Waking Up Is Hard To Do

“Now he’s comin’ down the mountain goin’ fast, fast, fast…”
New Riders of the Purple Sage
“Henry”
1969

Damn, if I don’t love driving my big blue 4-wheel drive truck!
It’s a ‘66 Chevrolet K10, better known in the identical GMC version as the “Gimmy.”

Take a regular windowless delivery van, put windows all along the sides, bolt in up to three rows of bench seats, or just use the open eight feet of covered cargo space. Then, for us extreme drivers, four-wheel drive with over-sized knobby mud and snow tires all around. These were the granddaddies of monster trucks–and all the accursed soccer mom SUV’s of the far distant future.

Fuck the future, we said, this is the ‘70s! We are the future! At least if we lasted that long.

Why I had an interest in going where there were no roads, I couldn’t really say. Maybe it was symbolic rebellion against the fact I always found myself following someone else on civilized highways going nowhere in general. I guess I just liked the idea of taking roads less likely to be traveled, especially by two-wheel drive plastic-cage cars carrying idiots lost on the trail of life.

Anyone growing up in the ‘50s logging forests of Oregon learned quickly this was the truck of choice for anybody needing to go damned near anywhere, whenever they damned well pleased. Besides loggers, there were miners, prospectors, and ranchers all needing reliable, dry, rugged, roomy, and powerful trucks for going places and carrying workers and loads where roads were dubious propositions at best.

Gimmy’s, also known as Jitney’s in logging lands, were literally created to haul workers and their tools to those pesky, past-the-end-of-the-road job sites. These sites were normally attained by traversing some butt-fucked hell-hole of someone’s demented nightmare of what might be facetiously referred to as a passable road but was really intended for only mules. This might mean anything from floating adrift in a sand dune sea, to climbing rocky trails that could easily intimidate a mountain goat.

The other nice thing about a Gimmy was they could seat up to nine big guys with all their required gear and tools, out of the rain and in relative take-it-like-a-man comfort during the often hours-long, sometimes brutal commutes. They functioned both as trucks and small buses with the added advantage of an over-built gas-guzzling monster American V-8 under the hood and the all-important four-wheel drive that fed hundreds of horsepower to four giant deep-tread mud and snow tires that could both dig it out of a hole or into one depending on the luck or skill of the driver. It could handle steep, often muddy, rocky, rugged, barely definable, dicey trails that back in Oregon were laughingly called logging roads.

It was in this strange collision of marketing hype, and an otherworldly setting of glowing yellow instrument lights, I found myself immersed in a comfortable feeling of warmth and optimism. I drove along quite happy to be traveling the road of dubious destiny.

At first, and as usual, I felt cool, comfortable, confident, strong, and right at home at the wheel of my big blue truck. It was dark blue, no doubt, to match the U of M colors, blue and gold, as it had been previously owned by the geology department and used to transport students and equipment to remote research sites in Mexico. Now it was mine, except I needed to replace the woefully worn-out six-cylinder with one of Bill Smith’s custom rebuilt 350 big-block V-8 engines.

As the big 4×4 roared up a twisty mountain road that seemed to be getting markedly more narrow and precipitous, winding higher and higher into some ill-defined remote snow-covered mountainous pass, I wondered where the fuck I was. For some reason, I had no idea why I was here. I was enjoying the view and warm feeling of hearing the roar of exploding dinosaur juice.
Pretty soon though, I found myself straddling deep muddy ruts crisscrossed with snow drifts. The fishtailing truck danced haphazardly all over the narrow ridge road. I wondered calmly just exactly why I was at this stupid place at this particular time. An exceedingly vague and innocuous voice emerged from some dark foggy depth telling me it wasn’t real, but I had to keep on truckin’ anyway.

The road morphed mysteriously into a narrow set of intertwined, gouged-out wheel channels atop a featureless snow-blown, ever-narrowing ridge devoid of any familiar sight that might clue me into this location. I looked down the left side of the truck and only briefly could make out a river shimmering with ice far below. On the other side was nothing but the icy matching colors of cold and threatening clouds.

“Damn!” I swore to myself. I could feel the sweat break out on my forehead and neck. I felt throat-squeezing stress building as my muscles tensed for the preventable yet inevitable crash. “How the hell did I get into this mess? Where the fuck am I?”

I felt totally isolated in the truck and intensely aware of what seemed to be an insane sense of dread and urgency; wanting to get somewhere badly but not quite sure exactly where it was I was going or why with such urgency. I just knew I had to get there or I was going to be dead, or maybe something worse. This damned road was probably a summer short-cut that now I cursed myself bitterly for taking. When will I ever wise up?

“Why the hell do I always get myself into this kind of shit?” I felt somehow this scenario was all too familiar. I simply had to stop repeating this vicious cycle of stupid naïve optimism followed by inevitable disaster.

The truck tipped dangerously toward the edge overlooking the river. It was a long way to the bottom and if I went over the edge now, it would be certain doom and destruction of both me and my beloved truck. Death seemed to loom over me like a dark and heavy shroud, like a tongue lapping my truck down into the gnashing maw and rocky teeth of a hungry canyon maw. I felt abjectly helpless, miserably trapped.

I became literally paralyzed with fear. I couldn’t move a muscle, though I desperately wanted to claw myself violently out of this hellhole of a mess. I was stupefyingly helpless to do anything. There was no wide space to turn around or even a spot to slow down safely. I didn’t dare stop for fear of being sucked over the icy edge toward a bottomless pit and an instantaneous crushing plunge into the big hurt. I could see no way out. My guts started churning tighter as if a boa constrictor inside me was squeezing my heart like a helpless, dying rabbit.

I pushed hard on the accelerator, but nothing seemed to stop the slow but inevitable slipping sideways toward doom. My muscles tightened as the truck tipped even farther over the edge. I could hear the grinding noise of rocks sliding under the belly of the truck as wheels came off the ground and it tipped ever closer to a fatal plunge.

“Shi-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-t!” I screamed, as my body jerked stiff in the anticipation of sudden weightlessness followed by the big gravity hammer and ultimate hurt. Through the wall of noise however, I swear I heard Katie cackling a derisive, almost dismissive laugh, like losing a loveable but nasty pet in a fitting manner that released her of all blame.

I gulped for air and blinked rapidly a dozen times as the scene suddenly went black. Slowly, I realized I had been dreaming. The screeching sound of rocks on metal was replaced with the deep-throated relaxing drone of a smooth-running engine. There was a bright glow in front of me but otherwise there was clueless darkness. Then I noticed the glowing objects separate and become an instrument panel glowing brightly with dials and switches.

