«The Festival – Part 3»

06-15-2309

On the third day, Saturday, I woke up staring at Leona again. This time I had rested much better, little white earplugs nestled deep enough to drown out the snoring coming from behind me. Lethargically we rose, groggy as we retreated from the hot morning sun, stumbling to the car as soon as we got up, starting the day off much alike the way we‘d ended the last–with beer, weed and AC.

We probably lounged inside for an hour or so before making our way to get some fresh water and wash up. We came back to smoke a little more, making some makeshift shade out of my tapestry and some duct tape. We got a little something on our stomachs as we hung out there, a few friends of theirs from Ithaki stopping by to say hello before going to get their drink on.

Still early in the morning, we heard music playing from the main stage, so we prepared what we’d need for the day, mostly the same as yesterday without the raingear, and headed over as quickly as possible. I also dragged Eon’s bag along with me this time, since I knew I’d have to do it eventually. I’d be bringing it home with me in Zech’s crawler anyway, and we could use another seat for a day or two.

They walked into the camp the same time we did, getting back from the Margarita Jim show that was put on secretly this morning. I knew he’d been added to the lineup last minute, but had no idea when he was supposed to go on. They had only heard of it when they were out getting breakfast, so they went to it unprepared. I wished I could have gone, again not a big fan but my dad is, so Zech and I would have known most of the word at least.

When they arrived they carried handfuls of confectionary delights to share with everyone. I looked down at the bloody mary I had in my hand and felt tickled at how wholesome my breakfast was today. Minkus raised a cup of tomato juice and vodka he’d got at the same stand to me in a toast.

“Nice. Breakfast of champions, my friend,” he said, taking a side on the behemoth‘s tail.

“I really like that I haven’t eaten anything today that didn’t contain weed,” Rip said with a big smile.

“If only every day could be like this,” Zech said, contemplating a life with edibles available all the time.

“It could be if you moved to Mars; it’s so legal there that it’s kinda scary,” I said, ever excited at the thought of buying it from a convenience store one day.

“We all know, that’s why we hate you,” Zech said, finishing his first cookie and taking a huge bite of the second while still glaring at me.

“What’s with the suitcase?” Rip asked, part of him hoping there would be drugs within.

“It’s Eon’s. She left all her stuff in NA when she moved back to Earth, so I got to drag it halfway across the solar system for her,” I said, sitting down on it heavily, spiteful to its contents.

“Ok…why would you do that for her after what she did?” he asked, always aghast at the stupid things men do for women.
“She’s paying me.”

“Oh, that’s legit,” he said, sitting down on the cooler next to me and retrieving his box of goodies from his backpack.

“Hey, I just ran into Eon,” Eli said, lighting himself a cigarette from a crushed pack. “I saw her, like, 10 days ago, or something,” he estimated, his eyes glazing over in memory.

“Oh, yeah? How is she?” I asked on impulse, just to small talk a bit. I really didn’t care about her well being, but I felt like I hadn’t spoken to Eli much this trip and wanted to chat. Ok, well maybe I was trying to figure out if she was still staying out of trouble, or if moving to Earth hadn’t helped her at all.

“She’s doing real well, man. I think, I don’t know, I can’t really remember what we talked about. I think she’s working at the mall again, or something,” he was beginning to get lost in his head.

“Knock, Knock?” Rip asked randomly right before he took a hit of the freshly packed bowl.

“Who’s there.” Minkus said quickly, holding out his hands to receive it from him.

“Hey, what? I’m sitting to the left of him, it should go to me,” I said, feeling confused and slighted.

“Yeah, but Mink said ‘Who’s there’ It’s kinda like a game, only someone sober enough to pay attention gets the second hit, then the rotation goes from there that round,” my brother kindly explained to me. I still felt gypped, but I shrugged, resolving to win the next time we played.

“So what are we going to see today?” Brick asked, glancing at the schedule for Saturday.

“Well the really important ones to see today are Cali Stripclub, Februraresque and GOVT, and those are all really late. Everything else today is pretty good, but I’m not so desperate to see anything in particular,” Rip assessed the day for us.

“Doesn’t The Boss headline tonight?” I asked, everyone around me flinching a little at the sound of his name. “What are we going to do during that?”

“Come back here and get high?” Minkus said? “Find ear plugs and get high?” 

“Either of those work for me,” I said chuckling. “I just wish we had something fun to take for Cali Stripclub,” I began muttering to myself without thinking.

My prayers were answered when moments later, out of nowhere, a heavy-lidded earth girl burst into our camp, necklaces and dreadlocks flailing about as she landed on to feet. She held in front of her a giant bag filled with tiny red and white pills as she shouted “Mmmescaliine!!”

We were simultaneously frightened and ecstatic; we didn’t know how to respond exactly. “What, yes! How much?” we seemed to each say, everyone reaching for their wallets at the same time.

“These are each 20,” she began to explain. “There isn’t much of this stuff around this year, so it’s going like mad. How much do you need, she asked, taking a count of raised hands, everyone but Leona, before trading a handful of capsules for a handful of money.

“Tell me, what’s this like, I’ve never done it,” Minkus requested, inspecting his pill, the only person who seemed nervous or at least curious.

“Well pure mescaline extract, like you’d get from a cactus, is like really intense, it makes your whole body feel weird and since it’s a purgative, it usually it makes you through up,” she started, watching Minkus tense up at the thought. “But this stuff is synthetic; it’s a lot mellower than what you’d expect from a psychedelic. It’s actually a lot like acid and molly at the same time,” she said, which seemed to illicit a sigh of confirmation from the party.

“Oh that’s perfect, that’s exactly what I’m looking for,” I said. She smiled; glad to find people who would really appreciate it.

“Is it anything like 2C-I or 2C-B?” Rip asked, obviously the expert here.

“I’d say it’s more like 2C-I, man. It will come in waves, too,” she said, stowing away the hundred-twenty dollars she just made. “Pleasure doing business with you guys, enjoy the gorkin’ show!” she yelled, disappearing as quickly as she came.

“Well this changes everything, doesn’t it?” Minkus asked Rip.
“Yeah, it does a bit. Well we’re gonna need a good half hour to let it kick in. You guys wanna just take them, like, 30 minutes before Cali Stripclub begins?” He suggested, looking at the schedule again.

“Yeah, that seems good, and we can just watch some of the end of Roger, Roger until it’s time to head over there, I know Klay mentioned them a few times on the way here,” Brick said, confirming with his schedule.

“Alright, so we can totes just go our own ways for now as long as we meet up back here in time to dose up,” he checked the time on his phone.

“Sounds good to me,” Brick began to put the schedule card away in his pocket, glancing at the little bit of green left in his pocket. “Today would be perfect if we had more of the good nug.”

“Heads! I got your dank right here!” a large man with a backpack was soliciting as he walked nearby. Everyone looked at him, then at Brick in wonder.

“This is just getting too trippy,” Minkus said, checking his shirt pocket to make sure he didn’t swallow his pill without thinking.

The day was shaping out perfectly, and so we set out for the arch, all seven of us together when we began. We managed to lose Zech somewhere before even getting to the end of line. He knew how to handle himself though, and he likely would have split the second we got inside, anyway. Minkus and Rip did, peeling off to leave Eli, Leona, Brick and I to watch Rod i Gabri.

The duo from Mars or some other Ionian world were masters each at the classical guitar. It was a great way to start the day, an event of true musicianship, the kind of thing you travel thousands of miles to see at a festival like this. The only musicians in the entire band, many songs would have Gabri playing her guitar like a bass while Rod played lead. Another featured a drum solo, her knuckles wrapping wildly against the hollow wooden body of the guitar while she slapped at the strings between beats. I was impressed, and when we had our fill we began to wander.

Gozo and Grambel were probably either at Kiley Jenis still, or they had moved on to Of Terranto by now, I couldn’t be sure. Brick and Eli wanted to see Executive Oxon, so we hung out a while at Which Stage to watch them. A solid, southern rock performance that proved more entertaining than I expected. They even had a girl from one of the other bands come on to sing with them as they covered some classic old songs, which were surprisingly well done, given how much I don’t like The Nocturnals. Before not too long at all, it was about time for us to head back to the camp.

We found Zech shortly before it was time to take our mescaline. He was passed out in the tent, where he’d apparently been most of the day since we became separated, all the cannabis food he ate hitting him at once with debilitating force. He wouldn’t budge as we tried to rouse him, so we shrugged and let him be, zipping the tent back up at Rip and Minkus walked up, eager to get started.

“Alright, here you each go,” Rip said, happy to be distributing them. He found he had one pill left over and asked “is Zech not taking his?”

“Yeah, he’s passed out right now, I tried waking him, but he’d probably be too tired to enjoy it even if he would get up,” I reasoned. He shrugged and closed up the container, slipping it into his box. “Hey, you haven’t taken one yet,” I reminded him.

“Oh, I’m not. I already know what 2C-I’s like. I did it, like, every day one summer. I sold my mescaline for 25, just in case something else interesting popped up, or we need more weed or gas,” he explained, a noble choice I wouldn’t have expected him to make, especially considering how excited he had been when we got them.

“That way he can babysit us too, if we so need a sober person,” Minkus added, obviously having discussed it with Rip beforehand.

“Alright then, I actually kind of safer that way. Uhh, bottoms up, guys?” I said, raising the tiny pill pinched between my fingers, everyone followed in suit and we swallowed them at approximately 5 pm.

“You do too much for your friends!” The voice of a desperate woman cried off in the background. Rip appeared, catching up with us after leaving the campsite.
“Someone on tranq just tried to sell me some,” he said, proudly.

“And you got it?” I asked, assuming that’s what his tone implied, and preparing my mind for the idea of a new drug.

“Wha–no. No, in fact, I didn’t do it. The way she got all offended that I didn’t want to, made it seem so much less appealing.”

“Yeah, she made an awfully poor poster for the substance, then,” I said, summing up his reasoning well enough to receive a nod from him.

We waited in line again at security, the time slowly ticking away each minute we remained behind a hundred hippies, nervous about what they’ve stashed in their shoes and crotches. I was more nervous about the sky melting away, or the feeling in my fingertips being replaced by fuzzy prickles, or any of a dozen other imaginative concerns worry you after you’ve ingested an unfamiliar psychotropic substance. Purely standard operating procedure.

