Treat ’em right an’ they come back.
Mae really smiles with all her might at truck drivers.
She bridles a little, fixes her back hair so that her breasts will lift with her raised arms, passes the time of day and indicates great things, great times, great jokes.
Al never speaks.
He is no contact.
Sometimes he smiles a little at a joke, but he never laughs.
Sometimes he looks up at the vivaciousness in Mae’s voice, and then he scrapes the griddle with a spatula, scrapes the grease into an iron trough around the plate.
He presses down a hissing hamburger with his spatula. He lays the split buns on the plate to toast and heat.
He gathers up stray onions from the plate and heaps them on the meat and presses them in with the spatula. He puts half the bun on top of the meat, paints the other half with melted butter, with thin pickle relish.
Holding the bun on the meat, he slips the spatula under the thin pad of meat, flips it over, lays the buttered half on top, and drops the hamburger on a small plate.
Quarter of a dill pickle, two black olives beside the sandwich.
Al skims the plate down the counter like a quoit.
And he scrapes his griddle with the spatula and looks moodily at the stew kettle.
Cars whisking by on 66.
License plates.
Mass., Tenn., RI, NY, Vt., Ohio.
Going west.
Fine cars, cruising at sixty-five.
There goes one of them Cords.
Looks like a coffin on wheels.
But, Jesus, how they travel!
See that La Salle?
Me for that.
I ain’t a hog.
I go for a La Salle.
’F ya goin’ big, what’s a matter with a Cad’?
Jus’ a little bigger, little faster.
I’d take a Zephyr myself.
You ain’t ridin’ no fortune, but you got class an’ speed.
Give me a Zephyr.
Well, sir, you may get a laugh outa this—I’ll take a Buick-Puick.
That’s good enough.
But, hell, that costs in the Zephyr class an’ it ain’t got the sap.
I don’ care.
I don’ want nothin’ to do with nothing of Henry Ford’s.
I don’ like ’im.
Never did.
Got a brother worked in the plant.
Oughta hear him tell.
Well, a Zephyr got sap.
The big cars on the highway.
Languid, heat-raddled ladies, small nucleuses about whom revolve a thousand accouterments: creams, ointments to grease themselves, coloring matter in phials—black, pink, red, white, green, silver—to change the color of hair, eyes, lips, nails, brows, lashes, lids.
Oils, seeds, and pills to make the bowels move.
A bag of bottles, syringes, pills, powders, fluids, jellies to make their sexual intercourse safe, odorless, and unproductive.
And this apart from clothes.
What a hell of a nuisance!
Lines of weariness around the eyes, lines of discontent down from the mouth, breasts lying heavily in little hammocks, stomach and thighs straining against cases of rubber.
And the mouths panting, the eyes sullen, disliking sun and wind and earth, resenting food and weariness, hating time that rarely makes them beautiful and always makes them old.
Beside them, little pot-bellied men in light suits and panama hats; clean, pink men with puzzled, worried eyes, with restless eyes.
Worried because formulas do not work out; hungry for security and yet sensing its disappearance from the earth.