I was in a small plane. The cabin seemed to be tipped a little sideways, just not as much as my truck in my nightmare. But that was rapidly becoming just a hazy vision. I straightened my head from an awkward angle, causing some neck pain, as everything surrounding me started coming back to more-or-less level and recognizable reality.

Then it struck me with a flash that made my stomach turn a couple of flips. I had fallen asleep while flying at night! I should be crashing and dying!

What? Why?

“Holy shit!” I muttered to myself as I fought back the fuzziness in an attempt to figure out what the hell was happening.

“Fuck me!” I cursed, as I wiggled my sore ass in the seat while desperately trying to figure out where the altimeter was located. My eyes seemed to be under someone else’s control. Everything looked both strange and yet very familiar.

I first focused on the big blue instrument right in front of the control column.

“Whew,” I said to myself as I noticed the artificial horizon was steady and oriented like a real horizon with blue sky above and brown earth below, just as I remembered it should be. Brown over blue, on the other hand, is definitely not a good thing.

Outside of a small banking turn to the right, the plane seemed normal and about where it was supposed to be, flying almost level in a big circle waiting for the stupid pilot to wake up. At least the plane wasn’t stalling or diving out of control. Finally, I found and focused on the altimeter, calibrated in hundreds of feet, indicating 54.5. I had been flying at 5500 feet heading east, so apparently, I had the plane well-trimmed and it was flying along just fine while I had taken a little nap. I looked at the clock: 4:45. But I had no memory of the last time I had read it. The gut-squeezing-shit feeling began to noticeably lessen as I took control of the stick, straightened up the bank, and rolled out on a course of about 60 degrees.

I felt indescribably exhausted. My brain seemed wrapped in a thick sticky goo similar to tar pits sucking up dinosaurs. Slowly, scattered and drug-fogged memories of my recent business venture started rearing their ugly little heads. We had been flying on our last leg between Kansas City and Ann Arbor. I checked my watch again. We had taken off from Kansas City at around 2 a.m. after refueling. It was now about five in the morning, just before sunrise. So we must be somewhere around Indiana or the Michigan-Ohio border.

“We?” I repeated out loud and realized there was someone else here in the plane with me. I look at the seat to my right and indeed there’s a dark body with black hair, sound asleep, head leaning sideways against the passenger door with an ugly drool coming out of one side of his mouth and dribbling down the window.

I remember more now. It’s my dorky partner-in-crime, Rob. A graduate student in math and computer science who like me worked at the Space Physics Lab while studying under a NASA grant; just like mine, it was in jeopardy of being taken away at any moment by that shithead Nix-goon.

I made friends with him because he seemed as intelligent as me and he was a PhD graduate student. I didn’t fully trust Rob, however, because he had medium-length hair, almost conventional, and belonged to a fraternity. If you didn’t have the guts to show the world who you were, you were a phony. He was sort of a phony, but so far, a tolerable one who liked to smoke dope.

I had joined a fraternity for a short spell just to see what it was all about. In short order, I realized they were pretty much what I had always suspected: sick, shallow, corrupt, nepotistic, salacious, and just plain dumbass, kiss-ass, bullshit-eating, snob suck-ups and dilettantes. At least Rob seemed to be smarter than the average idiot and sort of cool; he laughed at all the right topical jokes, which was usually a good measure of a proper counterculture sympathy. Still, he might be motivated by suspect forces that I still wasn’t sure of. He looked a little shady, especially with his neatly trimmed goatee, but I couldn’t hold that against him. We were all a little shady to the self-respecting white-washed masses.

Fraternity clowns were usually idiots trying to get a degree by any means that money, persistence, or influence could buy. Their one redeeming quality, at least for me, was their need for almost continuous partying while stuck in the four-year-degree scramble. I could relate to the consumption of copious quantities of beer, liquor, and various illegal substances. That’s where Rob apparently stepped in.

Rob wasn’t as rich as most of his brothers so that was in his favor and maybe that was why he came up with this crazy idea of flying to El Paso, buying some quality weed directly from the growers, and bringing it back to Ann Arbor’s famished fraternity row. As I’d just gotten my pilot’s license and liked to smoke good weed, Rob thought it would be a great way to top off our summer before school started up again and, of course, make a little bread on the side.
Neither he nor I had the money to finance such a trip, but his fraternity brothers did. He raised five grand the first afternoon. How foolish was I to have thought that they only did beer and the occasional sorority girl while watching mostly football on TV? Apparently, it took a lot of weed and cocaine today to get college girls in the same mood that beer and cigarettes seemed to provide in high school.

I jabbed him hard in the ribs.

“Wake up you bastard!” I yelled as I poked him in the ribs a second time and checked the compass heading again. Rob straightened up slowly and grunted something ugly but thankfully unintelligible.

“Fuck! You! You were supposed to keep me awake you scum-dog.” He just sat there blinking in confusion and looking straight ahead into the dark void.

“A lot of fucking good you are,” I shouted again. He looked as if he was still half asleep. I became conscious of my heart pounding furiously as I slowly realized how close we had come to being just another country newspaper headline: Mysterious Airplane Crashes in Swanson’s Back 40.

If we ended up ashes, we would make it onto the obituary page sometime after they eventually identified us by our teeth. If we just crumpled in, then we’d probably make the front page because of what we were carrying.

“Where are we?” Rob finally muttered, as he wiped the spittle still hanging from his chin. He stared around dazedly, mostly outside the cabin but, like me, couldn’t make out anything except for a few randomly scattered farm lights.

“I think we’re somewhere over Indiana. Where’s the map?” I demanded.

I checked the two navigational radios but wasn’t sure what FAA stations they were tuned to or what radials we might be currently flying on. Rob shuffled through some papers in his lap and finally came up with a sectional for the upper Midwest. “Is this what you want?” he asked as he handed me the chart.

“Grab the stick you worthless frat-pig and hold her steady on this heading.” I pointed to the gyro-compass, which now indicated the correct course. “I’ve got to figure out where the hell we are and whether we have enough fuel to make it home. I fell asleep too, and I’m not sure how long we’ve been flying in circles.”

“Shit!” he screamed as he finally jerked fully awake. “We could have crashed!”

“No shit, Sherlock! But we didn’t,” I yelled back. “Now just hold her steady while I figure this out.”

I consulted the map and kept looking outside to see if I could spot anything familiar that might correlate with the map so I could determine our general location. There were a few scattered lights, but nothing like a line of moving lights indicating a freeway, or a cluster of lights that might indicate a small town or city.

