Also by M.T. Bass
Go to Somethin’ for Nothin’ Page at mtbass.net
“Bass’ tale…exudes freshness, courtesy of a memorable snowy backdrop and indelible characters.” — Kirkus Reviews
“…an exciting, fast-paced novel…Featuring well drawn characters…” — The BookLife Prize in Fiction
People ask me where I get the ideas for my books. In this case, I recall reading about Alaska bush pilots for fun. I must have watched Animal House and Treasure of the Sierra Madre around that time and…a few months later—Eureka! The words for the prologue and first chapter just started spilling out of my head. (“Clean up on aisle five.”)
Anchorage, 1976 — Albert and Waxy flunk their Intro to Philosophy midterm and drunkenly decide to drop out of The Ohio State University and go to Alaska to “strike it rich” working on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. After Albert’s father cuts off his credit card, they get bartending & dishwashing jobs at an Anchorage bar, where Albert becomes involved with the bar owner’s girlfriend, CiCi, who is also the lead singer in the house band. Albert “acquires” a union card to get a pipeline job for himself, but then learns that Waxy has become part of a crazy scheme with Jimmi the Pilot, Beantown Bob and Moe the Eskimo to find and recover a long lost government payroll from an Air Force cargo plane that crashed in the Alaska Mountain Range decades ago.
Seriously, what could go wrong? Love & Betrayal…Murder & Mayhem…Friendship & Double-Crossing Partners in Pursuit of Buried Treasure…
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Chapter 1 — High Street
The blue bus is calling us…
Albert and Waxy woke one Thursday morning to the guttural gurgling of diesel engines. Albert’s blue Ford panel van was parked between a North American moving van and a Monsanto chemical tanker—a portentous sign, they both later concurred—at an Indiana rest stop just across the border from Ohio on Interstate 70. Waxy and Albert emerged from the van with a vacuity of will and comprehension so common to those suffering a hangover.
“Where the hell are we?” asked Albert.
Waxy squinted his eyes and sniffed the air. “Indiana? Maybe?”
“Oh God, I knew it. We’ve died and gone straight to hell.”
“It could be worse.”
“How in the hell is that?” Albert scowled and stared hard at Waxy.
“I don’t know.” Waxy shook his head. “I miss it.”
“Miss what?”
“Home.”
“AAAAIIIIRRRRRGGGGHHHH! GO DIRECTLY TO CLEVELAND! DO NOT PASS GO! DO NOT COLLECT $200!”
“You know what I mean.”
“For Christ’s sake, we’re not even two hundred miles from Columbus. We haven’t even been gone twelve hours, yet,” Albert exclaimed in disbelief. “Besides, it’s Ohio. O-Hi-O, Waxy. Remember? That four letter word with three syllables.”
“Huh?”
“Ohio, boy, Ohio. The Buckeye State, where that veritable Imperial Wizard of the Big Ten, Woody Hayes, reigns supreme. Home of the Rubber Capital of the world and the Pro Football Hall of Fame—the one hundred forty-seventh and two hundred sixty-third wonders of the world, respectively. Give me a break already, will you? Don’t tell me you want to go back-back-back there! Don’t tell me that you really, really want to be known as one of the only two human beings on the planet to legitimately flunk out of The Ohio State University. Have you forgotten about garfing that God damned midterm in Kragies’ Torment of the Soul 101 yesterday? She’ll crucify us, Waxy—nail our asses to the God damned cross. We won’t be able to get jobs pumping gas at a piss-ant Sohio station by the time she’s finished her Inquisition with us. As Immanuel Kant would say, ‘get real already.’ Face it, we’re screwed.”
“Well, yeah, but-but I sure don’t want to stay in Indiana.”
“Go west, young man, go west,” Albert whispered seductively.
“Is Alaska west? Or North? Or northwest?”
“Details, Waxy, don’t bother me with details. Get a focus on The Big Picture.”
“Oh, yeah. I keep forgetting.”
Waxy wasn’t very good at all at focusing in on The Big Picture. Albert was the idea man and that suited Waxy—and Albert, too—just fine.
