astonishing detail.
Eventually, the conversation returned to where it was originally headed. Roger said, “We’ll probably have time to run by the Desperado after we get finished at the hospital, you know, just for a couple of drinks and maybe a table dance or two.”
Aggie drove with his limp right wrist draped over the steering wheel and a beer in his left hand. He studied the road ahead and didn’t respond to the suggestion. His girlfriend would scream and throw things if she heard he’d spent money in a club gawkingat strippers. Calvin, though, was suddenly nervous with anticipation. “Sounds good to me,” he said.
“Sure,” added Aggie, but only because he had to.
A car approached from the other direction, and just before it passed them, Aggie inadvertently allowed the truck’s left front wheel to touch the yellow center line. Then he yanked it back. The other car swerved sharply.
“That was a cop!” Aggie yelled. He and Roger snapped their heads around for a fleeting look. The other car was stopping abruptly, its brake lights fully applied.
“Damned sure is,” Roger said. “A county boy. Go!”
“He’s comin’ after us,” Calvin said in a panic.
“Blue lights! Blue lights!” Roger squawked. “Oh shit!”
Aggie instinctively gunned his engine, and the big Dodge roared over a hill. “Are you sure this is a good idea?” he said.
“Just go, dammit,” Roger yelled.
“We got beer cans ever’where,” Calvin added.
“But I’m not drunk,” Aggie insisted. “Runnin’ just makes things worse.”
“We’re already runnin’,” Roger said. “Now the important thing is to not get caught.” And with that, he drained another can as if it might be his last.
The pickup hit eighty miles per hour, then ninety, as it flew over a long stretch of flat highway. “He’s comin’ fast,” Aggie said, glancing at the mirror, then back at the highway ahead. “Blue lights to hell and back.”
Calvin rolled down his window and said, “Let’s toss the beer!”
“No!” Roger squawked. “Are you crazy? He can’t catch us. Faster, faster!”
The pickup flew over a small hill and almost left the pavement, then it screeched around a tight curve and fishtailed slightly, enough for Calvin to say, “We’re gonna kill ourselves.”
“Shut up,” Roger barked. “Look for a driveway. We’ll duck in.”
“There’s a mailbox,” Aggie said and hit the brakes. The deputy was seconds behind them, but out of sight. They turned sharply to the right, and the truck’s lights swept across a small farmhouse tucked low under huge oak trees.
“Cut your lights,” Roger snapped, as if he’d been in this situation many times. Aggie killed the engine, switched off the lights, and the truck rolled quietly along the short dirt drive and came to rest next to a Ford pickup owned by Mr. Buford M. Gates, of Route 5, Owensville, Mississippi.
The patrol car flew by them without slowing, its blue lights ablaze but its siren still off. The three donors sat low in the seat, and when the blue lights were long gone, they slowly raised their heads.
The house they had chosen was dark and silent. Evidently, it was not protected by dogs. Even the front porch light was off.
“Nice work,” Roger said softly as they began to breathe again.
“We got lucky,” Aggie whispered.
They watched the house and listened to the highway, and after a few minutes of wonderful silence agreed that they had indeed been very lucky.
“How long we gonna sit here?” Calvin finally asked.
“Not long,” Aggie said as he stared at the windows of the house.
“I hear a car,” Calvin said, and the three heads ducked again. Seconds passed, and the deputy flew by from the other direction, lights flashing but still no siren. “Sumbitch is lookin’ for us,” Roger mumbled.
“Of course he is,” Aggie said.
When the sound of the patrol car faded in the distance, the three heads slowly rose in the Dodge, then Roger said, “I need