There was a faint orange glow to the east indicating it wouldn’t be long before the sun lit up the horizon in a blaze of clouded, polluted glory. I started fiddling with one of the navigational radios and dialed in the frequency for the Fort Wayne VOR, hoping we were somewhere near.
A VOR radio transmitter sends out a signal that tells a receiver onboard what direction the aircraft’s position is from the transmitter’s location. Tuning two receivers to two different VOR transmitters and drawing lines on the map along the two indicated radials, or direction lines; will show your current position, exactly where the two lines cross.

I didn’t have to draw actual lines on the map. I just needed to know our location roughly. The other radio was still tuned to South Bend and so I could just about imagine where we should be by tracing along the two radials with my finger. It seemed we were just northeast of Indianapolis and not very far from the Indiana-Michigan-Ohio border. That meant we had only about one more hour of flying time before reaching our destination. I checked the fuel gauges and saw that we had more than enough left to make it home. Fortunately, we hadn’t been asleep very long.

“Hell!” I exclaimed with smug satisfaction. Rob was concentrating on keeping the wings level, the altitude constant, and the compass glued to 60 degrees. “We only have about another hour or so to go before we get to the Ann Arbor airport. We’re almost home free.”

“I’m worried,” he quietly announced, as he made yet another small correction to our heading.
I was the trained and licensed pilot-in-command, but when I got busy navigating or talking on the radio, Rob knew just enough to steer the plane and keep it roughly on course. The old wood and fabric plane we borrowed for the trip had no autopilot or wing leveler, so outside of trimming the control tabs to neutralize stick pressure, it pretty much needed constant attention in order to keep flying straight and level. I must have done a damn good job trimming the plane before I fell asleep as it hadn’t lost any appreciable altitude nor gone into a death spiral. It had just flown in a big circle patiently waiting for me to wake up or run out of gas, whichever came first.

“Now what are you worried about?” I asked slightly exasperated. Rob had been pretty enthusiastic about our little flying project when he first proposed it. But as we went along and got further and further locked into what at best was a dicey proposition full of twists and unexpected turns, he lost what enthusiasm he had and ended up sounding like an old crazy woman talking to cats in a bag.

“What if the narcs are waiting for us at the airport? What if we land and they jump out of the bushes with guns and dogs? Maybe we should land at a different airport like Kalamazoo or Ypsilanti.”

Rob looked over at me; besides the obviously blurry bloodshot eyes looking back at me, I discerned another attack of paralyzing paranoia about to explode.

“You need to get control of yourself,” I shouted back over the sound of the engine. I was too poor to afford headphones or an intercom, so we made do with the old style of cockpit communication. We yelled to talk and turned the volume way up on the two-way radio so we could hear it over all the noise. The giant, hand-sized microphone was straight out of some ‘50s TV cop show.

We did make one concession for our amusement and entertainment. I set a car cassette deck on top of the instrument panel and hooked up a couple of stereo headphones. At least we could enjoy some tunes while pretending we were counterculture heroes bringing back the gold.
This little contraption almost got us killed when we took off from our first refueling stop in Illinois, however. As the plane pitched up taking to the air, the cassette deck slid off its perch on top of the instrument panel and hit one of the controls almost killing the engine. I jumped into full emergency mode and began my procedures. I could see there wasn’t enough runway left to land, and off the end of the runway was a large mobile home park with nothing but silver-painted roofs in sight, barring any emergency landing. Jeez, what a dumb place to build a trailer park. It could only be a matter of time before someone augurs in. What a mess that’s going to be!

Visions of flaming mobile homes and twisted aluminum wreckage flashed through my mind as I grappled with the controls, trying to keep it flying as I searched frantically for the knob that had been hit by the falling tape deck. To keep the airspeed above stalling, I pitched the plane down toward the rapidly approaching shiny aluminum boxes. Rob started screaming like a teeny-bopper at a Beatles concert.

Fortunately, I found the mixture knob that had been knocked in by the falling cassette deck. The plane started to sink sickeningly as it slowed and began fluttering slightly like a falling leaf. The controls lost their responsiveness and we were approaching that magic speed where the wings unglue themselves from the airstream flowing over them and the plane suddenly transitions from flying like a bird to falling like a rock. I felt a gut-wrenching stall coming on.
I jammed the mixture back to lean and regained full power. The little engine gave out a mighty mini-roar and we began to level out and climb. Whew! My butt unclenched about fifty pounds worth. Needless to say, at the next fuel stop, I dug the handy roll of duct tape out of my bag and taped the crap out of the tape deck in hope that no further white-knuckle events like that would ever happen again.

Hah, fat chance!

I always carried a full roll of duct tape with me while flying this plane. It was a very old cloth-covered Piper Tri-Pacer or PA-20, with holes appearing in the fabric on a regular basis. Before we took off from Ann Arbor almost a week ago, I had to tape up a big hole in the bottom of the cabin. A bird had already taken advantage of it and had started quite a nice nest inside for itself. I scooped out the twigs and leaves and put on two overlapping layers of my best duct tape. Last time I looked, it was still there.

“I’ll tell you what,” I said conceding slightly to his fears. “We can buzz the field a few times and look for any suspicious vehicles. It looks like we’re going to get there just at sunrise, and on a Sunday morning there shouldn’t be a whole lot of cars around anyway. We’ll be just fine.”
I patted him on the leg. He snorted like a pissed off horse.

I tried to maintain a calm manner at all times so Rob would more or less keep his nervous anxieties from exploding into drug-induced, raging paranoia. I suppose in this kind of business mistakes that lead to disaster or worse, like getting busted, are probably caused by losing your cool and doing something dumb or brash. We knew we had been skating on thin ice for the past week and it was only a matter of time before something unexpected became almost certain.

Stay cool, stay cool…. I repeated softly to myself over and over, as if it were my new personal mantra. I was nervous too but giving in to your fears is the first step in getting them realized. Rob practically made stay cool his mantra as well. He was constantly stroking and pinching his little black goatee, especially when he worried. He would crack a devious smile, making you think he was up to something with his world-class brain, when in fact he was about to implode with fear and cringing. He could look cool and calm, almost reflective, until later alone he might rip off his clothes, run in circles around the motel room, and howl out the window at the moon like some lovesick coyote. Fortunately, people in the Southwest apparently don’t find this behavior particularly suspicious.

As the horizon ahead of us started to show color, my thoughts began to wander. I couldn’t help replaying over and over like a tune stuck in my head our little flying adventure over the last week. Rob had proposed the idea a few weeks back in the middle of summer, when most local supplies began to thin out; the quality got poor and the price got high. Rob was still living in his frat house and knew a lot of trust-fund babies who liked to augment their usual beer and cheap Scotch diet with something they perceived to be more dangerous and seductive.

