Fear not the stars on
moonless nights, for they are at their brightest. While demons sleep without
the light, the wakeful dream of guidance.
Beware the glowing autumn moon as you would tend your seeds, and heed
the piercing call of loons; crouching in the reeds.
They walk among us. And sometimes, they hitchhike.
It could
just be a starless night without a glowing moon when one might encounter on a
lonely desert backroad in the deepest
hour of the night, a restless spirit seeking transport; not to, but away from a dimension from which it
can’t escape.
As advised
by any native elder, most folks would keep on driving.
For every
crisscrossed backroad or unmapped battered byway, folklores hang as faded signs
of tortured spirit pathways. And still, sometimes we stop.
Frequently told is the tale of a young maiden who canters in festive attire; her blue-black hair
dancing in the midnight wind that swirls her ankle-length skirt. Her lively
steps belie the futility in a random direction on an unchartered course of a
life unknown and forever unlived.
Ever smiling, a young boy stands at a barely discernable fork in the road; the
left side long since traversed. In summer shorts and bloodied tee, he waves a
rusted bicycle horn. While he always
declines a ride, he will give his name as that
of someone you know.
Antiquated neon signs line a darkened
stretch of highway where a scraggly
long-haired dog darts in front of passing cars that hit the guardrails in
sudden panic. Then, when drivers dive off the nearest ramp to calm their
wobbling knees, the silhouette of a Calvary man on horseback watches from the
mountain pass at Picacho Peak above.
Resplendent in a flowing Holy robe,
the Lost Father, patiently waits for a ride to take him four miles southeast,
where he then hails a ride back to where he was first picked up. It is said
that should a roadrunner cross your path, the Father will have found his bones.
I suppose
that with stories like these floating around my gullible youth, I needn’t have
wondered about the meaning of hitchhikers in the night being “Dead
giveaways.”
Though
helping a stranded motorist in daylight used to be acceptable and relatively
safe, it would seem that few movies depict the activity as advisable these
days. Does anyone remember “Scarecrow” with Al Pacino, or “Honeysuckle Rose”
with Willie Nelson? Remember the hitchhiker the girls in “Thelma and Louise” picked up?
