The road stretched on ahead straight as an arrow through
the scrublands into the distance, where it could be seen curving up out of
sight around a distant mesa. My
motorcycle rumbled comfortingly under me as we sailed together under dreamy
skies streaked with pale yellow as the rising sun at my back found the
horizon. Up ahead, in the morning light,
I saw another rider going solo through the desert.
I caught up with him on the curves going up the hill, but
did not pass out of courtesy. The bike,
an old Shovelhead, looked somehow familiar, as did the man in the saddle, an
obvious old-timer by the leathers and the ancient Bell full-face helmet with
the white hairs blowing about underneath.
As if by signal, we both pulled off at the overlook where the road
crested the hill.
Bikers on the road are a common family, so when you pull in
to a stopping point and see another bike already parked, that’s where you go,
automatically. I’ve met world travelers
that way, and old friends, but nothing that prepared me for the shock when the
old man climbed off his bike and pulled off his helmet. It was Stoney. A man I had not seen in ten long years, a man
who rode with me through thick and thin, stood at my back when I got in a beef
at the bar, and always had a good word on him somewhere. The thing was, and the reason it was such a
shock, was that Stoney had died out on Highway 50 one night, alone in the dark
in a snowstorm, ten years ago. We called
him Stoney because he always had a joint hanging out of his mouth, and because
he could be hard as a rock when he needed to.
I wrapped him in a bear-hug. “Stoney, you old dog! Where the hell have you been, and tell me how it
is I’m seeing you now, when it seems like yesterday I was at your funeral?” He held me off at arm’s length and smiled,
then turned me around with one hand on my shoulder while he pointed out across
the vast open spaces all around us. “I been ridin’,” he said, “That way goes north into the mountains, and
they go on forever, and that way goes to the ocean, where whales cruise near
the shore and you can get on a boat and sail the seven seas. I came back here to pick you up. You startin’ to catch on now?”
Suddenly, I remembered another funeral, more recent. I looked down at my own leathers, and
realized they were all brand new. I
glanced at my bike, and saw that all the chrome was polished, the paint was
perfect, and the tires were new. “Yeah,”
said Stoney. “I been waiting 10 long
years for you to die, too, so I could show you around. Now let’s get riding. You’ll notice that your gas tank never runs
empty here in heaven, and the beer is always cold at the place we’re headed for
lunch, Saddle up!” :-{)}