.
That's all
it was. Had to be. Another mystery solved, or so Joe thought. But, then
Joe gets to thinking: 'How come there ain't no buzzards or even flies,
but there's a Gila monster feeding off this cow'? When he first told me
that, that he had wondered about that, I have to admit I was impressed.
Real impressed. Hell, by that part of the story I had done forgot about
the lack of buzzards and flies. But, Joe had thought of it despite
everything. I was surely impressed.
Mmm...good beer. Anyway,
that made a lot of sense -- why in the hell was there a Gila monster
rooting around inside that cow when there weren't no buzzards nor flies?
And, just about then that protrusion, or bump, goes sliding by from one
side of that cow's belly to the other. Well, Joe doesn't miss a beat.
He figures the incident is just too weird and titillating for him to
leave anything to chance, so he fires up that video camera again and
starts taping so he can prove his story is true.
So, Joe's
video-taping that protrusion move back and forth again and again inside
the tight skin of that cow's bloated stomach when he has another
revelation. He figures maybe it ain't a Gila monster inside that cow.
Yessir! It ain't and Joe knows why: a Gila monster wouldn't scare off
buzzards, and it couldn't scare off flies, so -- it ain't no Gila
monster inside that cow.
The first time I heard that it
knocked me back on my heels, I can tell you that. Can't lie. What the
hell could do that? What could scare buzzards and flies off? Mmm...good
beer.
And, just then Joe sees that protrusion go back and
forth again, but this time there was a sound -- a new sound -- that
accompanied it. Joe says it was a sort of squeak, or squeal -- real
high-pitched like a pig or a bird. And, just then that protrusion
stopped moving -- it was still making the skin of that cow's stomach
stick out, but it wasn't moving. Just stopped, right in the middle of
the belly, pointing right at Joe. Then, there was this high-pitched
squealing again, except now there was another sound on top of the squeal
-- a click. Click, click, click. The squealing and the clicking was
going at the same time, real rhythmic -- like a clock ticking. Squeal,
tick, squeal, click. Over and over.
Well, Joe had stepped
back without even knowing it. He was still video taping, recording both
the picture and the sound, but he had stepped back a few feet. Just
then, the noise stopped -- both the squeal and the clicking. And, then,
that's when the protrusion sorta went away a little -- not all the way,
but most of the way. Now, Joe, he knows -- he can tell -- something's
about to happen. So, he stands there shooting video as best he can --
he's holding that camera as still as he can even though he's kinda
nervous and his hands were shaking a bit. And then, there's a rumble, or
a growling sort of snort come from inside that cow. And, Joe, he says
he was about to run, that snorting sounded so strange and threatening --
like a warning. And, just when you figure it couldn't get no worse,
that protrusion sticks out, way out -- like someone inside sticking the
end of a baseball bat against the inside of that cow's stomach as hard
as they can. Joe said that skin of the cow's belly stuck out maybe a
foot.
Joe says he was almost sick at the sight -- and the
sounds. That protrusion pushing that dead cow's taught skin so far out
it might pop any second, and that sound -- that growl, and that
snorting. And it seemed that whatever was in there was had eaten its
fill and was ready to come out.
Joe says he didn't know what
to do -- puke or run. Well, he didn't do neither, even though he felt
like doing both. He stood there and watched and video taped what was
happening. And, it's right about here, when Joe gets to this same spot
in the story, every time, that he looks me in the eye real steady and
says, "That's when I knew for sure there weren't no buzzards nor flies
because of what was crawling around inside that dead cow. And, whatever
it was, it was about to come outta there."
III
What's
that? You gotta have another before we go on? I could use another,
myself. Bartender! One more round, over here if you please. I know what
you mean. Yessir! The story gets pretty exciting along about now. And, a
good story always goes better with a cold brew, I always found. Just
ain't right listening to a good story, or watching a movie, or some such
thing, without a tall glass of beer. Well, I guess most prefer popcorn
or something like that, but I like beer. Here they are --
cheers...Mmm...that's nice. Getting on to the ending. Lemme get right
back to it.