Though it seemed like it had been doing something to my head since the moment I swallowed the little capsule, I can safely say that it actually kicked in as we approached the main stage to see Roger, Roger. A band from Earth that’s been around for a while, I had no idea they were as old as they looked, they have a very young voice and style. I was delighted to hear they were the same, if not better than their recorded material; crisp, clean, and so well polished.

It made a pleasant atmosphere for the onset of the mescaline. Slowly everything in my peripherals became brighter and moved about incomprehensibly, dodging perception by the time you turned to look at it. I could feel a strange weight come to rest on my shoulders, and a weird, cramp lurch across my stomach suddenly, as if I had just been ensnared in a trap. We bailed before the end of their show, wobbling along as Rip and Leona herded the four of us to Which Stage.

We arrived right as The Cali Stripclub began to play their incendiary introduction, setting up by a line of trees in the middle of what would be the first mezzanine. It wasn’t the first time I’d seen them, or the first time I’d seen them at Bonnaroo. The cataclysmic psychedelic band, which blended a sharp and imaginative orchestration with a kind of sideshow attraction macabre, had been a favorite of mine for a long time, the reason I came here four years ago, and the only band I watched when I did that. I was on shrooms and acid that time; you picture it.

At the present time they had been given a much smaller slot to play in, but this only encouraged the Lunarian band to perform at almost twice the normal tempo, just to squeeze in everything the crowd needed to hear. The world that swayed and pitched violently around me heaved into fast-forward all of a sudden, like some eccentric magic carpet ride. Though the pace boggled the human mind, the singer, the drummer and the guitarist, who was the musical brains behind the band, never became unsynced in the audio melee. I, for one, had an amazing time.

So amazing that it only made the close of their show and the slog over to the main stage at sunset so much worse–especially when it was to watch The Boss and the C Street Band. The man, who really should have been washed up by now, had long been the poster boy for Earth, believed to represent it and all freedom that this nation offers. He may as well have written the national anthem as far as his generation was concerned, but that was the last one. Ours, a younger and, I’d hope to think, more sophisticated crowd, had no real connection to the man, other than bits of songs we’d heard on the radio growing up, which our parents probably became fed up with and changed half way through anyway.

I could see the appeal though, maybe only cause it takes cactus juice to do it, but I could understand why people liked him. He was a charismatic and powerful individual, one whom I couldn’t help but imagine leading some actual great cause, though now he was just playing with a dumb rock and roll band. I thought to myself ‘He should just fight our wars!’ not sure whether I liked it more because it would work, of if it didn’t we’d be rid of another worthless famous people.

Speaking of worthless famous people, as the novelty of the Earths patriot wore off, like some cheap spell they pumped into the air to enchant us for a while when the music began, I finally noticed the other members of his band. The guitarist looked just like that annoying old redheaded woman who thinks she deserves to be famous, the large bassist looked like the purple guy from the zombie movies and electronics commercials, hell, the drummer was the one from that late night talkshow; it was The Boss and the D-List Celebrity Band.

After the fourth song he brought the mood down and began to talk to the audience. We didn’t even make it through a single sentence before we began to pack up our stuff, it couldn’t matter what he was going to say.

“How’s everyone doing here at The Bonnaroo?!” he asked excitedly, his eyes wide from being high on being himself. “How’s everyone doing tonight? You know, tonight, folks, I know you thought you were going to go to a concert, but instead you came here to build a house,” he explained to us, very confused and still on enough drugs to interpret the moment with too much meaning for what he’s trying to get across.

“Really? A house?” I asked.

“Hey guys, we’re building a house,” Minkus stated informatively, as if trying to get everyone to pay attention himself.

“I wish I’d have known, I did not come prepared for this,” Brick said like a comedian, too. Mescaline seemed to make us think we were funny.

“Ugh, I’m so not down,” Rip sighed, packing his blanket into his pack.

“Let’s make like a fetus and head out,” Eli said for the fourth time today.

Some of the most unique music I heard was on the walk out of Centeroo. As if in protest or just contrast, the world outside the gates as alive as it had ever been. Excited and ecstatic individuals bounded about in the lanes, stoked that they had made the right choice for leaving behind that disgraceful salty shell of a man to wither on stage. The belly dancers and fire blowers were amuck, instrumentalists and censer bearers drawing in the crowds they didn’t wrangle. Men dressed in nothing but neon filament, glowing cords and self illuminating fabrics gallivanted by, along with women wearing nothing but a coat of paint and inlaid jewelry over their bodies.

If the price was right, you too could experience the event as any of the aforementioned characters, simply stop by a glow hut or a breast painting stand, or get your own instrument to fill the air, or join the harem for a while. You can do anything you want here if you have enough money, even purchase whatever feeling you wanted to from a passing salesman.

It’s like the Earthling Dream’s field day in this secluded paradise. By paying the expensive price for the ticket, you’re guaranteed a world of opportunity not afforded to those outside the event’s confines. And in this safe microcosm, this controlled experiment of epic proportions, all is permitted–and it still doesn’t crumble apart from the inside.

We were gonna wait out the next few hours of nonsense at the main camp, smoking and getting something to eat, but Leona needed to grab a few things from our camp, so I walked with her to keep her company. Also, I was coming down on mescaline at this point, and I felt like having a deep conversation in my introspective state.

“So what’s it like on Epimetheus? How is it different than here?” I asked, curious about the moon of Saturn that she’d stayed on last year.

“Here, like, Bonnaroo?” she asked, feeling like that would be a really easy question to answer as someone walked by offering some sort of pills.

“Hahaha, no. No, sorry; I meant here as in Earth,” I corrected.

“Oh..hmm,” she thought about it briefly, wondering herself what the biggest difference was for a moment. “It’s not all that different. I mean, people like the same things and they have the same complaints and struggles in their day to day lives. I was in the capital, too, though,” she clarified.

“Ah, I see,” I searched for another question, any question. I’d never been particularly interested in Epimetheus, especially compared to some of Saturn’s other moons, but talking about anyplace outside of the inner systems was worth while to me. “What was it like being the only Earthling on a planet of Dionians,” I asked.

“I wasn’t the only one there,” she said, knowing well I knew that, “But white people were few and far between either way. It was kinda neat though, anyone you saw that had the same color skin as you, you know you could probably strike up a conversation and make friends with. Otherwise it was actually weird cause they treated me like a sort of celebrity,” she started to explain.

“How do you mean?”

“Well, you know… Cute white girl with blonde hair and blue eyes, wearing their clothes and eating their food and living life as one of them efficiently, kind of drew their attention more than you would expect. Maybe more than if I stood out like a tourist, maybe not; I’m not sure. But one time I was having a coffee, and looked up to like 50 men staring at me. Another time I was walking back to my home and I was followed by like 200 guys, some even taking pictures. It was crazy!”

“Gork, it sounds like it. That’s pretty cool though, not your typical reaction around here. I doubt I could go to any world were I’d get such a reaction, but I’d still like to travel plenty in my life,” I said.

“Yeah, I would suggest it. Something about seeing the world for yourself puts things in perspective,” she told me.

“I always figured so. Tell me, someone who’s not spent much time far from Earth, how much is our information filtered? How bad is our idea of the solar system compared to what everyone else knows?” an honest question I’ve always felt the need to answer.

“Well compared to a lot of places that aren’t linked up as well, it’s not that terrible. But considering what is actually served to us as a nation as opposed what one would discover on the nets, yeah: Earth doesn’t want it’s people to know everything. Especially about health and food–we make a lot of money off being sick and malnourished,” she had a tired spite behind these words.

“Gotta love this country,” I said sarcastically. “Well I think we’ve got everything we need, lets head back. I think Moar! will be starting soon.”

After meeting up for the last time that night to go through security again, we split up once inside. Leona, Brick, I peeled off to see the young jam band from upstate New Tros while the others headed in the direction of Naysayer. Having never listened to them to my knowledge, I couldn’t know what I was missing and reasoned I made the right choice. I also wasn’t familiar with Moar! but the others had vouched for them, and the epileptic light show at the end of the first song was enough to seal the deal for me.

When they dragged into their 4th or 5th extended jam I did begin to get tired. It had a lot more diversity than Karp did, but it was the same exact formula, the same style of music I’d listened to last night and would hear again tomorrow. I convinced Brick and Leona to leave so we could meet the others at This Tent for GOVT.

This would have been the third time I was supposed to see them by now: once I missed them by arrive to Sanctus Di Vinci too late, the other was much closer to Olympus and doesn’t have as clean an excuse. Here on Earth though I finally got to see what everyone was so excited about. We ran into Zech, who I hadn’t seen in heavens know how long, so ready to see on of his favorite bands.

After four boring songs I didn’t recognize, I proposed to the others that we leave and either see something else, or head back to the camp and call it a night. They agreed a little easier than I imagined, and together we made our way through Centeroo, passing by the closing number of Seven Foot Spikes, and one of those Moar! songs about beer. We figured leaving was the best option and headed back to our camp to smoke a bowl and pass out.

«←→»

I woke up on the last day of the concert feeling quite poorly rested. It was as late as any of us had slept, sometime around ten, but that wasn’t that much sleep even, considering no one in the entire farm had been able to pass out until Moar! stopped playing at 6 AM.

This morning, after crawling out of the tent like a pupa, we woke ourselves with water-bottle baths from reservoir of melted ice in the cooler, still freezing cold. It was refreshing, to say the least, and once we were into dry, clean clothes, we drank the last of our beers while smoking our waking bowl.

We met up with the others before noon, this time actually getting some food with everyon–real food and enriched food. We could tell it was going to be a slow day, no one making any real sudden movemnets, so when we got ready to see the shows we made sure to bring plenty of weed with us, as well as the blunt.

Civilian Cain was the first band we managed to watch that day, though I’m not sure any others were really playing early that day. We digested while we eased into the high of the day, Rip packing opium into one of the bowls to keep it interesting. There was nothing too memorable about the set, and soon we were on to the greens in front of the main stage.

We set up for Baditz Maru, the female hip-hop singer usually known for having outrageous hair or style. It looked like partied too hard last night as well, a grey sweatshirt hood pulled over her head and large mirrored sunglasses covering most of her face. We could tell it was going to be a slow day for her too.

After establishing the blanket that simply be our home base for the day, Zech, Eli and Rip left to go see some of the other attractions, Minkus wanting to watch her all the way through before leaving to run by the stand-up comedy tent. Leona and I left him with Brick as we ran to see Alan Falcon real quick. It was important that everyone be back before the next band came on the main stage, and especially important for whoever had the blunt.