So Rob hit up his brothers for investment money and asked around about where the best place might be for making a buy. I was amazed when he was able to raise around ten grand in small unmarked bills in less than three days, plus he found out about an importer of sorts who we only knew as Nick. He worked out of El Paso buying from a Juarez gang that brought pot up to the border from growers in southern Mexico. Nick bought in Juarez and then hired young Mexican students who regularly attended El Paso colleges to haul dope across the most heavily patrolled border in the U.S. He normally ran it back east in a decked-out fancy white van with all the windows darkened to Secret Service standards. We were going to be his first fly-in customer, sort of wholesale cash-and-carry.

I was game. Being a poor farm boy from Oregon, and working my way through graduate school, fostered a strong desire to make a little cash whenever the opportunity might arise. Flying a plane to El Paso to pick up a few hundred pounds of pot seemed like a fun way to have a little adventure and line my pockets at the same time. I knew a big drug dealer in Colorado who flew the southern routes and he seemed to be well off, pretending to be a hip photographer and pilot with a cornucopia of drugs and skinny blonde bitches hanging off his every word. I could dig it.

Besides, I liked smoking pot. It was the only thing that kept me from shooting myself from all the nerve-numbing drudgery of doing space physics research with those new fucking computers. Don’t misunderstand me, NASA was fun for a while, but it slipped badly after the moon shot and now was clearly on the outs. It couldn’t begin to compete with dodging the DEA, playing cat and mouse with Mexican Federales, and flying an old crate through late night thunderstorms over Nebraska. What fun!

With fucking Nix-goon in the White House, it just seemed proper that I become an outlaw. It was my form of protesting against the incredibly ignorant and corrupt government brought to us by a massively gullible and terminally stupid electorate. The Vietnam War was a prime example of stupendous social lunacy. This among a lot of other things proved exactly why the ancient Greeks did not trust democracy even though they invented it, used it, and abused it just as we do.

The general public of anywhere or anytime simply cannot be trusted to make sound decisions concerning public policy or proper governmental conduct. Hell, if 1930s Germany, one of the most intelligent and well-educated countries of modern Europe, could produce a Hitler complete with Nazis, wholesale genocide, and a disastrous World War II, then clearly even Americans in the ‘50s and ‘60s could just as easily be misled or, to put it bluntly, brainwashed into being the biggest bunch of blindly war-mongering, phony-patriotic, nationalistic idiots ever to defecate on the stage of human history.

Fuck’em, I said. My own country was trying to kill me, so anything I could do to throw it back in their face or simply take advantage of their stupidity was certainly more than justified. So every time I lit up a doobie, snorted some dynamite coke, or tripped out on psychedelics like acid, mushrooms, or the sacred cactus, it was just my way of standing up for justice, equality, righteousness, and the true American way. The Constitution guaranteed personal freedom. I was simply holding up my end of the bargain by living it. Fuck’em if they couldn’t take a civics joke.

So here I am, flying high (so to speak) over the heartland of America the Beautiful, bringing the next big load of shit-weed to her finest future hypocrites and professional thieves, like lawyers and politicians, who if asked would condemn drugs as a scourge on America while quietly financing some of the greatest and most powerful black-market criminal empires on earth. Hell, business itself is simply hypocrisy at its most refined level. Everybody lies, everybody knows everybody is lying, and yet such absurd conduct is still winked at and considered right and proper human behavior.

Such also is the thinking of the engaged, well-educated electorate who consistently votes for someone else’s interests at the unbelievable expense of their own. It’s just another oxymoron; voters are incapable of making rational decisions based on their own welfare. Just can’t do it. Their one and only redeeming quality, which keeps the rest of us sane minority piqued with keen interest, is the voters’ unfailing penchant for doing something really stupid like destroying themselves over some ludicrous poppycock idea of racial superiority, as the Germans did, or better yet, obliterating most of civilization as we know it because their god is better than some other god or their way of making money is better and more sacred than your way.

Don’t do as I do but do as I say. If it wasn’t so pathetic I would choke laughing. Actually, I do laugh a lot because if I didn’t, I’d probably blow my brains out. But living a counterculture lifestyle while disguised as just another conventional shithead makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside. I may not be able to change things, make them right, but I can live quite happily and satisfied while continually being at total odds with the scumbag oppressors. Survival of the smartest was my motto, and there were no laws against laughing while screwing with the jerks.
Light was gaining a hold on the eastern horizon, finally allowing some details to emerge from the flat darkness below. I could now discern trees, roads, telephone poles, and a few cars. The lights of a city appeared off to the north, which I presumed was either Jackson or Kalamazoo. No matter, it wouldn’t be long before we’d link up with I-96, which would lead us straight to our destination. It was probably less than an hour before we’d land at our home airport just south of Ann Arbor.

The lab where we worked as graduate students was under the engineering department, but semi-autonomous with its own budget. Even though it was situated on U of M land and staffed by college administrators, some who held university appointments in physics and engineering, it was entirely funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation. The official reason for its existence was upper atmospheric research. But in reality, I think it was an excellent excuse for frustrated engineers to get their hands on surplus military rockets that they fired off gleefully like boys playing with incredibly big fireworks.

NASA required justifications before they would hand over the good stuff, so it was my boss’s job to come up with real research projects that received funding from the NSF. In turn, that allowed the engineers to build electronic payload packages that got launched by the almost infinite supply of old 1950s Aerobee-Hi rockets. The data collected by the custom-built onboard electronics was radioed back to earth, where overworked and underpaid grad students like Rob and I would spend long hours deciphering, computing, and reporting on any scientific discoveries we might accidently make.

Our instrumentation consisted of lightweight, super-tiny highly sensitive mass spectrometers, developed in-house, that could detect the various atmospheric gases in the near-vacuum of earth’s outer atmosphere. We quickly determined that one of the gases that measured far above its normal concentration came from the exhaust fumes of Russian Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles as they blasted off from secret locations in Asia. That earned us electronic card-locks on the doors and some very ugly guards who wore clothes with strange bulges in places human anatomy could not normally justify.

But 80 percent of the labs personnel were either young graduate students like us, or recently graduated engineers waiting for their next lucrative job in private industry. We all smoked dope and if we could afford it, snorted coke. On special occasions when available, we took that daring step up the ladder of more exciting and dangerous drugs that only the CIA had more experience with, but that’s a different story.

