cruiser pulled to the right shoulder and remained stationary, its front wheels cut back toward the center stripe, the interior light on.
Whats he doing? Vikki said.
Hes probably got a description of us on his clipboard. Yep, here he comes.
They stared numbly into the cruisers approaching headlights, their eyes watering, their hearts beating. The air seemed clotted with dust and bugs and gnats, the roadway still warm from the sunset, smelling of oil and rubber. Then, for no apparent reason, the cruiser made a U-turn and headed north again, its weight sinking on the back springs.
Hell be back. We have to get off the highway, Pete said.
They crossed to the other side of the asphalt and began walking, glancing back over their shoulders, their abandoned car with all their household possessions dropping behind them into the darkness. A half hour later, a black man wearing strap overalls with no shirt stopped and said he was headed to his home, seventy miles southwest. Thats pert exactly where were going, Pete said.
They paid a weeks advance rent, twenty dollars per day, at a motel on a stretch of side road that resembled a Hollywood re-creation of Highway 66 during the 1950s: a pink plaster-of-Paris archway over the road, painted with roses; a diner shaped like an Airstream trailer with a tin facsimile of a rocket on top; a circular building made to look like a bulging cheeseburger with service windows; a drive-in movie theater and a miniature golf course blown with trash and tumbleweed, the empty marquee patterned with birdshot; a red-green-and-purple neon war bonnet high up on the log facade of a beer joint and steak house; three Cadillac car bodies buried seemingly nose-first in the earth, their fins slicing the wind.
This is a pretty neat place, if you ask me, Pete said, sitting on the side of the bed, looking through the side window at the landscape. He was barefoot and shirtless, and in the soft light of morning, the skin along his shoulder and one side of his back had the texture of lampshade material that has been wrinkled by intense heat.
Pete, what are we going to do? We dont have a car, were almost broke, and cops are probably looking for us all over Texas, Vikki said.
Weve done all right so far, havent we? Pete began talking about his friend Billy Bob Holland, a former Texas Ranger who had a law practice in western Montana. Billy Bob will hep us out. When I was little, my mother used to bring home men, usually late at night. Most of them were pretty worthless. This one guy was more worthless than all the rest put together and then some. One night he smacked both me and my mom around. When Billy Bob found out about it, he rode his horse into the beer joint and threw a rope on the guy and drug him out the front door into the parking lot. Then he kicked him into next week.
Your lawyer friend cant help a fugitive. All he can do is surrender you.
Billy Bob wouldnt do that.
We have to get your disability check.
Thats kind of a problem, isnt it? Pete stood up and propped one arm against the wall, gazing out the window, his upper torso shaped like a V. That check should have come yesterday. Its just sitting there in the box. The government always gets it there on the same date.
I can ask Junior to get it and send it to us, she said.
Junior doesnt quite look upon me as a member of his fan club.
Vikki was sitting at the small desk by the television set. She stared emptily at the decrepit state of their roomthe water-stained wallpaper, the air-conditioning unit that rattled in the window frame, the bedspread that she feared to touch, the shower stall blooming with mold. Theres another way, she said.
To turn ourselves in?
We havent done anything wrong.
I tried it already. That one wont flush, he said.
You tried to turn us in?
I called a government eight hundred number. They switched me around to a bunch of different offices and finally to a guy with Immigration and Customs. He said his name was Clawson.
Why didnt you tell me?
It didnt go too well. He said he wanted to meet me, like somehow all this was between him and me and we were buds or something. He had a voice like a robot. You know whats going on when people talk like robots? They dont want you to know