Falcon put on an unbelievable performance. The band from northern Earth, surprisingly small compared to the depth of sound I’d known from their recordings, merely filled in the space between his multi-instrumental talent. During one song he could play four different ones, a guitar and a violin, both electric and hooked up to loop petals, along with a marimba or some sort of miniature xylophone as well as whistling into a specially effected microphone.

When we’d had our fill we headed back, and hoped Eli would be there in time. Luckily, he was the first to return after us, followed shortly by Mink and Rip, who arrived just before The Dogg took the stage.

One of the most famous and successful rappers still alive, and a fierce proponent for the sticky-icky-icky, it was a dream come true for every pothead in the audience, no matter what the color of your skin–though here it was mostly white. It’s always fun to see songs that have long been favorites of yours in a live performance, especially while doing the same things you would do listening to the music at home. We sparked the blunt and passed it around to everyone as soon as he began playing.

He put on an ever entertaining show, though it was often frustrating for an singer who is usually found featured on other artist’s songs and albums. All the really famous ones usually included another verse or two sung by someone else before he would start, so it was weird when the songs would go from the intro to the last verse when they began. It was still a great show though, and couldn’t have been topped off better.

“Smoke weed, mother gorkers,” he shouted, dropping the mic before exiting the stage.

We collected the foundation of our spot and moved forward one last time, setting up for the final show of the event. There were a few more shows going on: Posse of Ponies, Kitty Crate, and Aaron & Algae, all of which I could have seen myself having a good time at. Instead I was intent on getting a meal in heading back to the main camp to meet anyone who was going to drop acid with me for the last show.

Eli practically begged me for piece of the acid laced paper I’d bought, a sliver of a larger picture of Jerry himself, even offering to trade me his chillum for a taste. I felt bad enough that I didn’t even take it, and split it four ways between him, myself, Brick and Minkus as we sat on top of Zech’s long inert vehicle. We chewed our wads vigorously, intent to make up for ground lost to each other, and we walked to the event center one last time.

The acid was weak, though I’m sure it would have been just as impotent had it not been cut into itty bits. If it kicked in at all, it was a subtle filter slowly vibrating over the rest if the evening. The other three who dropped with me didn’t seem to demonstrate any overwhelming reaction either, but we had to enjoy the moment; the festival was coming to an end.

Back at the blanket where Minkus, Leona and Zech were seated, we rejoined our company with time to smoke before the next act went on. It was going to be Karp again, closing out Bonnaroo with a second performance. I was pretty sure they’d played everything I wanted them to the first time I watched them for 3 hours this weekend, but who knows what fun surprises they could have in store for anyone willing to stick around for the last show.

Unfortunately, the only ace up their sleeve was The Boss, whom they invited on stage to play a couple of songs that I’m not even sure he wrote. Luckily, it was uncanny enough of a shock to make it feel like the acid was working, so I sat back and tried to at least enjoy the novelty of it all–trying hard to ignore the tortured screams and shouts of protest all around me.

“Gork. I thought you had to be on something to have a bad trip,” Minkus said spitefully.

“And this is it, this is my nightmare,” grumbled Brick as he laid down, covering his face with a bandana he had around his neck.

“Should I wake you guys when it’s all over or do you want me to get you up whenever the four horsemen arrive?” I asked as I looked up at the sky, half expecting skeletal riders to mounting a sulfuric storm front to the tune of Mustang Sally.

“Don’t bother, just get me for the fat lady…or the messiah…whoever they get to sing the closing number,” Minkus grumbled as he too layed down, pulling his had down over his eyes.

After a moment of reflection, I turned to Rip, who was packing another bowl now that only a few people were still awake to smoke it with him. “You know, if this really were the end of the world, I think I’d be satisfied with my life, especially after everything that’s happened this past week.”

“How many times have you supposed to die by now?” he asked, taking a hit.

“Four times,” I answered quickly, obviously having counted already. “Wait…5 times; there were some awfully questionable quesadillas the other morning.”

“You’re crazy,” he said, handing off the pipe as he exhaled.

«←→»

I woke up on the fifth day, better rested than I had on any previous day of the festival. Technically it was already over, as there were no events scheduled or entertainment planned, but the final day is still always an important part of the Bonnaroo tradition. This was the day you do your last minute shopping before the vendors leave, or snatch up the things everyone left behind. Today you try to find the friends you lost at the beginning of the festival, or the ride home you never really had before it started. This is about the time you sell the last of your weed or anything else you can to make gas money before it‘s too late.

I packed up my few belongings, my backpack and the small suitcase I brought, and helped my companions dismantle the tent and load up Brick’s crawler. Without any real ceremony or hesitation, I waved them off as I stood in an empty campsite, watching them slowly roll away. I began the lonely trudge to my brother’s camp.

At first I thought it would be odd to have five people in a party, but Zech was reasonably incapacitated from the weed cookies he’d already eaten that morning. The three remaining standing did little more than that, difficultly sloshing through each step they took as they slowly filled the car. It was frustrating to watch happen, the potential energy not being utilized.

Anxious to get this show on the road, and generally irritated that I was joining this crew just to chauffeur it to Dominia, I felt a bit like a lieutenant given a unit of uncooperative cadets. I looked down on them stumbling to get the last of their things as I secured Eon’s case to the roof rack, feeling like I already hated them and I hadn’t even gotten behind the wheel yet. I barked a few commands at them and climbed behind the controls to adjust the settings, seats and monitors to my trim while I waited for them to finish.

Rip was the only one willing to be useful, so I had him sit shotgun, in charge of navigation, music, and bowl packing. Eli and Zech were completely passed out on either side of the back seat, as I wished Mink had been. He was awake and complaining the whole time, especially if I accidentally switched off the audio to the movie he was watching on the screen installed into the ceiling of the cabin, which was easy to do when we had to turn down the music to take a phone call. He wouldn’t let us turn up our music too high, either, otherwise it would drown out his headphones–which raised the important question of who’s comfort was more important.

I grumbled to myself as I thumbed over to cruise control, operating acceleration with my hand to give my legs a rest. Rip handed me a bowl right before I merged onto the freeway that we’d be taking most of the way through Dominia, and passed a small sign for the town Morris.

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Published in:  on 21 September, 2309 at 1:03 PM Comments (3)
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«The Festival – Part 2»

06-12-2309

On the second day of the festival, I woke up to the cry of the evil magpie, awake at the crack of dawn and willing to share the experience with everyone. I looked up at the already illuminated world with dirty, bloodshot eyes. To my right Leona, still immune to anything audio, was well asleep. To my left Brick was still snoring away, like a shield against any noise that could potentially wake him. I envied his defense as I rolled over and covered my head with the sweatshirt I’d used as a makeshift pillow.

I couldn’t tell if I actually rested over the next two hours, or just tossed and turned myself around one little nap, but I didn’t start getting up until the others did sometime around 9 in the morning. We roused ourselves slowly, eating what we could find appetizing that early in the morning, which wasn’t much more than a PB&J sandwich and a granola bar. We were anxious to meet up with the other group, so we briefly washed up and got on our way to find us a map.

We got our first taste of the strange world around us. Passing by a small pocket of food stands apparently on loan from a carnival, with flashing lights and an iridescent paint jobs, we found ourselves on the paved road we’d used to drive in last night.

“We should probably head that way,” Brick was pointing opposite of the way we came in, the direction everyone else seemed to be traveling in.

“Looks good to me. Do you think that giant question mark will be of any use to us,” I asked, noting the floating white balloon nearby to our right.

“Couldn’t hurt to check,” Brick shrugged as he started to lead the way.

The giant question mark was labeled well enough. There they filled us in on all we needed to know, handing us each a map plate with the abbreviated concert information contained. Before getting back to the road, I used the map to locate the closest water station to fill up with fresh water before searching for my brother’s camp among these thousands of other camps.

“Good morning,” I said spitefully over the phone.

“Oh, hey. What’s up?” my brother simply responded.

“…Not much, where can we find you?”

“Uh, well we’re….you can…if you…well right now…” he continued, unhelpfully.

“Heavens, man! Where are you?” I was past impatient with him and I hadn’t even seen him yet.

“Balloon three. We’re by balloon number three right now, ge-” I cut him off after I heard all I needed to, hanging up the phone and pulling the map out of a cargo pocket to find #3.

The plastic card, loaded with a single program, displayed an aerial view of the 700 acre farm, broken up by a score of streets and avenues. The camping areas were in yellow, themselves each containing a dozen smaller lanes, and the 100 acre event center was in white at the south side of the farm, boasting 5 main stages, several small stages and hundreds of artisans and vendors–according to the info bubble.

The green circle with a “3” in it was located very close to the entrance of Centeroo, marking east-most secton in the first ring radiating from it. We ended up at the far end of the thoroughfare and could see the green balloon tied off somewhere ahead, and even further off, the very tip of the entrance arch visible over the top of the swarming crowd before us.

All three of us, the Martian and both Earthlings, marveled at everything we passed on display. Bags and blankets, with intricate, trippy patterns woven of hemp. Flowing hippie skirts and tie-dye shirts and accessories. Incense and burners of each shape and size, made of wood, stone and ceramic. Of course, there were the pipes and bongs, but most of what we saw looked thin and generic, nothing truly outstanding that called to us to waste our money on. They also sold food of the strangest types, brought in from all sides of the solar system, and all supposedly healthier for you–well, not the funnel cakes.

They definitely appeared to be on something when we found them. In an apparent daze, staring about and confused by their surroundings, was how we spotted them, loitering about a food stand. Rip and Zech were brightly colored, each with curly messes of hair atop their heads, cut by the same barber. Minkus was uncharacteristically bald, and appeared bruised about the eyes and forehead, like he’d been in an accident, or bar fight. He was bobbing up and down, singing back the name of his order to the beat of a nearby band playing when we sauntered up to them through the mud.

“Blue-Berry-Pan-Cakes! Blue-Berry-Pan-Cakes!” he went on in a deep voice, mimicking the bassline.

“What up, motha gorkas?!” I shouted sliding in when they hadn’t noticed me yet.

“Blu-Oh hey, what’s up!?” Minkus said, giving me a hug.

“Hey, man!” Rip was next, throwing an arm around me.

I stepped up to my brother, glaring at him for a second, before hugging the little guy. Well, not so little anymore it seemed, though he was only two years younger than me, it was strange to see he was as big as me now, and had more hair on his face. “Hey bro,” I finally said.

