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Road Trips Honk If You're Irrational They called it an unmapped drive through Indiana. But it really it was a silent cry for help. By Marshall Sella
In no time, our anarchic little system took shape. The first rule: Screw up. If you and your roadmate decide to stop for the night in Clay City, floor it through Clay City while telling him you're going to "drive on to Woodford." Later, inform him there's no such place as Woodford, then watch the fun begin! Even buying supplies can offer ample opportunities to confuse. In a town called Manson, Indiana, Frank and I purchased nothing but baked beansthree cans of every brand of baked bean. The cashier seemed to think we were consumer advocates, but our giggling soon deprived him of this reassuring delusion. As we left, he actually said, "I don't like the look of you." I replied, "We're bean people." Indiana is a wonderland of bad nameswhich all by itself can get you good and lost. The one planned destination of our trip was a spot called Kurtz, which we had to visit to accord with our Apocalypse Now theme. En route, however, I was so distracted by a place called Spraytown that in no time Kurtz was a faint memory. When we finally set about reorienting ourselves, we learned the hard way that there were four towns called Needmore within 120 miles of one another. This said it all: These Hoosiers knew the game. The day was cloudless, but we played one of those Environments cassettes of a thunderstorm to keep off-balance. Eventually, with invisible rain pelting our sunny windshield, we found ourselves somewhere in Hoosier National Forest. Frank had dozed off and asked, rather blearily, what we were looking for. I told him I'd read about "a ranch where they've bred plants made of red meat, and sometimes the plants scream." Even half-awake, Frank wasn't buying any of this. So I told him the truththat we were close to John Cougar Mellencamp's hometown, Seymour, and that I thought it was only proper that we stop by. This pleased Frank greatly. Both of us hated Johnny Cougar, so we were keen to stride up to his door with our supplies and offer to "break bean" with him. Who knew? If everything worked out, maybe we'd come to understand his scruffy "hurts-so-good" philosophy. As it happens, we were a mere 30 miles away, and it pains me to tell you I only learned that a few minutes ago. In the Random Roading game, you want to stay confused, but there comes a time in the evening when you dearly want to change back into a regular joe with access to a campground, or even a Kampground. That's the price of the dice: You laugh your head off all afternoon, but you spend a lot of late nights squinting around, worrying about deer, trying to find pavement again. Most people zip through Indiana in six hours. But Frank and I spent a solid four days trying to get out of that state. We were that little cartoon Billy from "Family Circus," making dotted lines all over the Midwest, blaming any problem on "Ida Know" and "Not Me," those two rascal ghosts. (Is there any life situation Bil Keane fails to capture?) We asked grocers in Delphi if they carried "fresh monkey or donkey." We annoyed everyone by lurching at a snail's pace through the town of Speed. In a place called Floyds Knobs, we simply asked "to see them." I recently phoned Frank; he's a professor at MIT, but not even he can accurately redraw our route on that trip. We do have a number of photos that offer enticing clues. There's one of a toddler girl riding a gigantic cow and blocking a dirt road. Another shows me looking disappointed in Seymour, not far from where John Mellencamp lives. Though I suspect I know why that was. Sometimes love don't feel like it should.
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