Well, now. Where was we? Oh, yeah... The way Joe
tells it that protrusion was sticking way out -- like a tent pole --
like whatever it was inside that cow was fixing to come outta there.
And, there was that growly snorting sound -- like a dog growling and a
pig snorting mashed into one sound. Joe was about beside himself he was
so disturbed by it all, but, he kept right on shooting that video --
even though he could barely keep the camera still enough so's you could
see what's what. Oh, I seen the video -- it's shaky but you can still
tell what's going on all right.
Welp, anyway, that protrusion
recedes a bit and the growly snorting sound goes away, too. Joe was
thinking maybe nothing was going to happen after all -- maybe the whole
episode was over. And, right then, the protrusion -- it sticks out
again, except this time it ain't like the thick end of a baseball bat.
No, sir! Not no more! Now, that protrusion is pointed -- sharp. It's
making a sharp peak in the hide of the cow's belly. Sticks out further
and further. Joe was just waiting for the skin to pop. Well, sure
enough, that point sticks out a few more inches when the tip of it
breaks through the skin. Well, at first nothing much happens -- there's
just this shiny metal-looking point sticking out of that cow's bloated
stomach. Then, a bit more of it comes out, and Joe can see from the look
of it, that it's some sorta blade -- like on a sword or something.
Said, the realization of it made him catch his breath. And, that blade
starts cutting that cow's stomach from one side to the other.
Well,
that blade don't cut but a coupla inches -- from left to right -- when
all that gas that's inside that cow that was built up from the
decomposition, you know -- that gas starts coming out. It made a nasty
sound -- like a long wet fart -- and Joe smelled it right off. Says it
was one of the worst, most foul smells he ever smelt. There was also
some intestine and pieces of flesh and whatnot that sprayed out from
that hole, and some of it splattered on his boots. Joe says he had to
pinch off his breathing and jump back real quick, stumble, several
steps. Almost lost his balance and fell, he says, the smell was so bad.
Well, he's a gasping for air and kicking the bits of goo off his boots,
and he wipes the tears from his eyes. But he don't make any noise, you
know what I mean -- no need to let whatever it was with that sword know
he was there, not just yet.
You see, by now Joe knew, well he
figured at least, that what was going on weren't nothing normal, and in
fact -- there might be some danger involved. But, dangerous or not,
getting that video was prolly the most important thing he'd ever done,
or have the opportunity to do, in his whole life. So, despite that most
folks woulda run, Joe stayed.
Well, that metallic looking
blade -- it keeps cutting -- from one side of that cow's belly, all the
way over to the other. Real smooth and slow. Joe says it didn't saw
none, neither -- didn't move back and forth the way you might saw on a
piece of chicken, you know. Said that blade just sliced straight through
that skin without no sawing motion at all. Musta been pretty sharp.
Then, when the end of that blade got to the other side of that cow's
belly, it went back inside and it was gone.
Well, by now all
that gas that was causing the bloating had escaped through that big hole
in its belly and that cow had shrunk back to its normal size. Joe says
it was kinda shriveled up. Well, for a few seconds, nothing happened.
Joe's just standing there video taping that shriveled up cow, waiting.
Then he sees it -- a hand -- just like a person's hand except the
fingers were longer -- and -- there was only three of them plus a thumb.
It comes out of that slit and pulls back the skin to make the exit
bigger. Then, comes a foot -- with only three long toes -- which sticks
itself out of the cow, followed by a leg. And that foot sets itself down
onto the pavement.
Joe says the skin was real light colored,
sorta like 'milk mixed with black ink', he says. And, it was smooth,
and there weren't no hair, neither. Next comes a arm and shoulder outta
that cow. Then come the hips, and the rear end, the butt -- pointing
right at Joe -- and then the other leg and other arm. Then, last, came
its head -- big, bald, with holes in the sides where the ears should be.
Couldn't see the face -- he (or maybe she, or maybe it don't matter but
I'll call it a 'he'), he had its back to Joe. And, that little man
backed out of that cow and stood up. It looked almost the same as a
small person or child except its limbs were longer than ours, and the
fingers and toes were real long.