We weren’t just a bunch of drug-crazed lunatics working surreptitiously for the federal government. We were young kids, freshly graduated from college, having the best time of our lives—chasing women, getting drunk and high whenever we could, partying like there was no tomorrow, and digging on Rock & Roll and loud music. We didn’t take ourselves too seriously and had no particular axe to grind against the university. In fact, we loved blowing off our multi-stage rockets carrying highly advanced electronic payload packages into extremely eccentric orbits that we launched from exotic places such as Kenya and Fort Churchill, Canada.
Flying an airplane was just one more thing attractive to bright scientific-minded persons like me, which I had to do along with shooting off million-dollar rockets and playing with the latest government-owned computers, all the while pretending we were some kind of daring amateur test pilots for DuPont Labs. On weekends we gathered in the local parks, where we set up portable stages with outrageously powerful PA systems and invited any and all Detroit-area musicians to come and entertain. Life was great. We were having a hell of a good time. Being wild and crazy gun-totin’ drug freaks was just the entrance exam to the University of Rock & Roll.

So it seemed natural that near the end of the summer when the quality and quantity of dope bottomed out weeks before the annual harvest would show up from Mexico and South America, we took it upon ourselves in the good old American tradition of entrepreneurialism and take-charge attitude to just go down there and get first crack at the new crop. It all started that Friday afternoon a few weeks ago when Rob dropped by my office to shoot the breeze in anticipation of knocking off early and getting a head start on the weekend. Weekends were our only life outside the lab.

The crap we did weekdays like working at the lab, if you could call it work, and attending a class or two at the university was sheer boredom at best. I was in the physics group, which was staffed by what were then called Atmospheric Physicists, and later, Planetary Atmospheric Physicists. At best, atmospheres were messy subjects far beyond any conventional mathematical approach. Such dynamic soups of gases, thermal gradients, gravity, and solar-powered winds defied any closed-formula approach.

Fortunately for us, the computer age was dawning; so messy real-world problems like atmospheres and geology were being attacked by something called simulations which were huge ugly computer programs that attempted to imitate physical processes by applying basic mathematical formulas and real-world data to a tiny hypothetical box containing whatever one was trying to simulate. In my case, it was a box full of gases at different altitudes and different locations that, when taken together, mimicked the chemistry and dynamics of earth’s upper atmosphere.

My handwritten program consisted of several long boxes containing hundreds of IBM punch cards. Each card had a single line of code. In these heady days before solid-state memory or cheap massive data storage, the cards held not only all the lines of the program, but all the data needed to run it as well. I had to patiently type the entire thing, one keystroke at a time at a keypunch machine setting outside the lab offices in an alcove under the stairs off the main entrance lobby. It was a shitty, boring job, but only I could be trusted to do it right, so no help. Besides, graduate students are helpless slaves anyway, so I slaved away on the IBM beast.
As it was the only keypunch machine at our lab, it was shared by everyone at the lab and busy most days. I found it easier and more convenient to use late at night when I was doing another project, developing rolls of 35mm film from an optical spectrometer located on the lab’s roof. It took pictures of the entire atmosphere over the top of the lab, photographing the spectrum of light from any sources of glowing gas like what an aurora produces. It took pictures every five minutes all night long, every night. Part of my duties were to develop this film and scan it for any possible signals from air glow. However, we were located near Detroit, so far south of the Arctic atmosphere and fogged by city light pollution that for an entire two years of exposing and developing, the film never recorded anything other than a normal black or cloudy sky.
So while I waited for the various baths to develop the film, I punched cards. When I thought I had a complete set of cards that the computer could compile and run, I would pack up the boxes, take them across campus to the monolithic computing center where there resided a very expensive IBM 360 computer. There, I submitted my boxes of cards through an iron-barred window that reminded me of a walk-up liquor store just outside an Indian reservation.
The computing center resembled a typical county jail. It had no windows, and its doors were heavy steel that could withstand battering rams and several pounds of C4 explosives. It resembled a Nazi-fortified bunker facing the Western Front. If it was done to frustrate those who after years of stressed-out frustrating work with insidious computers might snap and attempt to take revenge on the enigmatic soulless machine, then it surely accomplished its purpose.

I knew this all too well, as I had been submitting my cards for well over six months with no results of any kind, whatsoever. Inside the blockhouse, at the narrow window with the huge metal roll-down shutter, I would hand my stack of boxes to an attendant who in exchange gave me a single card imprinted with a job number. I would return after a couple of hours to be handed back, if lucky, several hundred printed sheets containing nothing but zeros, or more likely, a single sheet with the cryptic message, Failed to Compile.

No reason, no error message, not even a clue as to why it had failed. I would then retreat from the alien bomb shelter, taking the walk of shame and humiliation that had been dealt out by the all-powerful machine of mathematically certain frustration and failure. After a few weeks of this ego-shredding exercise, I sought some words of wisdom from my project director. He pointed out that sometimes only a simple comma out of place could cause catastrophic results.

“You have to go over your cards one character at a time, making sure there are no missing characters of any kind and no spaces where they shouldn’t be,” he advised.

That was it?

No great words of wisdom. No discussion of programming secrets or simulation philosophy. Just one stupid little typo in a program of hundreds of thousands of characters causes a complete computing meltdown. Were computers that fucking stupid? It was then I realized that computer jockeys were not the brilliant professionals they pretended to be. First, they had to be fastidiously accurate typists, and only after that dubious accomplishment could they demonstrate any level of actual cleverness. But the clueless computer could only do what the klutzy programmer typed.

In my case, and I suspected in many others as well, tedious acuity and mental agility simply did not coexist in the same brain. Then it dawned on me with a jolt of abject despair—the age of computers meant the end of a thinking civilization as we know it. Computers make humans more stupid and mindless, causing a dumbing-down of the race to the point they can’t create anything better, nor can they do without.

My dilemma was whether to cowardly assist our new master in its climb to world domination or be a sabot and throw myself into the bowels of the monster. Now I knew why the computer center job window looked like the back door to Fort Knox.

It was on one such afternoon of frustrating, mind-numbing, detailed examination of commas and spaces that Rob entered my cubical.

“Hey. Que paso?” he asked, without really expecting an answer. It was just our greeting based on a comic expression made famous by George Carlin’s Hippie Dippy Weatherman.

“Que paso to you too,” I answered. He stared at the stack of cards in the keypunch machine as he stroked his curly goatee and smiled his crooked little devious smile. His eyes twinkled with mirth as he saw me struggling and getting nowhere. Some people take great delight in seeing other people suffer, maybe just like them. It clearly wasn’t empathy, but rather an honest enjoyment of others’ pain you know well, close to some kind of twisted sense of revenge and shared punishment. Weird, but it happens more often than one might think.

“You ever get that thing to run yet?” he said.

“Nary a decimal yet,” I said somewhat despairing. “Whoever said computers make life better should have his thumbs perforated by a keypunch machine then fed through an impact printer.”