“What’s up, man?” a voice from behind me asked.

I turned to see Eli standing there, apparently having been there the whole time. “Whoa, I didn’t even notice you, man. How are you?” I asked, embarrassed I didn’t see him. He just shrugged.

“Hi guys,” Brick said, clearing his throat from behind everyone.

“Oh right, everyone this is Brick and Leona. They go to school in New Tros, and Brick‘s from Olympus county, he knew Linda,” I said to my old friends, who each nodded in understanding. “Guys, these are Rip, Minkus, Eli; they all went to school with me, Mink goes to school up north now, too. And this fuzzy guy is my brother, Zech.” I felt like I’d introduced everyone well enough.

After Minkus had received his blueberry pancakes, singing the theme song between each bite, we began the short walk to their camp site. Literally just around the corner from where we were standing, it didn’t take long at all for all seven of us to reach the nose of my brother’s supersized SUV. They opened the hatch to reveal a few seats on the tail and also pulled the cooler around for another.

“Sorry, we haven’t had this many people here. We didn’t realize we wouldn’t have enough seats,” Rip said, apologizing for his camp.

“No worries, I think I can fit up inside the hold, are you guys gonna be ok?” I asked my two companions.

“I’ll be fine for now, Leo?” Brick passed the question on.

“Yes, for now. I’ve got a folding seat back at our camp I could bring here. And a lamp for later at night,” she added, not noticing any of the tarps or lanterns you’d see accessorizing the other sites.

“You guys may wanna head back pretty soon and take care of that while it’s still early. It gets kinda hard to go back and forth all the time with this many people here,” Rip advised.

“Yeah, but first things first,” I insisted before anyone started moving.

“Hey, he’s right. You guys haven’t smoked yet right?” Minkus asked, his mouth full of breakfast.

“Oh, right on,” this convinced Brick to get comfortable and he sat down on the cooler, offering the other half to his roommate. Rip began to remove his box of goodies, a strange variation on the multi-pocketed case he usually carried his accoutrements.

“Check this out,” he said to me, removing his brand new teal blue pipe and handing it up to me on the tail.

“Wow, is this a…ah…what the gork? This is amazing, man,” I said, admiring the unnaturally blown glass with shock.

“Look what I got,” my brother chimed in from behind, displaying his bizarrely stretched pipe. I rolled the sturdy thing over in my hands, inspecting it.

“Well done, this one is perfect. I’m really impressed with these guys,” I passed both on to my original companions to appraise them.

“And I got this thing,” Eli said, leaning back from one of the front seats with a small blue chillum in his hand, still loaded with what looked like a ball of resin.

“Wait a sec,” I said, smelling something familiar before even taking the piece out of his hand. “Is this opium in here?”

“Yeah, son!” he said, excitedly snatching it back and removing a lighter to hit it.

“Pipes, opium…” I started

“Midies,” Minkus added, holding up a large bag he’d brought in.

“and Heads” Rip finished, producing a jar of what looked like purple and a bag of something orange, as well as the small baggie of black tar.

“Gork, how did you guys get all this stuff, you’ve only been here a day,” I was understandably impressed.

“We willed it all to us,” Rip explained in a deep, mystical voice as he clutched at an invisible ball of energy at his chest. I laughed a second until I noticed the deadpan expression on everyone else’s face.

“No really, we did. We manifested our desires,” Minkus said, usually skeptic of these sorts of things.

“Wait, really?” I was in disbelief.

“Yeah, it started when I sent Rip to find something for us to do,” he went on, “I was just telling Zech that I’d love to try chasing the dragon, and then bam, he appears again with opium.”

“Then I wished that we had something to smoke out of, besides the little thing I bought my mom,” Rip continued. “Then a glass blower wandered in and sold your bro and I our new pieces.

“Yep, then I wished for some dank, and someone came by to deliver it to us in moments,” Zech said. “Craziest thing ever, man.”

“Does it work with anything?” my mouth was agape as I looked about, marveling at the possibilities.

“Everything we’ve tried so far…here, hold on,” Minkus said, passing a freshly packed bowl to me to start. He stretched his arms for a second as he stood up, flinched his head a few times and cleared his throat before saying, very loudly “Man, I could really use some pussy!”

Everyone held their breaths as they waited to see if it would work. Would a desperately, attractive girl come running out of nowhere? Would a naked hooker fall from the sky? Would a kitty cat appear? After a minute it was apparent nothing would happen.

“Maybe it only works with drugs,” Brick suggested.

“Maybe everyone only gets one wish,” Leona said, looking around to everyone contemplatively nodding to her answer.

“Well, I don’t want to waste a wish, so somebody hand me a lighter,” I said, eyeing a green bowl in front of me.

After we were thoroughly baked, we wend our way through the other camps to find our own. Brick, Leona, Rip and I arrived back at the b-site in near no time, bringing with us a sleeping bag, pillow and jacket more suitable for Earth’s moist climate. We made sure to prepare everything we thought we’d need for the day: sunblock, water, snacks, maps, cigs, and a few umbrellas and ponchos incase the rain made a second appearance tonight. I grabbed my guitar to leave at the other camp and we were back on our way and harassed by the pushers in no time.

“Rolls, rolls, rolls,” some people would say under their breath as they passed. ‘Dust’, ‘Meteor’, and ‘Ultima’ were also whispered in such a way. The most common messages shot out this way were just initials like ‘K’, ‘H’, ‘X’, or “Q”.

“Lucy? Who was looking for Lucy, I found her,” another would say, less subtly. Girl’s names like ‘Molly’, ‘Stella’, or ‘Helen’ were often used, but sometimes over played, so people would start to get creative. ‘Kaleidoscope Eyes’ and ‘Chocolate Covered Shoelaces’ were obscure choices, but not as confusing as ‘8 Medal Olympian’. Eventually, you just assume anyone speaking in your general direction as they pass is trying to sell you something.

“I’ve got acid, 5 bucks a hit,” the most indiscreet of the salesmen would tell you as you walked by them. So forward and honest it was truly surreal, one had to marvel at it. What an amazing place where you can be so straightforward with your clients, and even haggle back with your vendors.

“Cookies. Five dollar cookies,” one kid with a large tuberware said passing by. I could see Rip straighten to attention, his antennae perking up a bit.

“C’mon,” he said back to us with determination as he sped up, tapping the kid on his bare shoulder and inviting him to take a walk down the nearest lane, away from all the prying eyes of the street.

“Alright, how many do you guys need?” he asked, getting his wallet out and opening the lid by rote.

“Uhm, well let’s see,” our Ionian-Davidian representative spoke, for us, turning to count heads real quick. “What if we get a bunch, will you cut a deal?”

“Yeah, just hurry up, what are you thinking, five for twenty? Six for twenty-five?”

“How about eight for thirty?” Leona chimed in real quick. I was already handing Rip 10 from me and another 10 from Brick to add to the pool. The salesman locked eyes with her for a second and then saw Rip handing him 30 dollars.

“Alright, alright,” he said, scooping out eight sugar cookies, benign enough in appearance, and trading them for the cash. “Pleasure doing business, gents. Enjoy,” he said, and returned to the real world.

“Ok, who wants how many?” Rip asked as he took two for himself and offered the other six.

“Oh, I don’t want any yet, thank you,” Leona politely turned it down.

“Really?” Brick asked. “Ok, I’ll take two then, Klay?”

“Yeah, I guess I’ll take two and we can give one to Mink and One to Zech,” I said taking my two and leaving the remaining pair for Rip to pocket. “I could always give my brother one of mine… or half of…naaaah,” I said, deciding to eat both as we hiked back.

I handed Eli the guitar, who graciously snatched it and disappeared for a while to play by himself, somewhere still in earshot. The rest of us discussed the plan for the remainder of the day.

“So what are we taking tonight?” Minkus asked of Representative Gozo, distracted by the act of packing his pipe.

“Hmm. Not sure yet,” he stopped everything to ponder. “I’d like to find E or Molly, maybe even 2CI or B. I think any of those will make this night most enjoyable,” he threw in.

“Well, you guys have fun with that, I think we’re gonna call it a night after Karp,” I said, speaking for the rest of the other camp, looking to them for confirmation to see they already looked ready to pass out.

“Aww, but you’re gonna miss Cedarpleat if you go to sleep. And Shiney Dots,” Rip said.

“Yeah, and GuyChat, dude; so sick,” Minkus added.

“Don’t you at least wanna see Ferrous Fortress,” my brother asked, insisting.

“You know, I’ve supposed to see them in Olympus two times already, I’m sure I’ll have another chance to when I’m less sleepy,” I said, received with a general shrug from the others.

“Hey did you ever finish all those flowers you guys had?” Zech queried. Brick and I looked at each other and shuddered slightly, remembering how close we came to dying that night.

“Yes, I think we’ve still got about an eighth left, I’m sure we didn’t eat anymore than a half each. They’re probably just in the cooler, too, Klay.”

“Do ya…want them?” I asked.

“Yes! What, you don’t?”

“Heavens, no. Please, you’d be doing Brick and I a favor.”

“Hey, can I have some, too?” Minkus asked my brother and I, whoever was in charge of doling it out.

“Yeah, and me too?” Eli wondered, miraculously appearing at sound of a new drug.

“Yes–gorkin’ vultures–you may. But I’m not just getting it for you. Follow me if you want the Flowers of Taurus,” I declared standing as I flipped my yellow scarf dramatically, and turned to lead them away.

“Wait, we’ll have to head to the shows soon,” Rip shouted to stop me.

“Hmm, well what do you suggest?” I asked, stopping mid-step.

“Well I think we were gonna go find some food,” Leona said, looking to Brick who nodded back, hunger behind his eyes.

“I guess I’ll go looking for tonight’s main course while the rest of you are gone then. Rendezvous here at 1500 hours?”

“When?” Zech asked facetiously.

“40 minutes, bro; let’s go.”

And so we split into three different missions, like in some RPG where all your characters separate to go on their own quests somewhere early on–so early you don’t get to choose who you take in each of your new parties. Brick and Leona’s goal seemed easy enough to handle by themselves, and Rip was leveled well enough to make it on his own. I, as the main character, felt like I was just dragging along a few expendable NPCs.

We got to the camp sometime after 2:30, the tent and crawler already hot to the touch from the unrestricted sun. I thumbed the keys in my pocket to open the door and began digging in the cooler for the psychedelic remnants.

