Yes, inhale deeply my friends.
That aroma you smell is a satisfying mix of fried chicken, onions, bean soup and meat loaf with a side of mildewed mop. It is the most notable feature of the Road Masters truck stop in Kingdom City. Drivers with flannel shirts and camouflaged ball caps sit at the food counter with their kits waiting for the next available shower, while vacationers arrayed at scattered tables assure their kids, yes they can have one more piece of cornbread from the buffet.
Brooke McHenry walked into the cafe and right past the 'Wait to be Seated' sign. She stood in the middle of the dining area, dropped her backpack to the floor and took a deep breath before announcing loudly, "Anyone headed west? I'm looking for a ride."
For a moment, all sound in the Road Masters cafe stopped. Brooke looked around to catch the stares from the diners. One by one they turned away, some with a brief scowl or a whisper to their neighbors; but one gangling trucker raised his hand like in school and said, "Ah am. You can ride wit me." He looked too eager. His close-set eyes perused Brooke's form, from her well-worn Chucks, across firm thighs and shapely hips- and they froze at her tank top stretched over fine, remarkable breasts. The man's lower lip hung open, exposing tobacco stained teeth and the sheen of perpetual drool.
'No fucking way,' thought Brooke. She turned, scanned the room and caught the eye of an older man sitting at a table alone with a cup of coffee and an empty food plate. He looked... less offensive, so she raised her eyebrows expectantly to transmit her unspoken message. 'Please help me out here.'
On cue, the man said. "I'm heading west."
Two minutes later, the man paid his bill at the front kiosk and turned around to offer Brooke his hand. "I'm Ray Bollard," he said. "I'm heading west from here, but eventually northwest. Also, I'm driving a car, not a rig. Is that OK with you?"
Brooke read him as a regular guy with a strong grip as she shook his hand. She gave him just the briefest of smiles and replied, "Yeah, that's good."
Ray held the door for her as they headed outside. With the pack on her shoulder she brushed past him into the parking lot.
---
Ray's car was parked at the far side of the lot and glinted in the bright sun. Brooke put on dark framed sun glasses as they approached and reached out to touch its emerald green, metal flake paint. Ray suddenly and grabbed her wrist. "Please don't do that," he said. He let go of her hand, and apologized. "I'm sorry. A lot of effort in that paint job, and fingers cause small scratches," he said sheepishly.
"What kind of car is this?" asked Brooke as she circled the vehicle admiring the fit and finish.
"Before your time, I guess," said Ray, "It's a Duster, made in 1972."
"Is it like a Chevy?" asked Brooke.
Ray laughed, "No, it's like a Plymouth."
"A what?" asked Brooke
Ray shook his head and said, "They don't make them any more." He opened the passenger door and gestured at the back seat for her to store her pack. Brooke stowed her gear, settled into the passenger seat and pulled the door shut. Ray walked around the car, opened the drivers side and sat behind the wheel. He inserted the key in the steering column, jiggled the shifter and started the engine. The Duster rumbled to life.
Ray leaned forward and looked up at the sky. He looked over at Brooke and said, "Listen, I'm not busting my ass on this trip, so I plan to drive till I'm hungry again and then stopping for the night. You can hop out then, if you like, and find another ride."
"Can't we drive at night?" asked Brooke.
"Can you drive a stick?" asked Ray in response.
Brooke shook her head, and squeezed her hands between her legs. "Thanks, for coming to my rescue in there," She said halfheartedly smiling as stared at the faux wood and plastic dash. Then she looked over at Ray and said, "I just needed to get gone, you know?"
Ray nodded, eyeing the pretty girl. Straight, strawberry blond hair, parted at the middle, and casually dressed to blend-in, rather than stand-out. Yes, she was running, but from what?
"Understood," Ray said. He engaged the clutch, pushed the shift lever to one, and the Duster rolled out of the parking lot onto the service road headed for the entrance ramp to the Interstate.
---
Brooke rolled up a hoodie for a pillow, wedged herself against the passenger door and fell asleep shortly after leaving Kingdom city. Ray watched the road and glanced at his passenger from time to time. He amused himself imagining her back story, if she had one. She was young, maybe 25. Old enough to get into trouble but not hardened like many women he'd known. Should he be concerned?
The car shuddered when Ray downshifted as he came up behind an eighteen wheeler running too slow in the fast lane. He flashed his lights, the trucker moved right and Ray passed him cleanly. He looked over at Brooke and sighed.
Maybe she was just a mixed up kid looking for a new life.
A new life. The words darkened his mood. He thought about the last time he had seen his wife. They had had a love affair that lasted twenty years. He could still feel her body last time they fucked, her kiss as they parted in the morning, the police knocking at his door...
"This car got satellite radio?" said Brooke, suddenly awake and breaking Ray's reverie.
"Um, it's got a radio," answered Ray flatly.
Brooke took that as an invitation to turn it on, and fiddle with the knobs. She soon found that all of the channels in this area were either country music or religious.
Ray looked up through the windshield and grimaced. The sky had clouded up and darkened; and was a storm moving in from the west. With no hills or trees to block the view, he could see the rain was still a long way off. He pressed his foot down a little on the pedal to get a few more miles down the road while the pavement was dry.
Brooke found a station playing a song with a male vocalist that sounded exactly like every country song Ray had ever heard. Evidently bored, she turned it down to background level and sat back in the seat to watch miles of nothing fly by.
"Not your thing?" Ray asked.
"No," said Brooke, as she picked at a nail.
The car's tires broadcast the pock-pock-pock of highway expansion joints that synchronized with the country music on the radio. Hay fields and corn rows blurred by in a stream of yellow and tan.
Brooke rolled her head and watched Ray drive. He was an active driver. She watched his muscled forearm reach for the white ball and shift decisively, while expertly operating the clutch and gas pedals. He was one with the machine, and driven with purpose.
"Ray, do you mind if I ask where you are headed?" asked Brooke.
Ray glanced at Brooke and said, "I'm headed to Wyoming for some business. I know a guy there, and I own him something." Ray showed no emotion as he concentrated on the driving, but there was intensity in his voice, a harshness that belied the innocence of his answer.
Brooke paused a second and asked, "What business are you in, Ray?"
"My business." Ray replied flatly.
Brooke rolled her eyes and asked, "Do you have a phone?"
Ray looked over at her and said, "Yes. You don't?"
"No," she replied, "Can I use yours?"
"No," he said.
The first drops of rain splattered on the windshield and Ray noticed the cars coming in the opposite direction had their wipers on. Ray turned on his headlights and wipers. Brooke put her hand on the passenger window absently tracing the rivulets as the rain increased.
"Ray, have you ever been out of the country?" Brooke asked absently.
"Yes, Germany, Kuwait and Iraq," responded Ray.
Brooke nodded as if another piece to the puzzle had been confirmed. She continued,"Did it affect your relationships when you returned?"
Ray looked over at Brooke, realizing he might have just learned what the girl was running from. He replied, "No, Brooke. Not like it does for some."
The windshield wipers were not keeping up as the rain pounded the Duster's windshield. They were near Salina, so Ray decided to pull the car off the road. There was a small cluster of buildings grouped around two gas stations on the right. Lightening flashed as bright as day as they pulled into the Busby's family restaurant parking lot.
---
"Listen, Ray," said Brooke. "I really don't have any money."
They were sitting across from each other in a booth with cracked red vinyl seats. Ray gave Brooke a hard look over the laminated menu card. The rain still beat a tattoo on the roof that echoed around in the nearly empty restaurant, and he paused a bit before responding.
"OK, Brooke. I'll buy you dinner." he said, and looked down at his menu.