Well, it stood up straight
-- wasn't but maybe four, or, four-and-a-half feet tall. Little guy.
Skinny, too -- all skin and bones. He stretched his arms over his head
-- just like a lotta folks do when they wake up -- took a deep breath,
and, well, just stood there a few seconds. Didn't look around or
anything -- just stood there. Was real relaxed looking, calm. Joe says
he could hardly believe his eyes. But, he says, the nature of what he
was seeing was so extreme, well, it just sorta focused his mind. Numbed
him -- made it easier to keep shooting that video and not panic or
anything.
Then, that little man looked at his arm -- there
was a piece of something slimy -- some skin or guts or something from
inside the cow -- it was stuck on that man's arm. Well, he picks it off
with his long fingers and lifts it to his mouth, tilts his head back,
and drops it in! Yeah! Doesn't chew, just drops it in his mouth and
swallows. Just like that. Joe says his jaw like to hit the pavement. As
if that weren't bad enough, then that little man licked his fingertips
-- you know, like you do when you eat fried chicken or something and you
want to get all of it. Just like that. Joe says he was already feeling
nauseous, but now he had to choke back vomit. Well, he didn't mind
puking -- prolly woulda made him feel better, he says -- but he didn't
want to make no commotion and disturb things. He wanted to see what was
going to happen next. So, Joe just swallows it back down and keeps on
video taping.
Then, the little man sorta brushes the other
bits of that cow's innards off himself -- he didn't eat no more of it --
'thank the lord', Joe always says. And, then he reaches inside a fold
of his skin in his side, like where you'd expect his ribs to be. It
wasn't like the pocket of a shirt or jacket -- well, that little man
didn't appear to be wearing no clothes no how. He just seemed to reach
right into his body! Anyway, he reaches in and pulls out this little
case -- small, maybe the size of a deck of cards. He presses the surface
of it -- where there musta been controls or something -- he presses it a
few times with his fat fingertips, like he was putting in a PIN number
at a ATM, you know, and the lid of that case opened up. Then, that
little man squatted down and reached into that cow, through the slit he
had cut, and he pulls out a handful of goo, and he puts that handful of
goo inside that case and stands back up. Then, he presses the controls
and the case shuts again. Then, he puts that case right back inside the
fold of skin from where he got it. I figure that little man was getting a
sample, like a specimen, of that cow's insides -- you know -- to be
examined in a lab by scientists later on.
Then, the little
man looks up at the sky. He looks from side to side, and Joe's watching
wondering what the man is looking for. Joe says he looked up in the sky
but didn't see a thing. Then, the man, whilst still looking up in the
sky, turns around, looking front to back, like he's scanning the entire
sky for something. Well, Joe looks around too, careful to keep the
camera pointed at the man -- Joe says he looked all the way around one
side, then the other, and behind him, but didn't see a thing. So, he
turns back, and when he does the little man is looking right at him!
Well,
Joe says he was pretty surprised to be looking this strange little man
right in the eye. But, as surprised as Joe was, the little man looked
even more surprised. That man's eyes was as big as saucers, and his
mouth was in the shape of a big letter O. Joe says the man's mouth was
pitch black inside -- didn't seem to have no teeth or nothing else in
there for that matter -- pure black. And, his eyes, giant -- each one
about the size of an egg, almost the same shape, too. With a funny
powder blue color with what looked like a grayish milk floating around
in them. And, the color went all the way to the edges -- there weren't
no whites of this man's eyes. And, there weren't no nose, either. Nor
hair. He was just a little skinny naked bald guy with giant blue eyes,
holes for ears, and a mouth (that was currently in the shape of a letter
O). And, his body was pretty much the same as ours -- two arms, legs,
et cetera. Joe says there weren't no parts in the crotch nor elsewhere
from which you could tell whether it was a little male man, or if it was
a female...well, you know what I mean. There weren't no parts.
Well,
they -- Joe and the little guy -- they just stared at each other for a
coupla seconds -- neither one knew what to do. Joe just kept on taping.