“Hey, any of you guys want a beer? They’re still ice cold.” They all asked for one and I handed them out, they’d need something to wash what I removed next. “Behold!”

“Coffee?” Minkus asked.

“Chocolate truffle coffee?” Zech asked, looking more closely at it.

“Shut up,” I began to open the package and dig around the finely ground stuff with my wet fingers. I sighed, wiped my hand off on my pants, and poured half Venusian bean on the ground. I stopped when the baggy fell out.

“Behold,” I said again, retrieving it for them. “It’s up to you guys to decide how much you each get,” I handed the flowers to my brother. I grabbed myself a snack and popped open a beer while I watched them divvy up the larger pieces of heads and stems, then take pinches of the bluish powder at the bottom.

It’s always amusing to see people react to the filthy, mucusy texture when eating them raw. I happen to like it; it reminds me of the taste of sunflower seeds. The two blonde Earthlings grimaced and cringed with each tangy bite, immediately washing it down with a big swig of lager when they couldn’t take it anymore. The dark haired one, face shaded by the brim of his baseball cap, ate it like candy, delighting in the end of the bag when the others didn’t want anymore. We grabbed another round of beers before heading off to join the other parties.

After our rendezvous, we made our way to the event center. The lanes and roads were well established by sandled foot by now, the main streets slick with mud from runoff at all the water stations and cafes, laid over with hay that too had saturated and slipped under foot. Rip had to head back before filing through the security checkpoint into Centeroo, he had to drop off the pure MDMA he’d just bought himself and the others who were staying up late tonight. We entered separately but managed to reunite again at an easy enough landmark, a blue pillar with a hood over top like a mushroom cap that dispensed water.

The first band I saw was Mammal Commune, one of the prime names on the ticket for me. Unfortunately, it was mostly stuff of their new album; more mellow than their typical lineups of the past, and was too relaxing of a show to start my concert off at. Brick and Leona were willing to stick around with me while I waited for them to play something I liked, the other four went to see some other sets and promised to meet back up at the same place to see the next band on the same stage.

This was the ‘Which Stage’, the second main stage of Bonnaroo. The first was called ‘What Stage’, and there were three smaller tents called ‘That’, ‘This’ and ‘The Other’. Then, on top of that, there was a series of smaller, even harder to remember venues, and if you think this explanation is confusing, it’s not any easier when you actually have a map.

We sat on our blanket, amidst dozens of other groups of happy concertgoers similarly seated, surviving only on frozen lemonade treats after the Mammals were over with and we waited for the others to get back in the afternoon sun. A few minutes before The No No Nos were about to go on, Rip and Minkus returned. They had no idea where Zech or Eli were, lost somewhere in the mass of others aimlessly crowding all of the paths.

“It’s fine,” Rip said, packing the pipe he snuck in. “We’re each getting our own versions of Bonnaroo. If your bro’s ever not enjoying himself, he can always leave and go see something else, or even just find us,” he finished, handing it to me. I hit it as the band started, their female lead as hot as ever, seeming to be making love with the very air around her. I would have been content to stay and watch their entire set, no matter how repetitive it would have gotten, but after the first few songs we packed up our spot and began to find our next event.

Rip chose Sinisilver, the spunky Neptunian-Earthling girl who’s gotten real big just over this past year so. She was really fun to watch and had amazing report with the audience. After Eli had met up with us, my original party retreated with me to grab some food somewhere still in earshot of That Tent.

The three of us made it on to Art Blue, the old fellow at What Tent. None of us were particularly fans of his, or really all that familiar with his body of work, but we knew he had been popular since before our parents were our age. It was also amusing to see what kind of a crowd the soul singer drew, until we got too much a taste of an old couple in front of us.

It was just painful to watch one purple guy dancing with an over enthusiastic lady, double fisting two empty beer bottles so he wouldn’t actually have to lay his hands on her. We also tried to keep our eyes off the cellulite wedgie-matic, or the man dancing with another girl that continued to pick it out for her no matter how many times it lodged itself between her cheeks. For a while I wished I had gone to see 3D on the Teli with the others, but I’d already been unsatisfied at one of their shows.

We were so relieved when Art finished his set and the crowd had dispersed. We picked up our stuff and eagerly made our way a little closer to the stage, setting back down where we could see the stage and both of the building sized screens on either side of it. We were joined by someone, Minkus I believe, shortly after the start of the next band.

The Devlish Dudes, long lasting cult icons of rock, hip hop and rap, weren’t doing too bad in their old age. In their lengthy set they managed to play all of my favorites, a truly wholesome lineup they could have easily gone out on. Minkus departed before the end to meet up with the others at the main camp, just before the band began to fall apart. They managed to sabotage one of their most famous songs, but for our sake attempted to get it right instead of giving up.

When they’d given their bows and cleared off, Leona, Brick and I moved up even closer to the stage, but not by much. We still remained far enough back where we could set up and take a rave nap while the next act got ready. It was the main event of Friday evening, the recently reunited Karp, who got back together shortly after the leader’s year of court ordered rehab.

Either he had relapsed or never needed them though, because they still put on a satisfyingly psychedelic performance. During the first song, at every crescendo and turnaround, a wave glowsticks and other illuminated objects erupted into the night sky. The audience was truly participating, small pulses rising consistently at every beat and more swells emerging every couple of measures. The screen showed the band’s incredulous reaction, staring out under the hundreds of bright lights to see the multicolored swarm hovering over the crowd. You could tell they were enjoying this show too.

The crowd’s enthusiasm dwindled reasonably, settling in to enjoy the extended jam sessions that stretched each song to at least 10 minutes. We ached where we stood, our bodies requesting sleep from us as we tried to enjoy the rest of the show. We made it to the end though, a couple grueling but enjoyable hours later. Satiated, we grabbed our belongings one final time and trudged our way back to the camping areas along with the rest of the slow moving crowd.

Just outside of the gates we ran into the others, on their way to take molly and dance their asses off to the evening lineup for another 4 hours.

“Hey Zech, gimmie your keys, I wanna grab something from your truck on the way back,” I said, stopping him for only a second as he shouted back.

“It’s open. The batteries dead so the doors won’t lock. Just don’t lock it or we’re gorked,” he warned, running to catch up with the others.

At his quiet campsite we collected the items we’d left there over the day, sunglasses and hats, our battery powered lantern and the green that Brick had found earlier. I also grabbed my brothers new pipe, since none of us had anything appropriate with us, and they had others to use if they so need to tonight or in the morning. I had a feeling I would likely be its custodian this summer, or at least at just over Bonnaroo, so I tucked it with care into my pocket as if it were my own.

Back at our camp, we immediately climbed into the crawler and sunk into the seats, turning on the AC even though it was night time, just to cut through the layer of humidity stuck to our skin. Brick turned up the music, Leona passed us beers from the back seat, and I packed a bowl at the end of the second day.

festivalday2

Published in:  on 14 September, 2309 at 4:17 PM Comments (2)
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«The Festival – Part 1»

06-11-2309

We woke up late and didn’t even hurry to get ready. We felt confident we’d make it in time. 9 o’clock rolled around and, sometime after breakfast was served, we finally got around to getting on the road. Our party of three set out in the 4-wheeled crawler down the last stretch of our journey before our main destination, the Bonnaroo festival.

It was at this exact same time that my brother pulled his SUV into the parking spot a volunteer in an orange vest waved him into. He had waited so long in line, following the slow moving trail of vehicles, all honking and hollering with excitement constantly for the past hour. On and on it went, to the middle of a grassy field, beside hundreds of others, and enough space between to comfortably fit a tent for each group.

His behemoth of a crawler lurched one last foot forward and came to a rest in the soft, rain fresh soil. He killed the engine and removed the key, his seat automatically un-adjusting to allow him more room to exit. After he set down the keys and remained seated, Zech Lane turned slowly to the rest of his group.

“Now bitches, we are here. Let‘s get high!” he said dramatically, and to much applause and cheer from the others.

Within thirty seconds all four members of their party had stepped down out of the navy blue beast and begun stretching and moaning. Minkus Grambel was the first out; he cracked his back, flinched his head to side a few times and pulled out a cigarette, tapping on a pack that matched the color of his shorts before lighting it.

Rip Gozo was soon after, slipping out of the passenger’s seat on the same side as Minkus. He stretched his arms together, giving out a strange, high-pitched grunt, and patted himself down for a pack of cigs. Finding none, he turned around to face the other Earthling.

“Hey Minkus, can I bum a Red from you?” he asked in a curious tone.

“You say it like we could possibly have another type of cigarette with us,” he retorted quickly, being on the road had made everyone a little edgy.

“I know that’s all we have, I was there when we bought the carton…so, can I have a cig?” he inquired again.

“Oh, right. Of course, man,” Minkus said apologetically as he pulled out the red and white box. “A cowboy killer for you.”

“Thanks,” Rip said as he lit it, and only taking a little puff of it. “I really hope buying all 200 of these will be worth it by the end of this.”

“More like…175. That was one long line, man,” Eli interjected. Mr. Bayer was a dopey looking Earthling in baggy jeans and a ball cap pulled low, but always had an ability to seem inconspicuous; the man would be downright unnoticeable in a crowd of garishly dressed hippies, let alone the likes of Rip and Minkus. “I’m sure I smoked a pack by myself,” he exaggerated, but lighting another as he joined them, walking around from the other back door.

“Guys, we really need to focus on setting up the tent,” my brother, Zech, reminded everyone as he rounded the front of his truck.

“He’s right, we have to stake our claim before the next car moves in, otherwise we won’t have enough room for everything,” Rip confirmed. He had been to every one of these festivals here since the year after I first went. I may have gone first, long ago in the day, relaying tales and fragments of what my memories revealed to anyone who would listen, but Rip was seasoned in the experience of Bonnaroo, this would be his fourth.

“Yeah..that..and I need to sleep,” Zech explained, glaring at Minkus for not getting behind the wheel at any point. He had made the 10 hour trek from Northern Dominia in one long stretch, and sat in line for another two; he desperately needed rest. He held out three fingers, putting them down one at a time, saying “Tent. Blunt. Sleep.”

“But I want to go out and…find something,” Eli moaned to himself, holding his elbows as his eyes searched far off.

“We can go out and find anything we want later,” he assured everyone, though he too looked off into the distance, longing to discover what palpable offerings there were at hand. “Also, it’s gonna be, like, way easier once everyone is done setting up, too,” he said, telling himself more than anyone else.