The Big Picture came to be defined in ever broader, ever more artistically abstract strokes as Albert and Waxy made their way down High Street hitting every bar across from the OSU campus that was open at 10:30 in the morning from the North Berg to the South Berg immediately after “garfing” their Introduction to Philosophy midterm examination. The Big Picture had its genesis in shots of Yukon Jack bourbon, which Albert and Waxy washed down liberally with Moosehead Lager beers.
“Look at that label! Look at that God damned label, Waxy! Have you ever in your life ever seen anything as ugly as that moose?!” Albert pointed to the label of his beer bottle. His voice had the timbre and decibel rating of a Pratt and Whitney jet engine roaring at take-off power in Waxy’s ear. “They’ve got to have Paul Bunyan-sized balls to put something that hideous on a beer bottle and still expect people to drink it! Yup! Genuine Paul Bunyan-sized testicles with sperm cells as big as rainbow trout! Waxy, my man, that’s where we belong! In the land of the ug-ug-ugliest member of the deer family and brew masters with the biggest balls in this quadrant of the Milky Way! It’s gotta be! It’s Jack London’s call of the fucking wild! It’s just gotta be! Look at that son-of-a-bitching Bullwinkle bastard! Look at him and tell me we don’t belong! We’ll be sucking down caribou milk and snarfing eagle eggs over easy with a side of reindeer back bacon for breakfast! Put hair on a hairless ass! Look at this! Look! When have you ever seen an uglier hunk of shag carpeting? Look at him. Am I right or am I right or am I right?”
“No man of reason can dispute this,” Waxy slurred as he squinted hard at his own bottle of Moosehead Beer.
The main ingredients of The Big Picture included collecting obscenely excessive amounts of money, Arctic springs welling up with honey-sweetened sour mash whiskey straight from the center of the earth, and clutches of Scandinavian-looking Eskimo women named Annika, Inge, Karena and Rika clawing at Albert and Waxy’s naked bodies. The more he drank, the more animated and enthusiastic Albert became, albeit the more Salvador Dali-like his vision of getting rich working on the construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline became.
Waxy, being of like mind and intoxication, measured Albert’s skewed vision of reality, riches and adventure against his own mundane high school existence in Delaware, Ohio; the abrasion of a liberal arts course of study at Ohio State University on his pragmatic, agrarian sensibilities; and the prospects of going to work on the second shift in the local luggage factory back home when his utter failure to comprehend the Humanities was verified in his hastily scribbled blue book by Professor Kragies. He came to the one and only conclusion a man who had sucked boiler makers for six hours straight possibly could: “Who cares if the mule is blind, let’s load up the wagon.”
“Huh?” asked a perplexed Albert.
“Why the hell not!”
“Now you’re talking.”
Their Manifest Destiny came to be symbolized in the soft, almost whispered a cappella chant, “The blue bus is calling us…”—a line from Albert’s favorite song off of his favorite album by his favorite rock band, “The End” by The Doors.
On the way to the bank to close out their accounts:
The blue bus is calling us…
On the way to the package store to buy provisions for their long, cross-continental pilgrimage:
The blue bus is calling us…
Back to their dorm room to gather only their most essential belongings, including swim suits, Cheryl Tiegs and Farrah Fawcett posters, as well as cassette tapes of Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Rolling Stones and, of course, The Doors:
The blue bus is calling us…
Watching their text books, piled along the banks of the Olentangy River, doused with gasoline and burning brightly:
The blue bus is calling us…
All the way to Indiana:
The blue bus is calling us…
Thursday morning at the rest stop, after squinting silently into the sun for what seemed like hours, Albert began chanting their mantra:
The blue bus is calling us…
Calm immediately crossed their troubled countenances. Peace reclaimed their souls. Their thoughts became focused on The Big Picture and the mission they shared. Their lives came to have purpose and meaning again.
Albert and Waxy got back into Albert’s blue Ford panel van and merged onto Interstate 70, westbound.
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