***Out In The Be-Bop
1950s Night-When “Stewball” Stu Ruled The Highways
From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence
Breslin
Scene: Brought to mind by the be-bop cover art photograph of a
“boss” two-toned 1950s Oldsmobile sitting in front of a car dealership just
waiting to be driven off in the “golden age of the automobile” night.
********
“Stewball” Stu loved cars, loved
1950s classic “boss” cars, period. And on the very top of that heap was his
cherry red ’57 Chevy. The flamed-out king hell dragon of the Mainiac highways,
especially those back roads around his, our, hometown, Olde Saco, close by the
sea. Not for him the new stuff, the new “boss” Mustang, Mustang Sally ride I am
crazy for, or would be crazy for if, (1) I was older than my current no-driver,
no legal driver fifteen, and (2) I had any kind of dough except the few bucks I
grab doing this and that, mainly that.
And how do I know about Stewball’s
preferences, prejudices if you want to put it that way? Well I, Joshua Lawrence
Breslin, have been riding “shot-gun” to Stewball’s driver for the past several
months, ever since I proved my metal, my Stu-worthy metal, when I “scrammed” a
while back when Stu moved in on me and a hot date I had with a local Lolita and
three was a crowd.
Ya, Stu and me are tight, tight as a
nineteen year guy who is the king of the roads around here can be with a
fifteen year old guy with no dough, no drivers’ license, no sister for him to
drool over, and zero, maybe minus zero, mechanical skills to back him up. So
you see me flaking out on that Lolita thing meant a lot to Stewball, although
he is not a guy that you can figure something on, not easy figuring anyhow.
[Hey, by the way, by the very big
way, that Stewball moniker is strictly between you and me. Some of the guys
that hung around his garage (really his bent out of shape trailer home rigged
up with all kinds of automobile-fixing stuff all over the place) started to
call him Stewball among ourselves after we observed, observed for the
sixty-fifth time, Stu loaded before noon on some rotgut Southern Comfort that
he swore kept him sober, unlike whiskey. Like I say don’t spread that around
because Stu in one tough hombre. I once saw him chain-whip a guy just for kind
of eyeing a Lolita (not the one I butted out on) that was sitting next to him
in that cherry red Chevy at Jimmy Joe’s Diner, the one down on Route One, not
the one over on Atlantic Avenue. Enough said, okay.]
Let me tell you about one time a few
months back when Stu proved, for the umpteenth time (although my first time,
first really seeing him in action glory time), why no one can come close to him
as king of these roads around here, and maybe any. It was a Friday night, an
October Friday night, just starting to get to be defroster or car heater time
so it had to be then. Stu, who lives over on Tobacco Road (I won’t tell you his
real address because, like he says, what people don’t know is just fine with
him and the girls all know where he is anyway. Ya, that’s a real Stu-ism)
picked me up at my house on Albemarle Street (got that girls, Albemarle) like
he always does, sometime between seven and eight, also as usual.
We then make the loop. First down
Atlantic passed the Colonial Donut Shoppe (they serve other stuff there too) to
see if there was a stray clover (A Stu-ism for a girl, origin unknown) or two
looking to erase the gloomy, lonely night coming on. (I hoped two, two girls
that is, because while I am glad, glad as hell, that I did right by Stu with
that "hot" Lolita (and she was hot, maybe too hot for me then, not
now) I don’t want to make a habit of it, being Stu’s “shot-gun,” or not. No
dice. So off to Lanny’s Bowl-World over on Sea Street. Guess it is kind of
early because no dice there either. Well, it’s off to “headquarters,” Jimmy
Joe’s Diner on Main Street (really Route One but everybody local calls it
Main).
Now Jimmy Joe’s has been Stu’s
headquarters for so long that he has a “reserved” spot there. Yes, right in
front just to the left on the entrance so that he can “scope” (Stu-ism) the
scene (read: girls, Josh-ism). Jimmy Joe, the owner, felt that Stu was so good
for business, Friday night hot teenage girls crowding the place looking for
fast-driving guys and fast, or slow, driving guys, ready to, well you know I
don’t have to draw you a diagram, business so he had no problem with the
arrangement. Except this Friday night, this October Friday night, Stu’s
reserved spot is occupied, occupied by a two-toned, low-riding 1956 Oldsmobile
that even I can see had been worked on, worked hard on to create maximum
horse-power in the minimum time. And inside that Oldsmobile sat one Duke McKay,
a guy some of us had heard of, from down in Kittery near the New Hampshire
border. So maybe Duke, not knowing the local rules, parked in that spot by
accident. Yah that seems like the right answer.
No way though. Why? Because sitting
right next old Duke, actually almost on top of him is that Lolita that I made
way for to help Stu. Said Lolita (not her real name because she was, and is, as
I write, uh, not “of age” so Lolita is a good enough moniker) looking very
fine, very fine indeed, as Stu goes over to the Oldsmobile to give Duke the
what for. I can almost hear the chains coming out.
But Stu must have had some kind of
jinx on him, or Lolita put one on him, because all he did was make Duke a
proposition. Beat Stu in a “chicken run” and the parking spot, Lolita, and the
unofficial king of the road title were his. Lose, and he was gone (without
chain-whipping I hoped) from Olde Saco, permanently, minus Lolita. Now I can
see where this Lolita is worth getting a little steamed up about. But take it
from me Stu, until just this minute, was strictly a love them or leave them guy
(leave them to me, please). Duke, with eight million pounds of bravado,
answered quickly like any true road-warrior does when challenged and just
uttered, “On.” And we are off, although not before Lolita gives Stu some
madness femme fatale look. A look, a pout really, which you couldn’t
tell if she was in Stu’s corner or wanted to see him in hell. Girls, damn.
A chicken race, for the squares, is
nothing but a race between two cars (usually two), two fast teenager-driven
cars, done late at night or early in the morning out on some desolate road,
sometimes straight, sometimes not. The idea is to get a fast start and keep the
accelerator on the floor as long as possible before some flame-out. For Olde
Saco runs they use the beach down at the Squaw Rock end since it is long, flat,
and wide even at high tide, and the loser either winds up in the dunes or the
ocean, usually the latter, ruining a perfectly good car but that is the way it
is. Most importantly it is out of sight of the cops until too late.
So about two in the morning one
could see a ’57 cherry red Chevy lining up, with me as a “second,” against a
’56 Oldsmobile, with Lolita as Duke’s “second.” Jimmy Joe’s son, Billy, acted
as starter as usual. And they are off. Duke got an extremely fast start and was
maybe thirty yards ahead of us and it looked like we done for when Stu opened
up from somewhere and flat out “smoked” the side of Duke Olds sending his
vehicle off into the ocean, soon to sputter in the roaring waves, and oblivion.
Stu stopped the Chevy, backed up the several hundred yards to the vicinity of
the distressed Oldsmobile, opened up the passenger side door and escorted Lolita,
as nice as you please, to his king hell Chevy. And she was smiling, smiling
very, well let’s put it this way, Stu’s got a big treat coming. And Josh? Well,
Stu yells over “Hey, Josh, hope you find a ride home tonight.” But do you see
what I mean about Stewball Stu being the king of the roads around here. What a
guy.
No comments:
Post a Comment