Thebes popped her head out of the van and said that if he wanted to have a funeral for them in the field, she could lead it, no charge, “Amazing Grace,” the works. I yanked her back inside and told her to leave him alone. She took a picture of him, boy grieving, with her disposable underwater camera. She and I gave him some time alone with his headphones.
I see Troutman corpses piling up, she said. We have to stop in the next town and get him new ones. Key to our survival.
Hey, she said. If Logan gets to get new headphones, could I get a crimping iron?
I don’t know, I said. Maybe.
A crimping iron is twenty-five bucks, she said, but if you just think about it for a minute you’ll soon realize that it’ll be worth every last penny.
Let me think about it for one hour, I said. I’ll need you not to talk to me during that time.
I want to make it to Cheyenne, Wyoming, I told the kids when we were back on the road.
It was smoking hot in the van and Logan took off his shirt and hoodie and climbed into the back and plunged his head into the cooler and then shook it. Water sprayed everywhere and Thebes screamed. Then she noticed a scar on his back.
Where’d you get that? she asked. She moved her finger lightly over his skin. He stared out the window.
Hey, she said, are you in a fight club?
You mean like the movie? he said.
Yeah, whatever, she said.
You mean like that movie Fight Club? he said.
Yeah, or you know, a variation on the theme, she said.
A variation on the theme of the movie Fight Club? he said.
Yeah! Like some local chapter, she said. You know? Starring Brad Pitt? Are you?
Am I a member of a local chapter that is a variation on the theme of the movie Fight Club starring Brad Pitt? he said.
I suggested to Thebes that she stop talking to Logan too, and write a story. Logan commended me on my first really excellent idea on the trip so far. Thebes didn’t know what to write about. Logan told her to write about a guy in a small village in South America or something like that, who is driven away because everyone thought that he had died and they were seeing his ghost and so now he lives down the road and is trying to prove that he’s alive so that he can go back and live in his village, which is all he wants out of life.
So, said Logan, the problem is, how does he prove he’s alive?
Thebes said she would rather rewrite the Ten Commandments on a piece of dark blue construction paper with her special gold glitter pen.
Then fucking do it already! I said. I immediately apologized.
It’s okay, said Thebes. Those are just words. Language isn’t real.
Yes it is, said Logan.
Not to me, said Thebes.
How can it not be real to you? I said. You use it every day.
Yeah, I know, said Thebes, but that’s all.
Okay, I said.
Like you know when it snows in May? said Thebes. How much that sucks?
Yeah, I said.
I don’t let my brain accept the word snow, said Thebes.
Hmm, I said. Okay, so…
I pretend it’s something else, she said.
The snow? said Logan.
Yeah, she said.
Like what? he said.
I don’t know, said Thebes. Like stuff somebody left behind.
Hey, said Logan, you forgot your stuff. It’s everywhere.
Yeah, I said, my dog’s shitting all over your stuff.
See, said Thebes, exactly. Hey, how’s this one?
What one? I said.
Be at Peace with Yourself in this Chaotic World, she said.
Is that one of your commandments? I asked. She said yeah.
Logan said it was too vague.
How about this, said Thebes. Do Not Let Hard Words Control Your Life.
I said yeah, that was a good one.
Logan said, What do you mean? Like harsh words? Or like difficult, complicated words.
Hard words, she said.
I think it should be clearer, said Logan. Write harsh or something. Or how about Do Not Let Hard Liquor Control Your Life.
Logan, just let Thebes make her own commandments, okay?
Fine.
Fine.
What about Be Kind to Dogs? asked Thebes.
What if a dog is attacking your best friend? said Logan. He was carving into the dash again.
Thebes, I said, just write your commandments down, every one you can think of.
She was quiet and then she started to say something. No, no, I said. Don’t. Don’t talk. I’m still thinking about that thing, that crimping iron, and you have to concentrate on your commandments. Let’s all be quiet. Let’s have a quiet contest.
Okay, she said, but just so you know? Glenn Gould could do his playing, his live performances, while reminding himself of people he had to call, the number of the cab he’d have to call later to get home, all that stuff, and none of it interfered with his playing.
Okay, I said. Boffo. I’m buying a tranquilizer gun in Cheyenne.
Hey, I whispered to Logan, how did you get that scar on your back? What happened?
Shhh, he said, quiet contest, remember?
Yeah, but, just—
Shhh…
This time Logan had carved the question Who needs actions when you’ve got words? K. Cobain. He had already changed the title of Thebes’s secondary reading material to Harry Pothead and the Philosopher’s Stone. Then he changed it to Happy Pothead…and then he changed it to Happy Pothead and Phil Is Stoned. I told him he’d have to buy Thebes a new book, but she doesn’t want a new one. She wants the old one with the messed-up cover and the equivalent worth in Archie comics. Logan is reading Twelve, a book about drugs and parties and death in Manhattan, and Heavier Than Heaven, the Kurt Cobain biography, which is all about pretty much the same stuff and where he must have gotten the quote he’d just carved into the dash. He’s got The Tin Drum and a George Saunders book and Maus and Howl and a book about Saturday Night Live all stuffed, along with his notebooks and sketchbooks, into a fake alligator-skin suitcase he bought at a Goodwill store for four dollars.
We drove through the heat. We didn’t talk for a long time. Who needs words when you’re having a quiet contest? I saw a fat guy walking slowly down the highway, hunched against the hot wind, with a faded marathon number pinned to his back. He looked tired. He was headed in the same direction as us. I wanted to talk to another adult.
I pulled up next to him and Logan rolled his window down and I leaned over and said hey.
Hey, said the guy. He barely looked at us.
We’re going to Cheyenne, I said. Are you in a race?
He said no, he had been, but not any more.
Oh, I said, are you lost?
No, he said, not exactly. I liked this guy. We could become best friends, I thought. I live in a town eighty miles from here, he said. I’m the caretaker of a church.
Do you want to ride with us for a while? I asked him.
Thebes and Logan looked at me, looked at him, looked at me.
No thank you, he said.
You’re gonna walk for eighty miles to get home? I asked him. He said he’d stop along the way. Where are you gonna stop? I asked him. He hadn’t decided yet.
I was desperate to talk to this guy. He kept trudging down the highway and our van crept along beside him. I don’t see any houses or anything around here at all, I said. He shrugged, nodded, yeah, no. So where are you going to stop? I asked him.