For some reason,ย the stretch of I-95 just south of Florence, South Carolina, isย theย place to drive a car on a Friday evening. We get bogged down in traffic for several miles, and even though Radar is desperate to violate the speed limit, heโs lucky when he can go thirty. Radar and I sit up front, and we try to keep from worrying by playing a game weโve just invented called That Guy Is a Gigolo. In the game, you imagine the lives of people in the cars around you.
Weโre driving alongside a Hispanic woman in a beat-up old Toyota Corolla. I watch her through the early darkness. โLeft her family to move here,โ I say. โIllegal. Sends money back home on the third Tuesday of every month. Sheโs got two little kidsโher husband is a migrant. Heโs in Ohio right nowโhe only spends three or four months a year at home, but they still get along really well.โ
Radar leans in front of me and glances over at her for half a second. โChrist, Q, itโs not so melodratragic as that. Sheโs a secretary at a law firm
โlook how sheโs dressed. It has taken her five years, but sheโs now close to getting a law degree of her own. And she doesnโt have kids, or a husband.
Sheโs got a boyfriend, though. Heโs a little flighty. Scared of commitment. White guy, a little nervous about the Jungle Fever angle of the whole thing.โ
โSheโs wearing a wedding ring,โ I point out. In Radarโs defense, Iโve been able to stare at her. She is to my right, just below me. I can see through her tinted windows, and I watch as she sings along to some song, her unblinking eyes on the road. There are so many people. It is easy to forget how full the world is of people, full to bursting, and each of them imaginable and consistently misimagined. I feel like this is an important idea, one of those ideas that your brain must wrap itself around slowly, the way pythons eat, but before I can get any further, Radar speaks.
โSheโs just wearing that so pervs like you donโt come on to her,โ Radar explains.
โMaybe.โ I smile, pick up the half-finished GoFast bar sitting on my lap, and take a bite. Itโs quiet again for a while, and I am thinking about the way you can and cannot see people, about the tinted windows between me and this woman who is still driving right beside us, both of us in cars with all these windows and mirrors everywhere, as she crawls along with us on this packed highway. When Radar starts talking again, I realize that he has been thinking, too.
โThe thing about That Guy Is a Gigolo,โ Radar says, โI mean, the thing about it as a game, is that in the end it reveals a lot more about the person doing the imagining than it does about the person being imagined.โ
โYeah,โ I say. โI was just thinking that.โ And I canโt help but feel that Whitman, for all his blustering beauty, might have been just a bit too optimistic. We can hear others, and we can travel to them without moving,
and we can imagine them, and we are all connected one to the other by a crazy root system like so many leaves of grassโbut the game makes me wonder whether we can really ever fullyย becomeย another.





