Momma and the UFOs



by

My momma hunted UFOs in the dead of the night,
 utilizing nothing more than a coughing, gold 1970
 Oldsmobile and her eagle-eye vision.

The evening
 would start out innocently enough on a Friday, the 
four of us with daddy at the wheel out for dinner at 
Tony’s Drive-In. But after the chili-cheeseburgers and 
butterscotch milkshakes had been finished and we began 
our slow descent back home along Highway 91, momma
 would suddenly get an itch that had to be scratched.

More than likely, she was just bored -- bored enough from
 watching TV and doing the laundry and talking on the
 phone over coffee about nothing that she began to
 believe the newspaper stories and weird tales from
 television sets. They were, after all, her only real 
link with the world and wouldn’t lie to her. So when 
she began taking the stories about extraterrestrials 
seriously, we all just held our tongues and rolled our
 eyes among ourselves. Momma was at it again, and 
there was no stopping her.

It began with Mr. Head’s adventures at the local shipyard and all the news he made in the local paper. The 
story was that he and his friend were out
 fishing on the riverbank below the shipyard one night 
when these aliens swooped down on them in a spaceship,
 sucked them up inside the thing by means of some type
 of beam, looked inside their bodies and returned them 
to the clay and marshland from whence they came. They 
made national TV and even wrote a book. Those who 
gossiped, however, thought the entire experience might
 have been enhanced by a twelve-pack of Schlitz.

Momma had already been interested in the UFO phenomenon, but this little local tale -- which included
 people she actually knew who shopped at her very own
 Winn Dixie -- it was just too much for her to ignore.
 So every time we headed back to town over the
 river bridge, momma had her eyes peeled for any
 suspicious-looking planes or lights.

As we headed into the long stretch of marshland before
 you hit our part of the county, she would still
 squint into the night and point at a red or white 
light here and there in the sky. “Look,” she
 would say, tugging at my dad’s T-shirt excitedly. “What’s
 that? It’s gotta be a UFO.” Daddy would just grimace 
and for the fortieth time explain it was a passing plane 
or a distant star. My little sister and I would strain against 
the Oldsmobile’s windows, too, fogging each side up in
 the hopes of seeing an alien ship. Each time we were
 disappointed: Nothing but night and water and frogs
 and the scent of mud and marsh.

Although the dial on daddy’s Timex watch would
 indicate the lateness of the hour, mom was not content

.

We spent this evening and many others to just search the skies 
along Highway 91. She would find a traveling light, 
most often a plane, and have dad zigzag the Oldsmobile
 along side roads and dirt patches and grassy openings 
at high rates of speed -- following the would-be UFO. 
In all the excitement, my little sister would fall
 asleep, her small body stretched out fully along the 
back window’s dashboard -- snoring to the rhythm of
 ruts in the road.

We would amble around this way for hours, all of us
 suffering in silence while mom continued to search the
 skies. What would she actually do if she came across
 some sort of alien life form? Invite them home for
 coffee? Wrestle them into the trunk until she found a 
television station that would make her a star? Or 
just join them on their trip through the stars, perhaps? More than likely she would scream and fall faint on sight, but I guess the thrill for her was more in the search than in the 
finding.

At least we would get home at a halfway decent hour,
 say by 11 pm, if daddy and his voice of reason were
 along. He would go along with a lot, but even he had 
his limits. It was worse if we children were alone
 with momma when she got this way, oh, say coming back 
from a long day of shopping but not buying anything in
 Alabama. I would find myself an unwilling navigator as 
momma ran over bushes and through stoplights in
 pursuit of a Martian ship. I was half scared of momma
 and half scared of the aliens, but I did what I was 
told. I was taught to respect my elders, no matter 
how crazy they were.

Momma never did find her alien, but she got wind of
 another hobby that was almost as interesting: the 
viewing of religious anomalies and figures on everyday
 objects. Once in awhile, the AP would print a story
 in the local paper about a Catholic church in 
Pennsylvania or some other Yankee state where 
parishioners had seen a statue of Jesus crying or the
 Blessed Virgin Mary’s figure appeared over the altar. 
Given there was only one Catholic church nearby, these
 sightings were mysterious and confusing to most
 Southerners.

Then more Baptist-like sightings started being 
reported: An outline of Jesus’ head on a church yard
tree or a stain -- that suddenly appeared -- in a 
church parking lot in the shape of a cross. The straw
 that broke the camel’s back for momma was the sighting
 at a church in the country, almost in the same neck of the woods as
 us. There, at the Baptist church's back lot, the
 propane tank’s rusting spots took on the face of Jesus
 himself.

Within hours, momma had me and sister loaded up in the 
Oldsmobile and zooming out towards the church, a good 
lick of a trip even in the daylight. So through the
 thick, wet fog and dark country roads, we traveled for
 what seemed an hour or so. At first, she got lost and
 couldn’t find the little church, but a stop-and-carry
store along the way housed a woman who gave her
 directions. Salem cigarette dangling from her lip, 
momma was more determined than ever to see the face of
 Jesus in that rusty ol’ propane tank.

When we got there, the place was lit up with
 jerry-rigged lights. A line of people in rollers and 
fuzzy houseslippers, John Deere caps and
 polyester clothing continued past the 
half-moon of light into the darkness. They talked in
 quiet, hushed voices -- waiting their turn patiently
 to see the rusty Jesus. It felt like the second
 coming to me, as momma gathered the details from those
 around her and gradually made her way to the back of
 the line.

Sister remained asleep in the car, but I couldn’t miss
 this once-in-a-lifetime event. Something strange and
 mysterious was going on, even though I didn’t quite
 understand it. When we reached the front of the line,
 a man in a black suit took my hand and guided us to
 the holy propane tank. And there he was. Jesus. Weeping rusty tears down the Blossman Gas logo. I
 couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t move.

The ride home was quiet, and I think I slept a little
 just from sheer emotional exhaustion. Momma 
contemplated this religious experience, her intent 
eyes lit by the glow of the dashboard light and the
 occasional bright drag from her cigarette. From that day on, I
 became a religious zealot, too. At age seven, I quoted the
 scripture to momma even when she went to spank me, and
 I couldn’t understand why such information made her 
all the madder.

And then one night, after late church service at 
our little Baptist church and right before the
 Sunbeams meeting -- it happened. I stopped for a pee 
in the unisex bathroom off the church hallway, and
 while on the toilet ... I looked up at the crystalized 
block glass in the upper window. The outside light at
 the top of a cresote pole shone through the star-like
 cuts in the glass, and the light’s reflection on the 
dark bathroom floor was that of Jesus’ face.

Slowly and reverently, I pulled my white cotton 
panties up, flushed the toilet respectfully and ran 
outside the door to tell the others in the
 congregation about Jesus’ visit to their toilet. It 
was sure to make the AP.

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