The business partner showed up from the middle of the Sandhills of Nebraska about 3:00 this afternoon, bringing with him a couple more presents (from other people) and…..a complete New Year’s Day dinner, cooked by his sister-in-law. The business partner and his older brother don’t get along very well, but his sister-in-law, who’s about my age, likes me.
Turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, fresh corn, fresh peas, whole-wheat rolls with real butter, a container of sour cream, and a quarter of a strawberry meringue pie. He was apologetic about it, but I told him no; such things have been saving me a great deal of trouble the past six days, making life considerably easier.
He agreed I appeared in no shape to attend any party tonight, and that he’d go to the neighbor’s alone.
It’s no big deal; true, he’s from 130 miles west of here, but because of his business activities, knows many people in the area. Too, he’s been a friend of the neighbor for nearly ten years now.
However, despite my weakened condition, I wanted to get out of here, even if for only a few minutes.
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We went to town. The only place then open in late afternoon on New Year’s Eve was the bar, all other businesses having closed early for the holiday. Although I had ample repast at home, I decided for a slight change of pace, I’d dine upon my usual instead, a hamburger pressed down hard on the grill so as to squeeze out every drop of grease, and french fries cooked on the grill, not in the fryer.
The cherubic cook of Polish derivation, Wanda, was cooking this evening, but at the moment, she was talking with three people, strangers.
I stopped in my tracks, and to confirm something turned around and looked outside the window. There was a car there, from a blue state, on which were half a dozen bumper-stickers, 0BAMA-BIDEN, CHRISTMAS S*CKS, ABORTION NOW, F*CK AMERICA, those sorts of things.
The three were huddled, their elbows on the bar, while arguing something with Wanda. Apparently they wanted to use a certain blue-and-grey credit card, and she was explaining to them one couldn’t use it for prepared food in Nebraska.
She also counseled them that it being New Year’s Eve, and almost everybody closed down, probably the closest place they could use it was in big city, nearly fifty miles away.
The guy looked to be about 40 years old, eerily resembling a more disheveled, dirtier, thinner Las Vegas Leviathan, and the two women with him might as well have been twins, and twin LynneSin primitives to boot.
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I was momentarily distracted by someone wanting to talk with me, and by the time I could turn my attention back to the bar, the primitives had disappeared.
I asked Wanda where they’d gone.
They were on their way from Ohio to Oregon, she said, and were planning on driving straight through Nebraska tonight.
I was aghast, alarmed.
They were going to cross the Sandhills of Nebraska at night; the Sandhills, the most daunting, the most fearsome, the most challenging, the roughest, the most formidable 300-mile stretch of roadway in all of North America, compared with which going through passes in the Rocky Mountains in blizzards, or soaring across the deserts of Utah and Nevada in the heat of summer, is a trifle, a piece of cake, as easy as strawberries-and-cream.
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The Sandhills--and at night--at which even native Americans, early explorers, fur trappers, Indian scouts, the U.S. Army, and hardy pioneers had quailed, and either turned around going back east, or sought an easier way west.
“God have mercy on their souls,†I said.