Zech was removing the nylon sack containing a 4-person tent that belonged to the Grambel family. “Mink, you’re really gonna have to help me with this. Eli, stop rolling that and…well…on second thought, roll it. I think we’ve got this.”

We were still elsewhere in Appalachia about two hours later. After an embarrassing, and downright soaking, stop into a Uber-Mart to stock up on last minute supplies and food to fill up whatever room we had left, our car had reached the end of waiting line for the festival. Ahead of us it seemed to go on infinitely, everyone pulled over to the shoulder to let local traffic through, and quickly behind us, as far back as we could see, it continued on, endless.

The police would roll by occasionally to assist, though that was mostly added up to shouting cryptic messages on the megaphone and getting our hopes up by continually saying we were almost there. They couldn’t be bothered to stop and inform us how long we actually had, better to just ride on by and squall at anyone standing in the middle of the road.

Brick, Leona and I waited about 15 minutes before becoming restless, eager to get in and get set up, knowing we were just around the corner from the entrance. It was about this time we started noticing pairs and groups of people bailing out from their vehicles and making a run for the tree line, sneaking in a quick pee break. We scoffed at their impatience, thinking we were mere minutes away from being let in.

“That’s it. I’m gonna get out and start making friends with the neighbors,” Brick said, unfastening his seatbelt.

“By neighbors you mean the car in front of us in line?” I asked, with a slight bitterness since I could have used a tree myself.

“Yep. Looks like a good enough time,” he said, opening the door as he snatched the pack of the cigarettes out of the console. The door slammed behind him, followed by a moment of silence.

“Well, I guess that means we get to be friends,” I said turning to Leona, taking the first opportunity alone with her to have a nice conversation.

Two hours later, at Zech’s campsite, Rip and Minkus returned from a browse through the shops along the thoroughfare to the event center. They managed to lose Eli somewhere along the way, but felt confident he‘d find his way back. Zech was still passed out in the tent, so the two present members opened up the tailgate of the behemoth, sat down and shared a bowl together.

“This is so astro, dude,” the blonde Earthling said, hitting the pipe out in the open, in broad daylight. He passed it back to his pointy eared companion, making no efforts to conceal it.

“Yeah, it’s always really nice here,” he responded flatly, well aware how awesome it was from the past three times he attended. He picked a curl of his dark hair out of his face and hit the little pipe they just. He glanced down at the tiny glass piece with a sour face as he exhaled, saying “Man, I should have bought a bigger one…I guess I’ll just give this one to my mom.”

“How many pipes that you didn’t want anymore have you given to your mom?” Minkus asked, facetiously.

“How many has she given to me?” Rip smirked.

“Hey, you guys wanna hang out over here?” a young woman’s voice called from another campsite. “We’re about to play a game of pong.”

Rip and Minkus looked at each other and nodded, turning to say in unison “Hell yeah!” They walked over with the unfinished pipe to the adjacent camp.

“Oh look, she’s making friends already,” their neighbor said to his brother. His girlfriend turned and gave him a face, sticking out her tongue.

“Shut up, now you have a team to play against,” she explained to him. None of them seemed too bright to Rip, Minkus just thought the neighbors were funny. They handed their new friends the bowl as they joined their game.

At nearly the same time, after two hours of waiting in line, I was finishing up the last pages of my tlog. Well, not the whole thing, just this ‘best of’ collection I have; the highlights, if you will. Realizing these last pages were all about Lou, I cut it short, making an ending out the middle of a random paragraph.

No one noticed, so I put my computer under the seat and picked my texti out of the console to check how long we’d been in line.

“That’s it, time for a beer,” I said to the back seat, holding my hand out and waiting for it to be filled.

Leona obliged, handing Brick and I a red and white can, then getting herself one. As we each cracked open a beer we noticed a crowd of hippies, and other brightly dressed folks our age, out frolicking and playing in the field we were parked beside. The traffic was remaining static in long enough intervals for people to start a game of ultimate or soccer between hobbling from point to point.

The best toy we could find was a beach ball Leona brought for the concert. As quickly as we could, we inflated it and ran out to the field. We soon learned how difficult it was to control such a light object in the breeze, which added a whole lot of unpredictability to the game, but frustrated the hell out of us.

Sometime around 2 in the afternoon Zech awoke, bathed in blue light and sweat, on top of his sleeping bag. All around him were the sounds of celebration: people laughing and shouting, beers popping and fireworks screeching, and music–music coming from more directions than he could count. He stretched, yawned, and unzipped the door of the cerulean tent they’d assembled some 5 hours ago, crawling out into the real world.

He was instead astounded by how surreal it was; standing up in a pool of vivid colors and sounds. He seemed to be treading in a sea of tents and cars that spanned as far as he looked in any direction, the horizon spiked with masts and waving flags, alive and brightly adorned. Giant balloons floated off in the distance, tethered to the ground by massive lines, and bottle rockets exploded in the sky nearby.

Rip and Minkus returned from another neighboring camp, waving goodbye to the pierced lesbians they just met. Minkus had a smitten expression on his face his companion was more than eager to wipe off.

“Just cause you’re extra feminine doesn’t mean they’ll find you any bit attractive,” Rip said, popping his bubble.

“Shut up. A man can dream, damn it.” He paused a moment to think, then said to himself “she kinda reminded me of LZ.”

“Well, look who’s finally alive. I mean, huh-what?” Rip quickly deflected, lest anyone notice how snarky he is all the time.

“Mornin’,” he responded, letting the joke roll off his back. What happened to Eli?” my little brother asked, noticing that his crew was short a member.

“Eli?” asked Minkus in a tone that made it seem like they’d been joking about him for a while.

“Yeah,” Rip continued, glancing at him with a smirk. “We haven’t seen him in hours..

“The man completely disappeared after we smoked and you passed out,” Minkus expressed with concern, but not enough to go out looking for him.

“Oh, but come on. We’d never find him out there; it’s, like, too insane,” Rip interjected with a swish of his hand.

“You’re right, it looks crazy from here,” Zech agreed, peering about for a second.

“If you really want to see something, check this out,” Minkus said, leading everyone to the side of the resting beast, where he climbed to the roof by stepping up the ladder and the wheel cowling to the hood. “The view’s amazing, guys. C’mon up here,” he waved to the others to follow. “And bring that fire, Rip.”

In a minute they were passing around the bowl, sitting 2 meters above everyone else’s heads, atop the blue back of the sleeping behemoth. To every direction there was excitement and joy; festivities raged to the horizon line. They could see the pulsing veins of fellow concertgoers between the other tents and vehicles, flowing like blood to the core of the several hundred acre event. They trailed with their eyes until they were all looking forward in amazement, jaws open.

“Holy gork!”

“My gorking heavens!”

“Shit, we can see the main stage from here,” Zech said, finally starting to wake up a bit.

“Wow guys…this is going to be a good year,” Rip said humbled, thinking it may be his best trip to this etesian Elusian so far.

An hour later, I was seated where I had been for what already felt like an eternity, head on my hand as I stared out the window of Brick’s crawler. I sighed, lit another of the non-menthol cigarettes I bummed from one of my neighbors. We’d started to get friendly with the adjacent cars in the few past hours.

To my left were the guys who drove down from New Tros, ready to take their X as soon as it got dark. On the right, behind us in line, were the guys from some other part of New Ganymede who debated whether or not they should fire up the grill the next time we come to a stop. And directly in front of me, knife-kid was at it again, beheading any wild flower he saw.

“That kid who seems to despise flowers is back,” I reported lazily. Leona hardly stirred from her book but Brick opened his eyes at least gave him a glance.

“That guy’s still choppin’ away, huh?” the Martian muttered, rolling his head back over where he was resting.

“I wonder what those poor, white flowers ever did to him,” I said to myself as I turned back to him, exhaling slowly. After another moment, I suddenly felt very fed up and started to climb out of the window as I exclaimed “That’s it!”

“How many times are we gonna go through this, you’ll never make it in on foot,” Brick hardly opened his eyes as he spoke.

“No-No, not again. I’m just gonna sit on the roof,” I said as I pulled myself out and up onto it.

From here I could see further ahead than I had before, and I definitely didn’t like what I saw. Nothing but the same thing over and over: tie-dye and technicolor crawling along the side of the road at a slug‘s pace.

I leaned over the driver’s side and pounded on the roof. Brick stuck his head out and stared at me irascibly. “Hey-” I started.

“What?” he snapped quickly.

“We shouldn’t have smoked the last of our weed last night.”

“I know, I realized that already,” he said glaring, “or sacrificed the last of it for luck last night, you Callitian.”

“Yeah, my bad. Look…we should have slaughtered a goat…or Leona,” I said jokingly.

“Haha,” his mood changed a bit. “No we’re trading the blonde for hallucinogens, remember?”

“What’s that?” she finally interjected, sticking her head out the window too.

“Nothing, go back to reading, hon,” I said, dismissing her. She gave me a puzzled look and shrugged, withdrawing back inside. Brick chuckled again and retreated as well. I remained on the roof, finishing my cigarette as I stared at the anxious line, slothing its way along.

Another hour later and Rip was just getting back to the camp, excited to smoke what he just bought. He was almost frolicking by the time he bounded into the site, greeted by two pairs of confused, blue eyes that only said goodbye to him a minute ago.

“Guess what I got, like, three camps away.”

“What, what?” Minkus asked, hoping it was something better than the brick weed he’d brought from up north.

He removed a baggie that contained a black, lumpy substance, and held it aloft, shouting “Mmmm-opium!” This lit up the eyes of the other crew members, excited to add the first exotic drug to the list for this trip.

“Did somebody say opium?” an optimistic voice called from around the car. Eli Bayer stepped out of nowhere, as if summoned by the tarry stuff.

“Yes, in fact, I did…Where did you come from, El?” Rip asked, feeling most confused of all.

“Huh? Oh, I was just in there,” he said, pointing to open driver’s door of the 6-wheel’d truck everyone was currently seated on the tail of.

“Really?” Minkus turned in amazement, obviously not even knowing he was there. “How long?” Eli just shrugged and joined them, sitting on a cooler with a jacket on top for a cushion.

“Now if only we had another pipe to smoke out of,” Rip started to mutter, staring at the little blue one. Not even a minute later, a large hippie came roaming passed the camp with a massive black case.

“Blown glass pieces! Finest Quality! Get them while they last!” he shouted in all directions, unashamedly. The crew just looked at each other a moment before, responding.

