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The Adventures of
SuperTrucker
It all started one day when
I was tippy-toeing across the Buckeye. I was in no mood for talking,
because I was running
late, as always. I only had about forty-eight hours to get to Shakey
and I was running solo.
I was mashing my motor and taking no prisoners. I had an eyeball
on the road and an ear on
the cb, just in case there were any bears around. You see, I'm
allergic to flashing blue lights.
I was hauling a load of dispatcher brains, so I was really moving.
I passed a slow
truck called Swift and an orange truck called Yellow. I was
having a little trouble trying
to pass a Celadon truck that must have been turned up, when
I saw a sign up ahead for the chicken
coup and sure enough, they had the small word out. I put my
blinker on, hoping Celadon would
let me in, but he just kept hammering. He must've had a Pre-Pass.
So I just kept on going,
trying to stay right next to him and hoping they wouldn't see
me from the window at the coup.
I finally got around Celadon and I pulled over to wait for
them, just in case they were coming.
I didn't want it to look like I was trying to outrun them.
Anyway, I had to squirt the dirt
and I always try to get one thing done while waiting for another
thing. I wiped off my chicken
lights, which I always leave on for safety, just to kill some
time and wait for Smokey. After
a few minutes, nobody showed up, so I put it in the wind. I
had to keep my door closed if I
was going to make it.
Now, being a groin-o-cologist
like
I am, looking at all the skirts
in the cars, I never saw him coming. I heard a voice on the
radio say "look out Supertrucker"
but I didn't think he was talking to me, so I ignored him.
After all, I hardly ever come around
here and I'm pretty sure nobody around here knows me. And besides,
so many drivers call each
other Supertrucker when they are trying to insult someone.
How could anyone around here possibly
know that Supertrucker was really my handle. Well, at least
that's what they call me when they're
not mad at me.
Then I heard that
voice again. "Plain
brown wrapper, a Camaro, hammer
down, westbound. Copy that Supertrucker?" Then I recognized
the voice. It was my old buddy
Mudflap. "Is that you, Mudflap?" I asked. "Last
time I saw you, you hit
an armadillo in Amarillo." We used to follow each other
across Texas in those days. He
was a spanish speaking gringo who drove a parking lot. A good
family man too. He had lots of
grandkids and he was always buying things for them. "Long
time no see, hand" I said.
"No time to talk though, unless you can keep up. I'm in
the eleventh hour on my logbook."
"I'm in the same boat as you" he said. Then added
"I can keep up, I never did
like waving with my right hand anyway. But we better watch
out. Someone said there was a smokey
hammer down on our back door. I got a sleeper full of grandkids
and Grandma riding shotgun.
So I can't be getting pulled-over right now."
I was
drinking a coffee with my left
hand and holding a cb mic in my right, when I answered. "Well,
I never....Well, maybe
once...But I'll never tell."
I put my coffee
down
and started to pick my nose with
a sharp nail, when I hit a bump. At that exact moment, I seen
an alligator in the road and
was about to switch to the granny lane. I was already leaning
toward the white line when I
seen him. His headlights were flashing left and right. Then
the blood started running down
from my nose. He slowed down and I pulled in front of him.
Then he pulled up next to me in
the hammer lane and spoke to me on a loud speaker. "Pull
over now!" So I did. All
of a sudden I got a headache from my eyeball to my ear. I was
thinking about the speeding ticket
I was sure to get. It hurt my head even more as I struggled
to come up with a good excuse.
He walked up to my door, with a perfectly pressed uniform as
I was still trying to think of
a good one and then it hit me. I said "you ain't gonna
believe this, but I am lost. I
know I was making good time, but I am truly lost. I blew a
pancake and some cb Rambo was yelling
at my radio, trying to tell me where a shop was, but I wasn't
even sure which way I was going,
so I was trying to hurry up and find out where I was. Someone
on the cb told me to look in
the mirror and I would find myself and nobody was helping me.
Then I got a nosebleed and saw
you." And the blood was getting all over right about then.
I couldn't get a smile
out of him. I think his face was made of stone. He was walking
tall and did everything by the
book. He just looked at me like I wasn't even talking and asked
"do you know why I stopped
you?"
Well, I didn't
want to be the one to tell him
I was doing a 69 in a 55, so naturally
I said "no sir, I don't" with my confused, innocent
little boy face, as I grabbed
another napkin. "Don't get smart" was all he
said as I handed him my license.
"I'm not being sarcastic, I'm being facetious." I
said, trying to impress upon him
my award winning personality, but he was having none of it.
"Do you always ramble
on like that" he asked me?
So I answered truthfully.
"I grew up eating Sugar
Pops and watching Topcat on tv. That's why I am the way I am."
He
gave me my
award certificate, wished me a happy-happy and a merry-merry
and I was on my way. And you know
what? I never saw Mudflap again.
Ken
Skaggs
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