It takes a little whileย for everyone to explain to their parents that 1. Weโre all going to miss graduation, and 2. Weโre driving to New York, to 3. See a town that may or may not technically exist, and hopefully 4. Intercept the Omnictionary poster, who according to the Randomly capitalized Evidence is 5. Margo Roth Spiegelman.
Radar is the last to get off the phone, and when he finally does, he says, โIโd like to make an announcement. My parents are very annoyed that Iโm missing graduation. My girlfriend is also annoyed, because we were scheduled to do somethingย veryย special in about eight hours. I donโt want to get into details about it, but this had better be one fun road trip.โ
โYour ability to not lose your virginity is an inspiration to us all,โ Ben says next to me.
I glance at Radar through the rearview mirror. โWOOHOO ROAD TRIP!โ I tell him. In spite of himself, a smile creeps across his face. The pleasure of leaving.
By now we are on I-4, and traffic is fairly light, which in and of itself is borderline miraculous. Iโm in the far left lane driving eight miles an hour over the fifty-five-miles-per-hour speed limit, because I heard once that you donโt get pulled over until youโre going nine miles an hour over the speed limit.
Very quickly, we all settle into our roles.
In the wayback, Lacey is the provisioner. She lists aloud everything we currently have for the trip: the half of a Snickers that Ben was eating when I called about Margo; the 212 beers in the back; the directions I printed out; and the following items from her purse: eight sticks of wintergreen gum, a pencil, some tissue, three tampons, one pair of sunglasses, some ChapStick, her house keys, a YMCA membership card, a library card, some receipts, thirty-five dollars, and a BP card.
From the back, Lacey says, โThis is exciting! Weโre like under- provisioned pioneers! I wish we had more money, though.โ
โAt least we have the BP card,โ I say. โWe can get gas and food.โ
I look up into the rearview mirror and see Radar, wearing his graduation gown, looking over into Laceyโs purse. The graduation gown has a bit of a low-cut neck, so I can see some curled chest hairs. โYou got any boxers in there?โ he asks.
โSeriously, we better be stopping at the Gap,โ Ben adds.
Radarโs job, which he begins with the calculator on his handheld, is Research and Calculations. Heโs alone in the row of seats behind me, with the directions and the minivanโs ownerโs manual spread out next to him. Heโs figuring out how fast we need to travel in order to make it by noon tomorrow, how many times weโll need to stop in order to keep the car from running out of gas, the locations of BP stations on our route and how long each stop will be, and how much time weโll lose in the process of slowing down to exit.
โWe gotta stop four times for gas. The stops will have to be very very short. Six minutes at the most off-highway. Weโre looking at three long areas of construction, plus traffic in Jacksonville, Washington, D.C., and
Philadelphia, although it will help that weโre driving through D.C. around three in the morning. According to my calculations, our average cruising speed should be around seventy-two. How fast are you going?โ
โSixty-three,โ I say. โThe speed limit is fifty-five.โ โGo seventy-two,โ he says.
โI canโt; itโs dangerous, and Iโll get a ticket.โ
โGo seventy-two,โ he says again. I press my foot down hard on the gas. The difficulty is partly that I am hesitant to go seventy-two and partly that the minivan itself is hesitant to go seventy-two. It begins to shake in a way that implies it might fall apart. I stay in the far left lane, even though Iโm still not the fastest car on the road, and I feel bad that people are passing me on the right, but I need clear road ahead, because unlike everyone else on this road, I canโt slow down. And this is my role: my role is to drive, and to be nervous. It occurs to me that I have played this role before.
And Ben? Benโs role is to need to pee. At first it seems like his main role is going to be complaining about how we donโt have any CDs and that all the radio stations in Orlando suck except for the college radio station, which is already out of range. But soon enough, he abandons that role for his true and faithful calling: needing to pee.
โI need to pee,โ he says at 3:06. Weโve been on the road for forty-three minutes. We have approximately a day left in our drive.
โWell,โ says Radar, โthe good news is that we will be stopping. The bad news is that it wonโt be for another four hours and thirty minutes.โ
โI think I can hold it,โ Ben says. At 3:10, he announces, โActually, I really need to pee. Really.โ
The chorus responds, โHold it.โ He says, โBut Iโโ And the chorus responds again, โHold it!โ It is fun, for now, Ben needing to pee and us needing him to hold it. He is laughing, and complaining that laughing makes him need to pee more. Lacey jumps forward and leans in behind him and starts tickling at his sides. He laughs and whines and I laugh, too, keeping the speedometer on seventy-two. I wonder if she created this journey for us on purpose or by accidentโregardless, itโs the most fun Iโve had since the last time I spent hours behind the wheel of a minivan.