Said he wasn't nearly as scared as before, not since he seen the guy eye
to eye. Said he, somehow, looked like a intelligent and calm sort of
fella -- somehow. Anyway, he didn't seem like he meant Joe no harm. And
the fella didn't seem scared of Joe (he had gotten over the shock of
seeing Joe and his eyes weren't so big and his mouth wasn't in the shape
of a O no more).
Right then, the little guy raises his hand
and faces the palm toward Joe -- like this. Well, obviously he was
waving so Joe raises his hand -- not the one with the camera -- and
waves at the little guy. Then, the little feller smiles. And, well, Joe
smiles right back. Then, he makes this clicking sound, just like what
Joe had heard earlier. 'Clickity, tickity, click', Joe says it sounded
like. Just like that. Well...hell -- Joe didn't have much choice -- that
man musta been saying something and it musta been some kind of
greeting, so Joe says, "Howdy." Then Joe points to himself and says, "My
name's Joe." Well, when that little man heard that his eyes got all big
again and he smiles even bigger, and he point to himself and makes more
clicking sounds. Well, Joe took that to be the little guy introducing
himself and he just couldn't help it, he chuckles a bit. "Well, pleased
to meet you," Joe says, chuckling.
And, then the little guy,
he makes this sorta chirping sound. Little short tweets like a bird
might make -- over and over. To Joe, it sounded sorta like a laugh.
Well, hearing that made Joe go from chuckling to laughing, don't you
know. And, when the little man heard Joe laughing he starts a chirping
even more -- faster, and this time with a kind of trill added on. He had
a twinkle in his eye and had tilted his head back. Joe laughed harder, a
real belly laugh -- said it was the funniest thing. And, there they
were -- laughing at each other, each one waving their hand. Laughing and
waving, waving and laughing. Right out there in the middle of the
desert, in the middle of State Route 375. Lord, every time Joe tells
it...I just laugh till I can't see for the tears -- just about like we
both are now! Oh, lord! Mmm... That is funny!
Well, this goes
on for a bit, then they both settle down and lower their hands and stop
laughing, and just look at each other again. Then, the little guy, he
looks at that dead cow, then looks back at Joe with a sort of guilty
expression on his face -- like the cat that ate the bird. Then, he
shrugs. Joe says it looked for all the world as if that little guy was
embarrassed or ashamed that he was inside that cow a eating it. Well,
hell, Joe didn't mind -- to each his own. "I like a good burger myself
-- only mine are usually cooked on a grill and they ain't rotten -- but
that don't matter," Joe always says. Yep, folks is different.
Anyway,
right about then the little guy looks up over the top of them double
fences -- the ones with the signs and razor-wire, and he makes more of
them clicking sounds. Well, Joe looks over there, too -- at the sky over
Area 51 -- but he don't see nothing. Just a clear blue sky. Then, Joe
sees this dot way off in the sky. It's just a tiny speck but it's
shimmering the way a star does at night -- except it's the middle of the
day. Joe watches that speck grow, real fast, as it gets closer. Says it
was going faster than any jet plane he ever saw. It went from being
just a speck on the horizon to a big giant thing in just a coupla
seconds. Just like that. Well, that ship -- Joe always calls it a
spaceship cause it didn't look like no plane or other aircraft he had
ever seen -- that spaceship gets right up almost directly over them. It
blotted out the sun and Joe and the little man were in its shadow.
Joe
says it was the biggest ship he had ever seen. Bigger than a navy ship.
Hell, Joe says it was at least as big as two aircraft carriers. Beats
me how something that big can be made to fly. And, not just fly but
'whip through the air like a bullet, then come to a complete stop in
mid-air, all without making a sound -- completely silent', that's what
Joe says. Joe says that spaceship stopped so abrupt (it stopped right on
a dime) that, if anybody -- he means normal people -- had been aboard
it they'd been killed. Woulda been mashed flat. So, he figures that
anybody that was on that ship just wasn't like us -- you and me. Well,
when that ship stopped, it kicked up a buncha dust, and you could feel
the wind from it. The wind caught a tumble weed and rolled it right out
in front of Joe and over to the other side of the road.
