Deer die in the woods, alone, and their bodies rot. They leave skeletons behind, their antlered heads distinctive in certain forests. People do strange things with these skulls, mounting on walls chief among them.
That’s beside the point.
I keep the antlered deer head in mind as I look for a skull in an acre of bones, the first of many pieces I’ll need.
‘A wasteland of rust, ‘Trish’s Ride Away’ is nothing more than a monetized junkyard. For an entry fee of $100, Trish will allow you to peruse the acres of wasted automotive parts she buys in bulk and to stay as long as you don’t make a nuisance of yourself. A book in the small shack at the front gate has pictures of the twenty or so odd people that have ridden out of the ‘Ride Away’ on vehicles they have salvaged, cleaned, and assembled. This is the best option.
Trish’s liberal time allowance has inadvertently led to the ‘Ride Away’ becoming a tent city, too far from any concerned municipality to warrant shutting down. The ‘Ride Away’ denizens can be both cagey and helpful, long cut-off from outside society by the metallic disruption of cellular signals and their borderline-superstitious fear of having to re-pay the entry fee. Goods from the nearby gas station will garner favors and ease a visitor’s passage.
The difference between ‘hidden’ and ‘lost’ is subtle, reader, and many lose themselves in Trish’s maze. Remember the worth of a hundred dollars and do not stay longer than necessary.’
I haven’t said much about my past, have I? I’ve kept my eye on the future and I describe the present only in the ways it hinders me. Well, I was a mechanic for a while, or, I should say, I was the stupid kid that works in a mechanic’s shop. I learned the basics there.
And I am tired of walking, of hitchhiking, and of waking up in strange diners with deep, rumbling headaches.
“Oh, look,” a voice says, “A window shopper.”
It’s not immediately clear who is speaking.
“What are you looking for?”
“A bike frame,” I tell her, speaking in the direction of the voice, “Something usable.”
“And then?”
“And then the rest of the bike.”
“Got a place to stay?”
“I’m getting tired of talking to myself,” I tell her, “What do you want?”
A woman’s body rises from the backseat of a truck. Her eyes narrow.
“What do you got?”
Ruby is 20 and she tells me she has been living in ‘Trish’s’ for some five years. She tells me she runs an inn for short-term visitors like myself but when I ask to see a room she says there aren’t any vacancies.
“Checkout’s at two,” she says, “Ask again after that.”
For a pack of gum she lets me store my backpack in the trunk of a car. She keeps the key and many others on a chain around her neck. We haggle absurdly for a while until she agrees to show me a few frames for the cheese-and-meat jerky packs I pulled off the clearance shelf.
“Cheese,” she says, “Is like gold here. A can of spray stuff will set you up for a while.”
I shrug and rub my sore jaw. My face is swollen, still, but Ruby doesn’t mention it. She leads me toward the center of the property, where she says she has contacts.
“Don’t know shit about cars myself,” she mutters.
Had I known that…
We speak to several people, each living in a carved-out hovel of old car parts and each with wildly different answers. Many ask for payment but Ruby shuts them up. If anybody is getting what I brought in, it will be her. Ruby, despite my misgivings, takes the average of our motley advice and draws me a map.
“You’re not coming?” I ask.
“I’ve got a business to run,” she says, “Should I hold a room for you?”
I consider the author’s warning and prod the empty place where my molar once was.
“Sure.”
I have a frame by nightfall, its handlebar head twisting loosely in the gray light. I, and a man I bribe with chips, haul it back to Ruby’s and set it near my room: the deeply buried carcass of a VW bus.
“The yard out front is yours as long as you’re renting,” Ruby says, handing me another key from her chain, “Folks around here respect that but keep an eye out for tourists. I gave you the ‘Bug Suite,’ no extra charge. Water-proofed it myself.”
“Thanks…” I tell her.
“I’m holed up just down the way if you need anything,” she says.
Ruby is buying time for something, her gangly silhouette hesitating at my door.
“Do you need me to pay now?”
“You seem good for it,” she says, “Think you’ll stay long?”
“As long as it takes to get this thing going.”
“It’s not great here,” she warns me.
“Oh?”
“I’m kicking guys like you out of my place all the time. You find a project, burn out, run out of things to barter. You end up sleeping under some random hood and asking for handouts. People adjust to this kind of living and then get stuck here.”
“I know,” I tell her, “I read it in a book before I came.”
“A book?”
I show her Shitholes, the nice, newer copy. I flip to the entry and see her smile, curiously, in the flickering overhead light. She sits softly on my ‘bed.’
“Well I’ll be…” she says, pointing at the accompanying photo of a non-descript pile of junk, “That’s my place. You know this guy?”
“Maybe.”
Ruby’s body odor has filled the hollow bus. I shift uncomfortably and roll down a window. I grate my teeth as she squirms around on my blankets, browsing the glossy pages of my book. I cough and yawn and side-eye her in turns.
“Seems like a bit of an asshole.”
The bus’ radio clicks with quiet, staticky laughter.
Heh, heh, heh…
-traveler