“You know what helps me a lot in debugging?” he went on, casually ignoring my complaints. “I set up a bunch of print statement cards and insert them at key spots to see how far the program is working before it fails.”

“I did that,” I said still frustrated. “It’s getting through the main part but for some reason the numerical solution from the differential flow equations aren’t converging. They either diverge to zero or infinity but never the right answer.”

“Can’t help you with that. Sometimes smaller steps work,” Rob offered.

“If I took any smaller steps,” I retorted, “the computing center would run out of printer paper.”

“They can afford it,” he calmly asserted, as if they needed to be taught a lesson.

“But they charge it to the lab account. My boss would have a cow.”

“He seems to be having a whole herd of cows lately. Must be budget renewal time.”

“No shit, Sherlock! He’s locked up with the other department heads now trying to rationalize next year’s budget cuts. The fucking Republicrooks and Nix-goon are squeezing the crap out of the NSF and even NASA. I even heard a rumor they may have to close the whole damn lab.”

“Not until we graduate for Christ’s sake!” he declared loudly. Then Rob changed the subject just as fast.

“So what are you doing this weekend?” he asked, hoping to get me off the unpleasant issue of looming disaster.

“Nothing planned. I’ll probably just hang out on campus. Go to the Film Forum showing maybe.” I finally looked up from the computer printout that was starting to go fuzzy on me anyway.

“Know where I can score?”

“Weed? Nope. It’s getting pretty dry around town. There’s always coke,” I suggested thinking of Bill and his Corvette-powered pharmacy on wheels.

Bill Smith was the charismatic local drug dealer who almost always had some kind of exotic pharmaceutical for casual sampling or short test flights. The American pharmaceutical companies were all gearing up with lots of new drugs for fighting the Vietnam War, Bill had a link to them all. He sometimes had pot, but he preferred coke and recently developed a solid connection with some guy who worked on the inside at a big hospital pharmacy, so he had all kinds of strange and exotic pills—including some amazing reagent-grade pharmaceutical cocaine, guaranteed pure by the FDA. Just having the label from that squat brown bottle was a major coup.

Bill carried around a Physicians Desk Reference, or PDR, which looked like a giant bible the Pope might use. He kept current with all the formal chemical names, drug effects, contraindications, and adverse reactions, which was sometimes exactly what one was trying to attain from a good high. He was both a genius and a successful lawbreaker, not a common criminal, and therefore considered himself to be legal savvy and exceptionally knowledgeable on the ways of the modern police force. Bill was a part-time private eye and a large-event security expert. He was also a damned good engine mechanic and auto parts finder.

He often helped the local promoters organize and run security at the many rock concerts staged in town. It was fortuitous and quite convenient to have a security chief who was also the premier local drug dealer. It kept things absurdly simple and nicely under wraps. He had full backstage access, all the right connections, and more practical experience with illegal substances than almost anyone in town. Bill was the key contact for anything involving the young locals and he knew everything that went on in the dirty little underbelly of that prestigious university town.

“Naw,” Rob said. “I just checked the fraternities and they’re all out of weed and getting desperate. They suggested that I make a run down south and even offered to put up the bread!”

For a mathematician, there was nothing esoteric about Rob’s predilections. He liked drugs, sex, and Rock & Roll, like everyone else I knew, just not necessarily in that order. More than that, he liked money. He was a frat boy after all, not really trustworthy.

I wasn’t sure how he thought he was going to get rich being a math major, but I guess for now it paid the bills. Wall Street hadn’t discovered computers yet.

Since the Space Race with Russia, many students who were perhaps more interested in the pedestrian side of life found that majoring in science and engineering attracted more financial support than business or accounting. That was all changing rapidly, since that goon posing as a human, Nix-goon, actually conned a bunch of dumbasses into voting for him and he stole the election again even after he was clearly guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors as well as significant crimes against humanity.

“How much?” I asked trying to appear disinterested, but willing to keep up my end of the conversation.

“I don’t know but I’m sure it would be enough to make it worth our time.”

“What do you mean we, white man?” I loved this line from the old joke about the Lone Ranger and Tonto being surrounded by hostile Indians. When the Lone Ranger tells him, ‘We have to do something about all those Indians.’ Tonto responds, ‘What do you mean we, white man?’

“I figure we could take a week off from work and fly down to El Paso, where I know a guy who gets it directly from the Mexicans. You can get a plane, right?”

“I might know where I can find a plane. It’s only a four-place, so we can’t haul more than a couple hundred pounds,” I offered halfheartedly, going along with the absurd proposition just to see how far it might go.

I had no idea it would lead to a week of drunken, drug-addled paranoia, raging lunacy, skirting the edge of every sort of comic-book calamity and probable disaster imaginable.

Sometimes we succumb to a great notion. Sometimes we become victims of our own hubris. In this case, neither of us was going to admit he didn’t have the guts to do something we’d been daring ourselves to do for months. At the time, we were convinced that two graduate students with a combined IQ in the 300s could surely outwit a bunch of high-school-dropout narco cops. All we needed was the will and a plausible way. Now that the money issue was resolved, we had no excuses left. We were mutually trapped by our own phony male bravado.

Testosterone was our inspiration and fate, our leader. Nothing could stop us now even if it sounded totally ridiculous and absurd. Which it did.

As we neared the end of this nefarious adventure, so many foolish and ridiculous things had happened. They all seemed like disconnected episodes of a weeklong comic nightmare that I would ponder for decades. How could we possibly have survived any of it?

We had enough screw-ups our first night out to kill a dozen would-be smugglers. After damn near crashing on our takeoff in Illinois, we almost ran out of gas over Iowa. We beat an oncoming thunderstorm at 2 a.m. by landing at Omaha International between 737s. Then we flew into an early morning fog over Wyoming, desperately searching yet again for an open refueling spot. We didn’t even have drugs to blame at that point, as we wanted to stay squeaky-clean-legal for as long as possible.

Finally, we made it to Boulder, sister city to Ann Arbor, and another of the few oases of sanity in a world gone mad. I happened to know the big dealer in town. It was the ol’ my best friend married a girl whose best friend is… story. In this case, her best friend was the favorite mistress of Jim Blake, Boulder’s biggest drug importer and rich hippie photographer dilettante whose aerial photography business provided cover for his fleet of drug-smuggling airplanes.