Well,
that spaceship didn't twitch from side to side nor sway at all, not
even the least bit -- just stayed exactly in one spot, as if it was
cemented up there somehow. Soundless, motionless -- a long metallic
silver-looking cigar-shaped ship. Joe was awestruck, but, by now,
shooting video had become second-nature to him and he kept that camera
trained perfect and captured events just so. Just then, something stuck
out of that ship -- it was a long tube-looking thing -- also silver and
metallic, maybe as long as a car, and it turned and pointed right at Joe
and the little man.
(Well, at the time Joe thought it was
pointed right at him and thought maybe it was some kind of gun they was
preparing to blast him with. And, Joe, he ain't afraid to admit it, he
prayed. He says he told the maker he was sorry for his sins, and hoped
he wouldn't be judged too harshly).
Anyway, then that tube
starts humming and there's sparks -- green, blue, some was pink --
coming off it, and Joe figures that was the end for him. The humming
gets louder and the pitch goes higher and them sparks are a flying
faster. Well, Joe braces himself -- and he still keeps pointing that
video camera so as to catch all the action, for posterity, he supposed.
Just then, a milky-blue beam emanates from that tube and it hits the
little man (not Joe). And that little man raises his hand and waves one
more time to Joe, then he (the little man) starts a fading away, and in a
few seconds he's gone! Then, that beam quits. Just like that. That man
is gone. Well, at first Joe thought they had killed that little man for
being seen by Joe -- like a punishment for being caught eating a dead
cow. But, that didn't make no sense cause they coulda just killed Joe if
they was going to kill anybody. So, Joe figured they had beamed that
little man up into the ship -- just like you see on TV. Well, he didn't
have but a coupla seconds to think on it cause that tube starts to
humming again. And, just like before, the humming grows and the pitch
goes up and the sparks are a flying, then that tube shoots that beam a
second time -- and the beam hits the dead cow. Well, that cow starts
fading away just like the little man did, and not more than a coupla
seconds later -- it's gone -- didn't even leave a stain.
So
now, Joe's standing there in the middle of the road all alone looking up
at that ship. Well, don't you know it -- that tube starts to humming
again. Now, don't get me wrong, Joe thinks of running -- sure he does.
But, he always says, 'Something that told me to stick around -- see what
happens next'. So he just stands there and lets that beam hit him. He
says he felt all queasy inside, and there was a deep vibration running
through him -- not unpleasant he says, but not what you'd call
pleasurable neither. He felt a pressure build in the base of his spine
and then travel up his backbone. And when that vibrating pressure got to
the top of his head the only thing Joe remembers is -- he dropped that
video camera.
The next thing Joe knows, he's standing on some
kind of floor that felt all squishy under his feet and there ain't
nothing to see except this gray-blue light that surrounded him and what
looks like a milky fluid flowing through it. He says it was like he was
standing in a mix of milky water, or some kind of fluid, and a bluish
light. He says he didn't feel like he was suffocating -- but he don't
remember taking any breaths, neither. Didn't feel the need. Says, he
just was just standing there not breathing, nor feeling a shortness of
breath. And he could sorta make out people (or whatever you want to call
them) who was standing just a few feet away. Each one of them looked
exactly like the little man that had come out of that cow. After a few
seconds, one of them stepped forward and he raised his hand -- just like
the little man had -- and he sorta waved at Joe. Well, Joe, not knowing
what else to do, waved back. Then, the little man smiled at him, and
Joe smiled right back. Then, the other little men raised their hands and
waved.
Well, it's right about then that Joe says he saw a
brilliant light -- so bright it blinded him. Well, almost blinded him --
he could still see the little man (the other folks had disappeared, but
that one little man was still there), or, more precisely, the form of
that little man was still there. The form was made up of bright dots.