“Yo, over here!” Rip said, acting as representative for them. The salesman came over and displayed his wares: truly the finest of triple blown glass they had ever seen.

“I made these myself; all the ones you see here in blue don’t change color because I blew them with silver,” the artisan explained. Rip immediately gravitated to one of these metallic blue pieces, particularly such with what seemed like a sidecar-handle. Zech locked eyes with a different, sturdy one shaped similarly to a gavel. Both had strange honeycomb patterns that seemed to sweeten the deal. They noticed the prices though.

“I really won’t have enough for other stuff this weekend if I spend a hundred on this,” Rip complained. Zech was getting his wallet out.

“But it’s so gorkin’ awesome, man. You have to get it,” Minkus pleaded.

“It really is a pretty one,” Eli even added with his mysteriously present southern drawl..

“I can throw in one of these chillums here for free,” the man offered, still holding the case with one arm as he pointed to a series of short one-hitters in the front. Rip spotted a white one that looked surprisingly like a squid and snatched it up.

“Yea, ok. I’ll take these too then,” the dark curly haired Earthling said, bowing his head as if in defeat.

“And I’ll take this one for 75,” the light curly haired one said, handing over the money immediately.

“I appreciate it, pleasure doing business with ya’ll,” he thanked them and disappeared, but could still be heard, continuing to advertise himself nearby for a few more minutes.

“Wow guys, that was real lucky,” Minkus was still in a bit of shock. Rip and Zech continued eying the new pieces of their arsenals.

“I really wish I had some dank weed to christen this thing properly,” my brother said, seemingly to no one. Some force seemed to beck their call, as another, even brighter dressed hippie came trading through.

“Headeez! I‘ve got Orange and Purple!” he bellowed as he rounded another site and entered theirs.

“Yo, over here!” everyone yelled.

The clock in the HUD of brick’s crawler showed a few past five o’clock. I grumbled as I looked down into the pack of cigarettes I’d bought this morning. I at least consider myself lucky that I’d bought two, but that meant I’d really only have one the weekend. As I lit it, Brick turned to me.

“Hey, put your tuni back on, I’m getting sick of my playlist.”

“Uh, I exhausted mine hours ago, but I guess I could find something obscure,” I said, spending the next moment in complete silence, spare the click of the selector wheel. I sat, running scroll-wise for what seemed forever, eventually forgetting what I was doing and just absent mindedly spinning my thumb around as words streamed by unintelligible.

“Pick something, the click is maddening!” Brick had been getting impatient.

“Huh? Oh, sorry,” I picked the next thing I saw, something we’d listened to on Luna, but it was long enough ago by now. “Damn it, why aren’t we at the shows yet, we’re missing out on so much right now.”

“Its ok guys, I’m sure we’ll be there soon, I mean…how much longer could this line be?” Leona asked rhetorically.

“It’s just we’ve been in this car for so damn long,” Brick moaned. “I think this is the longest we’ve been in these seats consecutively this entire trip,” he stated, looking to me to confirm.

“Well considering that we’ve gotten out and to play on every rocky out cropping along the way, or at least sat down in a restaurant for a good portion of time each day, even if it was a fast food joint, I’d say yea, this has been unbearably long and I hope it ends soon,” I said to two nodding heads. We had no idea how close or far we were from getting in.

It was about the same time, only a couple of miles away, that Rip, Minkus and Eli left the camp to go on another excursion into the vibrant world that surrounded them. Zech remained behind to mind the camp, an activity that wouldn’t require too much of the already fatigued lad. The others attempted to establish a viable path out of the three rows of other camps that impeded them from reaching the closest lane.

When they’d reached the already well trodden path, they came to join the gaudy, surging mass making its way to the junction between the event center and camping areas; a giant arch constructed in the middle of the farm with the words ‘Bonnaroo’ illuminated for all to see, though it was only slightly visible unless you were quite close by.

Rather than tag along the column of slowly moving bodies to the stages, the gang became distracted by the glittering attractions of the thoroughfare vendors. All sorts of baubles and trinkets dangled from leather thongs on the posts holding up the blue tarps of their shops.

Belly dancers and fire jugglers played in the street to bring attention to the shop, some waving about smoldering bunches of incense that filled the entire avenue with a pungent but memorable aroma. Brightly colored fabrics woven of natural fibers were sold alongside wood carvings and incense burners; screened tee shirts beside music memorabilia and ash trays. Every manner of smoking device available on display for all to lust for sat at their fingertips, and all could be theirs for the right price.

“This is what heaven is like, right,” Minkus asked, shaking his head in disbelief.

“No, not at all,” Rip argued, “this is so much better!”

A roar of excitement filed its way back through the line to us, catching my attention and stirring me from my daydreams. It was just after 6 by the clock in the dash, and it looked like we were moving a considerable amount, compared to the last hours of drudgery that amounted to very little.

We suddenly came around a corner, a sharp right off the street with which we’d become sickeningly accustomed, onto an even more secluded, backwoods road. This really looked like the home stretch, and by the applause of all ahead and behind, there was no reason to believe it wasn’t.

We watched people in other vehicles climb out their open windows and sit, sideways on the door as if on a railing. It looked like a good idea, so I grabbed my guitar and followed suit, hanging onto the wooden instrument as we crept along at a few miles an hour. I tried to play anything but the same song I had been for days, the one I wrote right before this trip started, but eventually launched into a 6 minute rendition of it. And still, we kept crawling.

“We’ll be set up in no time, guys!” I shouted with glee, though my excitement began to wane when I looked ahead again to see red break lights flowing at us.

An hour later and it had begun to rain over the 700 acre and its surrounding areas. Hard rain; heavy and unrelenting to those improperly covered or prepared for such an occurrence. Three individuals, particularly so, began their withdrawal back to the car. A slow retreat though, none seemed to be too bothered by the downpour.

The one with strong Ionian features (dark curly hair and pointy ears), a brand new tie-dye shirt, and a new blanket wrapped around his shoulders, woven of coarse pink and grey fibers, lead the way. Behind him, the Earthling with blue eyes hid his buzzed blonde hair and slightly pointed ears under a brand new blue hat as he nestled his arms, warm underneath his favorite sweatshirt. Trailing in rear was the dopey looking one with dark hair and blue eyes who wore nothing but a t-shirt, but was too busy staring the new piece he had bought himself, the little blue chillum he imagined he’d get to use plenty.

Surprisingly, the fourth member of their crew was awake when they returned to the camp. The youngest one, skinny and pale with light blue eyes and long, curly blonde hair sat in the wide open cargo bay, noming on a box of cookies, dry and safe from the storm underneath the large hatch, swung up above him. He scooted back to let them in, seating himself on top of someone’s luggage.

Rip simply shook out his blanket and folded it up, the material dry as he was underneath it. Minkus swapped sweatshirts and wrapped the hood of his wet one around the inner handle of the large hatch to let it dry. Eli took off his soaked t-shirt and put a sweater on over his damp back, muttering something to himself as he hung his only shirt over a seat‘s headrest.

“Alright, who wants to get high,” Rip said, removing his tool kit and some freshly purchased supplies. Three eager faces responded by huddling up close to where he sat, the glow from the dash illuminating them all from behind.

At that same moment is when I noticed it beginning to rain. I was just thinking to myself that it had gotten dark all of a sudden when tiny points of moisture began to strike the windshield and my arm hanging out the window. I saw, already, that there was no one left playing outside or hanging out on someone else’s hood and started to roll up my window, the others doing so as well when they realized why.

We obviously weren’t at the gate yet, the short cut or whatever we thought we had taken ended up being just another lengthy leg of the line. There was no considerable end in sight and we sighed as the drizzle became a rain and then a downpour.

Two hours later and it was still coming down hard on the exterior of the vehicle, pounding arhythmically for what seemed like forever on this already infinite day. There wasn’t even music playing anymore, we only ran the engine to keep the air circulating while the windows were closed. Brick feared if the line kept going any longer that we’d run out of gas before reaching our camp. I tried to reassure him we’d never be able to burn the rest, but words like ‘never’ ‘could’ and impossible meant very little in these conditions.

“I wonder how the others are enjoying the festival so far,” I grumbled as I looked back out the window into the dark, wet nothingness.

“This isn’t so bad, you know?” Minkus said, turning to the others. “In fact, I think it’s kinda cool. As long as we’re dry, I don’t care if we’re missing any of the bands.”

“I wouldn’t want to be out at any of those shows in this weather, anyway,” Rip decided, pausing a second to think if any of them would even be worth getting soaked for. “No, it always seems like a good idea, but it only gets more and more miserable as the show goes on.

“What do you mean, that doesn’t sound like a good idea at all,” Minkus objected, turning to see Rip wasn’t being the slightest bit serious.

“You think Klay and his friends made it in ok?” Eli spoke from where he sat in one of the forward seats.

“I hope so,” Rip answered. “I thought they would have called the second they got in, but maybe they’re too tired or all their phones are dead,” he reasoned.

“Ok, look. There’s no way that all of their phones are dead. No, I think they just haven’t gotten in through the gates yet,” Minkus stated pessimistically.

“Well that sucks because they’re gonna have to cut the line off eventually,” Rip began thinking to himself. “Man, I hope they get in soon.”

“Seriously, I dunno how much longer I can stay awake,” Eli said groggily, obviously already starting to doze off.

“All we can do is wait I guess…” Rip said to the rain still falling outside.

Another two hours later and the rain had let up. At this point, we’d been in line nearly 12 hours now, and half a day of this monotony had worn on us greatly. We were, without a doubt this time, certain we were approaching the final stretch.

The locals were out here, set up all the way on the other side of the lawn from their trailers and track homes–front row seats to the freak show passing by. In folding chairs with a can of beer in their hands, they watched the procession march on ever slowly from the edge of the road. An entire day of amusement just came to them, better than anything they’d be able to find on teli.

One particularly hairy Earthling, seeming to barely have had a cut or trim since the turn of the millennium, decided to thrust himself into the spectacle. He made his way down the line of foreign vehicles, meeting and greeting every single one of the ill humored, brightly colored individuals with his beer-free hand. He informed us we were in Asbury, a promising detail according to what I’d remembered seeing on the map. Then he was on his stumbling, stuttering way to the next car down the line, the odorous oaf.

Next there were even vendor tables; unofficial, redneck-run kiosks offering everything from cold beer to ponchos and bug repellent, and all for three times the price that we saw them for anywhere outside in the real world. But this was a trap from here on in, no way to get out now so we’ll jack up the prices. Welcome to our amusement park–hope you enjoy the ride.