Jim’s only photograph that ever made any money had nothing to do with airplanes, ironically, but everything to do with illegal drugs. It was a great hippie poster that showed two skiers riding a chairlift in a snowstorm passing a joint. Get High on the Rockies ended up in every headshop in the country as pot, skiing, and running away to the wilderness became ultra-cool.
Rob and I spent the weekend resting up at an apartment Jim had hidden inside his hanger at the Boulder airport. On Sunday, he took us to a legendary mountain party thrown by some big rock promoters in town. It was held at the secret wilderness home of a rich patron of the new arts atop a nearby mountain with an incredible one hundred-mile view to the eastern plains. I vaguely remember seeing Kansas from the back deck, which also overlooked all of Boulder and most of north Denver. The view was mind-numbing, even without the aid of drugs; the vast distance and sharp detailed perspective made one feel like a giant striding across an anthill earth.

The party-favor dish on the coffee table had more colored pills than The Doors’ backstage snack table. Rob, still battling airsickness after flying across Nebraska dodging thunderstorms, didn’t indulge. I did and drifted into random thoughts on our condition as the sky lit up with intense colors. Rob had found the host’s telephone and was busy talking to somebody in an agitated manner. He seemed to be doing a lot of that lately. Probably just trying to keep all the nervous investors back in Ann Arbor calm. He could use some soothing himself. He seemed much more nervous than the situation actually called for.

I found a big rock near the Coors keg and settled down to daydream about our era. We lived at a time when apparently only college students were left to stand up for freedom and fight injustice. America had somehow gone insane with redneck super-patriots who’d turn in their own mothers if they wore peace symbols or even worse, sympathized with commie-pinko-atheist-coward students opposing their sacred patriotic war in fucking Vietnam. Everyone had been brainwashed except for an intelligent few who clung precariously to reality with the aid of chemicals. It seemed like the only place where sanity still ruled was in the minds of a drug-crazed Rock & Roll freaks.

We weren’t all hippies, but we were smart enough to know our government was full of lying pigs bent on creating wars, killing innocent people, and otherwise raping democracy in order to loot the national treasury for the further enrichment of bastards who thought they deserved unbridled wealth and power at the expense of nearly everybody else on earth. Nobody told me life was a zero-sum game! Was the only way to get ahead in this world, to knock down everybody else?

The Military Industrial Complex had swept away the last vestiges of freedom and democracy in the country. They took control of the Pentagon in World War II. They took absolute control when they assassinated both Kennedys in a secret coup. After that, the so-called democratically elected government became a sham where the public will have turned into the product of modern psychological marketing and TV news brainwashing. The American oligarch-aristocracy quietly and secretly took over the government lock, stock, and barrel, making it their private little feudal kingdom to use, abuse, and bleed at will. They called themselves Republicrooks but we just called them Pigs.

The reason cops are called Pigs is really simple. When cops put on their Nazi-like uniforms, they change into something other than human. They morph into something akin to animals, with nothing but raw feelings of hate, lust, and the hierarchy of a feeding frenzy. No morals, no human values, except to follow the alpha-male and establish their territory wherever and whenever possible. They became cops so they could continue being the bullies and thugs they always were. Now they get paid for it by whoever’s in power, covering up real crimes by attacking innocent citizens and criminalizing those telling the truth. The Pigs were Nix-goon’s antidote for truth, justice and the American Way.

Thus victimized, the vast majority of Americans became nothing more than complacent advocates for their wily new masters. Students and professors at a handful of colleges and universities were the exception, and we were flabbergasted! We could fight with these dumb bastards, but we’d never win. They cheated. They lied freely. They abused the law to cover their asses. We used logic and reason while they used guns and clubs. We were at a distinct disadvantage.

So we decided it was best to play along and pretend to be one of them, but be ready to strike with the legendary sabot at any time. Sabotaging the war machine was the unofficial goal, but if that didn’t work out, we had small caches of guns and stockpiled ammunition to play with just for the sport, just in case. You never knew how sick these bastards could get. Look at Kent State.

The whole thing disgusted me. We were fighting the demon as hard as we could but he had the money, lawyers, politicians, thugs, and all the really big guns. What was left to us was just a secret campaign of a thousand irritants and the certain knowledge that the monster could actually be killed by making it bleed from a million tiny stab wounds. Buying pot in Mexico from independent producers, reselling at a sizeable profit, and bypassing the government-sanctioned warlords and mob-connected drug dealers was a stabbing well worth the trouble.
It’s gonna work. All we have to do is stay small and not get greedy. We fly under the radar. We fly a paper airplane. The Piper was perfect.

“The sun is coming up,” Rob declared, gesturing toward the east, which was now pretty much dead ahead anyway.

I shook my head to clear out the blurry memory of that golden Colorado afternoon. I was back in the darkened cockpit listening to Rob state the obvious.
I saw I-94 coming up ahead of us on the left and adjusted our course to fly parallel with it on the last leg in.

“How much longer to Ann Arbor?” he asked.

“Less than an hour,” I replied.

I adjusted the VOR’s again, finding new directional radials pointing to our current location. I held up the map I normally kept folded on my lap and pointed out roughly where we were.

“Looks like about another sixty or seventy miles. I think I see I-94 off to the left. At our present ground speed, we should be over the airport in another forty minutes or so.”

“What are you going to do if we see a bunch of big black unmarked government cars hanging around the parking lot?”

The worried brow above his deviate’s smile told me he was for real.

I shrugged trying to look as unconcerned as possible.

“I don’t know. We can buzz the field, I guess, and if we see something suspicious we could try for one of those private fields off to the north or northeast.”

“What if those rednecks back at that weird airport in Boise City get suspicious and trace our plane to Ann Arbor and call the Feds?”

He was referring to the little freak-out we’d experienced yesterday afternoon after making an unexpected landing at a small airport in Oklahoma’s western panhandle.

We had successfully taken delivery of our pot in two large suitcases early that morning after it had been smuggled across the border in several trips taking the entire night. The guys we were working with in El Paso warned us that there were major roadblocks on every road and freeway out of town with Feds, stopping every single car and truck to search for illegal contraband of any kind—drugs or people. Never mind that illegal search-and-seizure was totally unconstitutional, the Nix-goons were in charge now so it was a battle between thugs and henchmen on both sides. An independent honest entrepreneur didn’t stand much of a chance.

Fortunately for us, the DEA roadblock on I-25 heading north out of El Paso toward Albuquerque was actually located north of Las Cruces where we’d landed our little Tri-Pacer a couple days earlier. We had long ago nixed landing directly at El Paso International for obvious reasons. Las Cruces was a small university town like Ann Arbor, so I thought there we might at least have a better chance of blending in.

Hungover from the Boulder party the day before, I cut corners, literally, and crossed a restricted air zone somewhere near the White Sands proving grounds in southern New Mexico. Rob freaked out again, expecting to see fighter jets diving out of the sun at any moment to strafe our ragtag little plane. He was paranoid as hell when we landed in Las Cruces, but I felt more or less safe, having taken every precaution to appear innocuous and hopefully as innocent as Catholic School girls.