Some of the dots were blue, but most were a grayish white. That's what
that man's body had become -- a collection of dots of light. Joe says he
was looking into that little man's eyes -- said it was more intense a
thing than he'd ever done. But, he says, there weren't no tension and he
didn't feel embarrassed or anything like that even though they was
looking right at each other. Joe says they looked at each other for
maybe a few seconds then, well, Joe says he felt like he was hit by a
deep pressure right in the middle of his forehead -- right between his
eyes, but up a bit in his forehead. Right here -- you know? He said it
was a warm dry buzzy pressure -- but not unpleasant. Said he felt it in
his mind as much as he did on his forehead. And, while that buzzing
pressure was in his mind he didn't have no thoughts at all. This went on
for some period of time, but Joe don't know how long. Coulda been a
second, coulda been a hour. Then, that buzzing pressure quits. Stops.
Just like that.
And, Joe found himself right back in the
middle of the road standing in the same spot he had been standing in
before he got beamed onto that spaceship. He got his bearings, looked up
at the ship, looked at the spot where the little man and the cow had
been, then looked down and saw that video camera laying right where he
dropped it. Well, he picks it up and presses the button and sure enough
it still worked. He looked up at that cigar-shaped ship and pointed the
camera at it -- I guess by now ole Joe was a real proficient camera man.
Just
then, he notices that tube retracting -- pulled right back into the
ship. Well, Joe stood there a second or two, figuring the ship would
leave. But, it didn't. Joe kept waiting. Still, that ship just hovered
there. Then, without thinking too much about it, Joe raises his hand and
waves goodbye to the ship. Then, there was this clicking sound --
click, tickity, click -- like that. Well, Joe figured them people on the
ship saying goodbye. So, he says, 'Take it easy', and he keeps waving
and video taping as that ship turned and flew away, back over those
double fences, and back into Area 51. And, just like that, in just a
coupla seconds, that big ship was gone and out of sight. It left so
quick it kicked up a bit of a wind and that tumble weed rolled right
past Joe's feet, right back to where it came from, and stopped in the
same spot it had been in before.
Joe was still standing there
looking past those double fences, still waving, when he come to his
senses and stopped waving and looked around. Just like that, it was like
there had never been a cow, nor a little man, nor any kind of a
spaceship. Joe was just standing out there roasting in the hot sun in
the middle of SR 375 video taping the desert. And, that was that.
Anyway,
Joe finished up his day's work -- like normal -- like nothing had
happened. And, because he hadn't taken no lunch break, he met up with
his partner at the south end of SR 375 in Warm Springs, just like they
planned, and they went back to the station.
Well, Joe went
home and he looked at that video -- the entire thing. Run through it a
coupla times, I suppose. Just to make sure he hadn't lost his marbles
out there in that desert sun. (That's been known happen every now and
then). Joe says he spent that night thinking. Spent the whole weekend
thinking, he says. Figured what had happened called for some
consideration.
What Joe remembered the most -- what seemed
the most important to him -- was when he was on that ship and they --
that little man that was made up of dots of light, and Joe -- when they
was looking at each other and Joe felt that pressure in the middle of
his forehead, in the middle of his mind -- that was the most special
part of being on that ship. Joe says that, in that moment, he felt he
knew what that little man was thinking. Not like he could hear the words
or nothing, he just knew that man's thoughts. Like the thoughts were
imprinted on Joe's mind. Like tracks in the sand, he says -- he has a
hard time describing it. Not only that, but Joe says he could perceive
how that man's entire life had been -- on a pinpoint -- all at the same
time! Anyway, Joe says the more he thought about it over that weekend
the more he realized how different that little man was from him.
Well,
lemme explain. First, that little man didn't carry no anger, Joe says.
Wasn't angry at a thing nor any person. And, not only that, but Joe got
the impression he had never, not even once, been angry. No, sir. Not
once. And, when Joe thought about it more he realized that little man
had never thought a nasty thought about another person. Nope. Also,
didn't pity nobody, nor feel sorry for himself, neither. Never had! Not
one time. Joe says, "The more I come to understand how that little man
lived and how pure his thoughts were, the more I understood how poorly I
had been living."
Even though he thought about it all
weekend Joe just couldn't figure out why he had carried all that anger
with him all his life. He had been angry at everyone, not just folks
that crossed him. All the time, he says, even when he was alone.