Less than half hour later and we were finally at the gate, one of the last cars before the cutoff. Suddenly, after hours of seeing nothing but other vehicles on either side of us, looking back we saw nothing but an empty road. We look forward and we’re the next car to show our tickets and get our bracelets. They also gave us garbage bags, which we brought plenty of, but they were out of event programs, which could have been really useful to have at the time.

We joined the last pack being led to their camp sites, and sat tangled with it for mere seconds compared to what we’d just been through. We wanted nothing more than to wait and rest a short while after we’d pulled into our lake front property, but we knew time was against us, and it could start raining again any second.

We started to set up our shelter, stomping out a square of grass large enough to lay down a tarp and then stretched out nylon construction. The tent up easily enough, and we were just getting inside for the first time to assess how much space we‘d have when the deluge resumed.

“Wow, good timing, guys,” Leona said, shocked at how well that worked out.

“That was pretty near perfect I must say,” and I did, sighing with relief.

“Eh…not too perfect,” Brick interrupted in an unsettling tone. “We’re leaking,” he said, pointing up.

We could see that the seal on the fly was weak, very weak. Water began to pour through all the seams of the hexagonally shaped top-piece of the tent, and the main layer wasn‘t designed to hold back moisture . We futilely held towels up above our heads to stop the flow until it lightened up enough to go out and do something about it.

I cut up one of the ponchos I bought at Uber-Mart for 50c and we used duct tape on the other seams, making it as waterproof as it would ever get. Brick and I made a ring around it twice with our rolls and covered every single spot and crack we could find, Leona helping by doing the same inside.

We all prepared to call it an evening, deciding it was probably too late to try to find anything to smoke, and that we should cut our losses and try early in the morning. That’s about when I realized that Zech was bringing my sleeping bag and ground mat, and none of our crew had brought a real blanket with us.

I called him up immediately, he answered the third try. “Hello?” his groggy voice crackled from my texti’s speaker.

“Hey bro, we’re in, where are you?”

“Uh..I dunno,” he paused a moment, “do you have a map?”

“No? No, they didn’t give me one.”

“Oh, well…I don’t know how I can be helpful right now,” he admitted.

“Ok…is there anyone still awake who could be more helpful than you?”

“Uh…no.”

“Well…thanks?”

“Night,” he said, his voice disappearing with a beep.

I ground my teeth together for a second before giving up, letting out a regretful sigh. “Guess I don’t get a sleeping bag tonight,” I shrugged.

I ended up using a giant hippie tapestry as a blanket, and a genuine, Venusian poncho as a sheet on top of the inflatable pool floatie I was offered as a mattress–luckily with a pillow built in to it. And, at least, I was given the middle, more comfortable of the three spots and least likely to roll up against the damp side of a tent in your sleep.

Unfortunately, like each other night of the trip, Brick began to snore heavily once he passed out. Each of the other times I had been stoned enough to ignore it, or was given a separate room entirely. Instead, I was sober, uncomfortable, and not properly covered. I rolled over and looked at Leona, deep in dream already with self-molding earplugs nestled deep enough to even drown out one’s own voice. I leaned back over, flat on my back, staring up at the top of tent until, finally, a kindly bullfrog serenaded me to sleep.

festivalday1

«How to Plan a Summer Road Trip»

05-20-2309

Brick’s back in town!

Fondgrid has been one of my best friends for a while. Of the first acquaintances I made after moving to this desolate rock, I think he’s the only person I still hang out with. Well, I say that relatively since I only see him when he makes visits during his breaks from college on Earth, though that’s still far more often than I run into anyone else from that town. I know I just saw him two months ago when he came for the spring holiday, but it’s always good to have another friend around.

He had grown up and graduated with Linda, the girl I was dating back then–you know, the one I came to Mars for. It was so nice to find someone as intelligent as all my friends were growing up, smart like Allan, and I can remember great times hanging out, just the three of us, anytime he was back home from school. Late nights and the lights of Fender below, just smoking, drinking, talking…I miss those days, come to think of it. After she and I broke up, he did his best not to take sides, but always knew where to come if he needed a good smoke and a nerd off with someone.

He’s only staying in town two more weeks, though. At first I was upset that he wouldn’t even be back for a whole month, but last night I changed my mood about it.

“Say, sir, what are you doing come June?” Brick asked, exhaling a cloud of smoke in my direction.

“Uh…I’m pretty sure I have nothing going this summer,” I contemplated it as I took a hit, the exception coming to mind as I passed it back to him. “Oh wait, I’ve got one thing towards the end of June. Eon is making a trip back to grab all the stuff she left.”

“All the stuff they broke into your crawler for and didn’t even take?” he sneered.

“That’s the stuff. She’s coming to get it all and I just have to be here to give it to her, why do you ask?” He handed the glass back to me in a second, indicating with his eyebrows that the ash needed to be cleared.

“Oh, no reason, just…ROAD TRIP!!” he exclaimed, catching me so off guard with the fragile smoking piece in my hand that I almost dropped the little thing.

“What? Really? Where?” I didn’t know which I wanted him to answer first.

“I’m going to Earth, same way I drove last summer, but this time I’m staying in Carolina, working at the plant there til I go back to school in the fall. I think I can make more money there than working for them here.”

His family owned a corporation called Fondgrid Foods based in Olympus County. You might have seen them, I can’t remember if we had any back home, but in most of the sandwich cases in Martian liquor stores, you’ll spot an array of their products, neatly packaged with their famous red label. I’m kinda partial to Fondgrid jerky myself. Anyway, he usually spends his summers working for his father to make a little money for school, but last summer he had driven a company broadside to their branch in Carolina, just a few hours south of Menesopolis.

“Really, well I’ll be damned,” I was excitedly distracted from filling the glass up again.

“And before I start working…BONNAROO!!” I almost dropped it again.

Bonnaroo is a huge deal–Earth’s largest annual music and arts festival, or at least the biggest one I’ve ever been to. It rivals certain Martian events like the Carnival and Palmchella, but could even be considered the Earth’s equivalent to Mars’s Burning Man.

The half-weeklong jamboree is frequented by that same hippie crowd, still preaching the same verses of peace and love our parents have been singing since the late 2260s. Back in my younger, more drug addled days, it was exactly my kind of scene. I may have gotten all my chemical experimentation out of the way early in life, but I think I could still agree with ideals of peace and unity. Granted, there’s a bit fewer paisleys and rainbows around, mostly flashing lights and glowsticks, but whose keeping score, anyway?

“That’s astro, dude. I’m really jealous,” I congratulated him with contempt, remembering the fun I had, during the parts I could remember.

“Like I asked, what are you doing this summer? Cause one of the girls I’m tenting with dropped out and is selling her ticket for half price, and, uh…I don’t feel like making that trip alone this year..” he said. I was too shocked to say anything. So he continued, “it will take a day to get to the ferry, 2 to get across Luna and another 2 across the western continent of Earth. The other girl that’s still coming is catching a direct flight in on the 9th, so we just have to make sure we’re at least as far as the Appalachia Spaceport by then.”

“So we’d have to leave by 4th or sometime early on the 5th to make it in time,” I responded, the wheels in my head grinding away.

“So you’ll come?! Sweet!” Brick cheered, adding a sigh of relief.

“Yeah, money will only sorta be an issue. It’s pool season and my dad owes me a trip. Hell, what does he care, he’ll just be stoked he doesn’t have to cover my spacefare,” and that money could go towards gas, lodging, food and the ticket for the show, I realized.

“Man, this is going to be the ultimest road trip. Ever!” I could tell that his Martian cogs were spinning at full steam as well. “Should we go closer to the northern hemisphere of Luna like I did last time, or try deep the southern?”

“Mmm…well the only thing I’d want to do in southern Luna is visit my aunt in New Martia, but I don’t really have the time, it would be out of the way. Besides, that means we’d probably have to go through more of the south of Earth,” I shuddered to think of all those battle flags that still hung on front porches, along with their giant swingseats. “Which I am less than willing to do.”

“I as well, good sir, I as well,” Fondgrid confirmed.

“Hey, this way I could just bring all of Eon’s stuff with me to Earth, and neither of us have to worry about having enough room, or it being too heavy,” I pondered another second, “we’ll have enough room in the broadside for a couple of extra cases, right?”

“Yes, we should. We may need to cut down on other extra weight though, but I don’t mind if you don’t,” he agreed to the idea.

“No I don‘t, I need to practice packing less anyway. Hold on, lemme just text her real quick, run through the plan again, please,” I set the half-full pipe aside for a moment and reached into one of my pockets for my texti. With one swift motion of my thumb, I slid the phone open and began to send a new message.

“Ok, in two weeks we leave from Fender, heading north west, past the Tharsis Montes and just North of the Mariners Valleys. From there we catch a quick ferry to Luna. There we stick to the northern hemisphere and the same when we finally get to Earth. We’ll cut through the bottom of your state and be in Carolina in no time. This way we avoid the rednecks and the hicks and drop 10 kg by not having to carry a weapon and ammunition. Then, Bonnaroo. Good?”

“Well hold on a second, Brick. We don’t want to go too far north right? Terra is nice and all, but even in summer, it’s cold as the balls of an Acheron penguin up there. I mean, I think that’s why they put the border there in the first place. We should stay in the Territories.”

“Yes, Klay, I know all about it. My school is right next to the Terran Border. I left my passport there for a reason,” he chuckled.

“So that means we’re left with one option: to go through the religious ring,” I concluded, “so I still want to bring a shotgun.” We both laughed out loud, but I was suddenly serious.

“Oh. Well, we don’t actually have weapons on the truck, I was just joking about not needing them, cause we never actually do at Fondgrid,” Brick admitted.

“Ahh, gork,” I said disappointed, but understanding. It’s not that I liked guns, I’ve hardly used anything larger than a B.B. myself. I just don’t trust religious fanatics. “We’ll have to be careful, still.”

“Shut up, we’ll be fine. Besides, I plotted this route so we’d barely touch that horrible area” he laughed. “Now have you decided on a good school for it yet, or are you just baby sitting the little thing?” he said indicating to the inert glass in my hand, trying make a crack at me.

“Uh, right,” caught off guard by the joke, I looked down at the twisted piece, charged and ready to go, then smirked. “To the Summer!” I raised in toast. The lighter snapped aglow.

howtoplanasummerroadtrip