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An essay on elderly drivers
An essay on elderly drivers
Anglo american culture
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The road stretches back and forward, whirring beneath tires worn bald by old
age. James, dark haired and bright eyed, grips the wheel with one hand and looks lazily
between the mirrors to the road to the sky, trying to stay awake. He floats beyond trucks
and minivans, driving with the confidence of one never scarred. They pass fields,
stretches of yellow and dust, not waving, just watching, guarded by the occasional
brooding building.
Everything is older here, in middle America, in Kentucky, in Tennessee, in Ohio,
but not in the way of wise New England. Instead the houses and cars, reek of middle
age. They're worn but not yet discarded; out of fashion but still functional. If money
weren't tight they'd find relief, but appearances aren't worth much here. And so they sag
with time.
James rolls on, rarely turning, passing through towns, only waking to stop on red
and go on green. Next to him, Dotty sleeps. She might be dead, he thinks, and he might
be right. What little light left in her eyes muffled by lids, she shrinks against the door.
Crumpled skin peeking beyond cuffs, her face sinks, her lips spotted and parted to show
gritted teeth. When awake, her eyes retain their pale blue, always watering, leaking.
In Farristown, Kentucky, James pulls off the highway and into a Mobil station. He
leaves Dotty in the car, and walks inside the store. Through aisles of snacks, he
reaches the counter and asks for 20 on two.
"Where you headed?" the attendant, a bloated mustachioed man named Miles
asks, ignoring James' request.
"Oh, just down the road."
"You lost?"
"Not yet."
"But you don't know where you'll end up."
"I do."
"Do you?"
"I thought so."
"Good luck then."
"I'd rather gas, i...
... middle of paper ...
..., and she remembers, walking
slowly down the hallway, peeking through the slight gap. And there was Henry fucking
his whore. She was crying but he wouldn't stop and Dotty was stuck, watching, the door
now open.
"Henry," Daisy cries, when she looks past him to Dotty. Henry doesn't stop but he
does turn.
"Don't you fucking move," he growls at Dotty. "I will knock you the fuck out if you
take one step back." And for a minute Dotty can't bring her feet to turn.
But that was then. And she remembers not to fucking move, as she hears the
slapping, the cracking, a few feet away. And so she keeps her eyes squeezed tight,
trying to breathe silently, trying not to choke. And she cries.
***
"Grandma, it's time to go." They drive on, through the fields, through the towns,
through the places, toward home. They drive toward Dotty's home.
The End
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Kluger, Jeffrey. "Too Old TO Drive?." Time 162.4 (2003): 73. Ebscohost. Web. 20 April 2014.
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