Sometimes it was people that had done him wrong years earlier, sometimes
it was strangers on the street. He just carried that anger with him all
the time, no matter what. Then, Joe realized that that anger had turned
to spite. He hated people even before he met them! Yessir! Like I said
at the start, Joe always had a chip on his shoulder. It prolly was the
reason he never had nobody -- never had real friends, (except me I
guess), or a family, nor no comfort in life. Well, after two straight
days of thinking about it Joe figured he weren't gonna live like that no
more. Figured he was fed up with it. Figured he'd been carrying enough
hate long enough for one man -- for one lifetime.
Well, come
Monday morning, Joe went in to work and gave notice. Just like that.
And, in the two weeks he had left to work Joe went about making amends
with other employees he had spited, either openly or to himself. He got
to know about them and about their families and what their interests
was, and such. Well, it's fair to say that Joe got to be pretty good
friends with his co-workers -- even though he only had a coupla weeks to
do it. Got to be good enough friends with some that they have him over
from time to time -- for a barbecue, or to watch a game on TV, or
celebrate the fourth -- any such occasion.
Well, Joe didn't
just have new friends, his life got better in general. Now, he keeps in
touch with Delores. After all these years. They buried the hatchet. They
exchange emails once in a while -- he sends her kids presents on
birthdays, Christmas, whatnot. I was glad to see it. Normally, after
being separated for so long two people don't keep in touch at all, but
Delores and Joe had something special, I suppose. They're still friends.
I guess friendship don't go away even after you call the marriage off.
Joe
never did date before the incident, like I said -- but, now he sees
this one gal. She's a hostess over at one of them fancy casinos in
Vegas. Mighty fair looking woman, too. Joe done good -- again. And, he
got his tooth fixed, too. Yeah! After it got knocked out forty some
years ago in that fight with that fella in back in high school -- Joe
finally replaces it with one of them dental implants. Looks real good,
too. (I bet his lady friend appreciates it -- not that I ever asked,
mind you).
These days, Joe spends most of his time out in the
desert looking to get more video of strange things -- looks for funny
footprints, dead animals that ain't quite right, strange formations of
rocks and pebbles -- that sorta thing. Of course, objects in the sky
remains his primary passion -- UFOs. What's that? Oh, he finds stuff.
Yessir! Lots of it. It never ceases to amaze me just how many weird
occurrences there are in the desert almost every day -- at least round
here. Sure, he does -- Joe gets all sorts of videos. I seen footage he
got of weird flying formations -- there's one of a blurry blob just
criss-crossing the sky so fast you'd hardly believe it. He's got a lot
of UFO footage. You can see it if you like.
But, the videos I
like best are the ones of stuff on the ground. Three-toed footprints
(ain't no animal out these parts with three toes!), funny imprints that
look like landing gear -- usually in sets of three, each about fifty
feet apart. Why he's even got a coupla shots of what looks like them
little men -- way off -- peeking out from behind boulders, looking at
him. Those are fun to watch. I'll watch 'em over and over to see whether
there's anything I mighta missed the last time I watched 'em.
Some
say the footage is fake, but you'd have to get kids to wear outfits and
run around for the camera in order to do that -- just can't see a
parent subjecting their kid to that. Besides, them little men -- they
don't look like kids no how -- too skinny. I guess you could make a kid
look like he had a big head like them little men have, and maybe put
some fake eyes on them, like that, but I don't see how you can make a
kid look that skinny. Ain't never seen no kid that skinny. Those little
men are as skinny as cats.
Welp. That there is just about it
-- the story of 'The Incident'. Mmm...that was good. Three beers. Guess
that makes this here a 'three-beer story'. Yessir! Guess I'll be
heading home in a bit. Anyway...I reckon ole Joe's got it better since
the incident. And, I'm glad for him, but, myself, I reckon maybe it was
providence that caused Joe to get that assignment that day. Yessir!
That's what I believe. Like, the things that happened were supposed to
take place. Like he was supposed to be out there in the desert next to
Area 51 that day. I can't get it to add up no other way. No matter how
many times I think about it. Makes you wonder. I mean, not only Joe
getting that assignment on that stretch of road on that particular day,
but him just happening to have a camera -- the only day he ever brought a
camera to work with him! Oh, hell -- it had been years since the last
time Joe and Delores even so much as talked on the phone, then, she up
and sends him a video camera for his birthday, just a coupla days before
Joe witnesses the strangest thing he ever saw. No, sir! Just don't add
up.