Just to be sure, I found a pay phone and quickly called Jim back in Boulder. I asked him if I should be worried about the Air Force coming knocking. He assured me that small paper airplanes are way below their concern.

“Besides,” he said, “I cut that same corner all the time. It cuts about an hour off my trips to photograph farmland in Mexico.”

I heaved a big sigh of relief, which I purposely kept Rob from noticing.

We rented an aging pickup from the only guy present at the airport. He apparently pumped gas, sold tickets, talked on the radio, and rented cars. Otherwise he appeared lonely, dumb, and happy. The old battered truck looked right at home on the desert roads, so it helped us blend right in with the local poor white trash who were generally unmolested by the pigs. So at least we qualified, by being white and not wearing ties.

The guy at the airport who tied down our plane and rented us the beat-up rusty truck was probably onto us from the start, though I dropped a few obvious clues from our cover story to allay any first suspicions he had. We planned our cover story all the way out from Michigan. After a lot of discussion during the long periods of boredom between the more entertaining parts of our takeoffs and landings, we finally came up with a story that we thought was close enough to real life to carry-off.

Our cover, which had served us pretty well so far, was sort of the truth. Truthful enough that it made it easier to tell without looking outrageously guilty or simply out-of-place suspicious. It seemed unique and therefore more believable. After all, would two drug smugglers come up with such an outlandish cover story and expect anyone to believe it?

We agreed to pose as a couple of grad students, which we were, on our way to the New Mexico State University in Las Cruces, where we landed, to consult with a professor there on NASA business, hence the flying part. We even had the name of a professor at Las Cruces who did NASA research, but had never heard of us; if anybody had called to check our story, we would instantly have been doomed. I cursed at this, probably the weakest part of the plan. But I also knew how hard it was to find a professor who was actually in his office and answering the phone, so I felt we were probably safe enough.

Nobody was even remotely curious. Looking back on it later, what surprised me the most was the fact that no one seemed at all interested in what a couple of goofy kids were doing flying around the southwest in a tattered old Tri-Pacer. Maybe our mission was more common than we thought. Maybe nobody really gave a shit.

The airport guy might not have bought it, but I think he was happy for the business and didn’t really care where the money came from. All smugglers have stories. Ours was probably more boring and ridiculous than most.

We left El Paso three days later with much heavier suitcases than when we’d arrived. We made it to the airplane in Las Cruces without ever seeing a cop. That didn’t keep us from freaking out every few minutes as we imagined all sorts of hidden plain-wrapper cop cars converging on us from all directions. There were audible sucking wind sounds every time we spotted a black Crown Victoria or Suburban with blacked-out windows.

We finally made it all the way back to the airport, apparently undetected. No suspicious cars in sight as we drove onto the ramp to where the little black Piper waited patiently for its trip home. Rob loaded the suitcases into the plane’s back seat while I paid the airport guy for the pickup, gas, and tie-down fees. I even gave him a tip. He smiled. Who knew, I might be back some day.

I watched him very carefully as I walked back out to the plane, attempting to see if he was acting weirdly, tipping me off to an ambush. He seemed totally unconcerned. I felt a little better but kept looking around nervously as I walked across the hot and dry, sand-dusted tarmac. We were a long way from home. Anything could happen. It sort of did.

To avoid looking too suspicious on radar screens, we took off heading straight north, as this was the direction most small planes would fly from the El Paso area to, say, Albuquerque. I was positive the El Paso radar operators would regard anything heading directly east or northeast as a sure sign of suspicious activity. We flew low and followed the muddy Rio Grande as it meandered along a line of mountains to the east and deserts to the west. I was fairly certain they would lose us quickly behind the mountains and even if they did see a blip on their screens, they would hopefully assume we were a small plane heading north into Mormon country instead of where we really intended.

Much later I discovered the radar facility at El Paso couldn’t have seen a flying battleship unless it carried a transponder to amplify its echo. The rag-covered Piper had no transponder and was simply too small and lacking enough metal surfaces to be detected and displayed on their screens. As far as they were concerned we were a flock of sparrows.

That explains the reason nobody gave chase when we flew over that restricted area on the trip down from Boulder. In reality we had nothing to worry about. With our level of raging paranoia banging against the brink of insanity, we probably wouldn’t have believed it anyway and taken no comfort from that fact. When you know you’re walking on the edge, you might as well enjoy the adrenaline. It’s part of the scenery.

We had been very careful during our stay in El Paso not to smoke anything or get too drunk. Years before, I had come up with a little rule of crime that went something like this: don’t break more than one law at a time. In my experience, you could usually get away with breaking one law. But when you start multiplying your risk exposure with more than one infraction at a time, well, the result was usually that you first got busted for the little infraction and then they slapped you with The Big One. Murder is easy to escape unless you have a broken taillight, which exponentially amplifies the probability of getting caught.

So when we were a decent distance from El Paso and well north of the restricted air space that blocks any earlier turn to the east, we finally set a course heading that would take us straight to southern Michigan. At this point, we felt we had successfully escaped the worst part undetected, so Rob decided it was time to sample our wares just to see what we’d acquired for all our efforts.

When we met the seller just outside the barrio section of Juarez in a very scary, seedy motel, we could tell from the odor and look that it was primo weed but we hadn’t actually smoked any for a lot of reasons. Being in a foreign country and having to keep our wits about us as we took delivery of a goodly amount of illegal drugs under the nose of some of the most corrupt and criminal cops in the world was more than reason enough to avoid any sampling.

Spending the rest of that night getting it smuggled across the border via several trips driven by a young English-speaking Mexican teen with a beat-up old white Toyota pickup kept the fear factor at absolute maximum until daybreak. We had purchased about five times the volume that the hidden compartments in his pickup bed could hold. While Rob and I waited on the Mexican side in a ’57 Ford Fairlane 500 with a trunk full of hopefully the best weed Acapulco farmers had to offer, our El Paso partners worked the other side offloading the product each time the little Mexican kid made the trip across the border.

We really had no great need to heighten our already raging fear and paranoia. Fear and loathing may have been quaint in Las Vegas, but in Juarez it was tantamount to playing with death. Or so we thought. A little bit of insanity can actually sharpen the wits, but you have to be careful because sometimes it will turn downright delusional and treacherously terminal.
So, I put a New Riders of the Purple Sage cassette in the tape machine, still duct-taped to the instrument panel, and it started pounding out a rock song about driving back to California with a couple hundred pounds of Acapulco Gold. My body tingled with excitement. For weeks we’d been out of weed just like the song. We took a trip down south. Now we’re bringing it home. I was going to be a hero.