Then, there's the change in Joe's personality to
consider. You see, like I said, Joe had decided not to carry all that
anger and spite no more, but that ain't the half of it. Now, Joe's
concerned for folks. He cares, gives of himself, tries to help out.
And...and this is the thing -- he wants to make the world a better
place. Can you beat that? He's said that right to my face. Used to be
Joe'd just as soon spit if you looked at him wrong, and now he wants to
make the world a better place!? If ever there was a higher power at
work... Yessir! Joe went from being outright ornery to a philanthropist
in just one weekend. Makes you wonder...sure does. Ain't for me to
judge, though, I expect. Not any of it.
Anyway, Joe may not
believe in no higher power -- or, at least he don't come out and say it
-- but he does believe in a higher calling. At least something better
than painting them lines down state highways. After he quit his job, Joe
cashed in his retirement accounts and set about to answering that
calling. He got himself a snazzy computer, and another video camera -- a
professional model -- and started himself a website. Yessir! I could
not hardly believe it. Ole regular Joe starting a internet website. He
gets lots of hits, too. And that's not all -- he even has advertising on
his site. People -- businesses -- they pay him good money to show their
ads!
Some of them ads are those flashy banner type -- ever
seen 'em. Sure -- you have. Everyone's seen 'em. Bother some people. Not
me... I don't see Joe too much no more. He's always off doing what he
calls 'field work'. Can stay away for weeks. Right now he's down in
South America -- Chile -- in the mountains they got down there. Local
folks tell of some kind of half-man, half-furry monster lives up in them
mountains. So, Joe's aiming to be the first to get video of it. Then,
he'll post it on his site and tell the world. I suppose that would make
the world a better place somehow -- if we was aware of all the creatures
that's half man, half whatever.
Well, don't get me wrong!
Joe's work is surely important, and I don't mean to poke fun at it. He
does quite a bit more to enhance people's lives than I do, that's for
sure. He gives to charities, too. Gives more money than I ever could.
No, sir, Joe's efforts accomplish quite a bit. I'd venture he's making
the world a better place. Certainly is. Just like he set out to.
Here,
lemme write down the address on this napkin. There. That's Joe's
website -- that's where you can see his video. And them other ones, too.
If you care to. He's also got photos, and personal accounts --
interviews -- from people that say they had experiences similar to
Joe's. People from all over the world -- seems like lots of folks have
had weird things happen in their lives.
Well, that's the
story of 'The Incident'. I thank you for the beers. It's getting late --
gonna get real cold soon. Most folks don't know it but it gets mighty
cold this time of year at night round here. No, thank you anyway -- I'm
walking, don't need a ride. Just live a quarter mile up the trail.
That's right -- it's just a trail -- no sidewalk, nor lights. Nothing.
It's safe, though, I suppose. I can still see pretty good at night.
Nope. You don't have to worry about no snakes. Nor scorpions, and such.
Too cold. They's all burrowed under rocks to keep warm. Gila monster?
Naw! They're the first to dig in once the sun gets low. Besides, they're
cold-blooded, like snakes. Gila monster's slow as sin during the heat
of the day -- at night, when it's cold, why, you could step right on one
of them lizards and by the time he turned to bite you you'd be home in
bed.
No, there ain't nothing to be afraid of on a cold night
out here. Well, maybe other people, sad as it is to say. I suppose I
wouldn't want to run into no serial killer. That's just a joke. There
ain't no folks out this far to be concerned about. Lemme just get my
coat on and I'll be saying good night. I hope you enjoyed it -- the
story, that is. I thank you again for buying me them beers. Hopefully,
I'll run into you again sometime. Maybe I'll get the next round.
Well,
I'll be going. No, sir. Ain't nothing out there to be concerned about
out in the desert. Not anything from this planet, I mean. Welp,
goodnight to you. Naw...there ain't nothing to be concerned about -- not
from this planet, anyways.
.
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