Key to the Highway
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An erotic motorbike fantasy and a magical blues harp take Chris Hunter on a wild, Orphic odyssey through the Australian Outback to Indonesia, India, Bangkok, Borneo and Rio. His reality morphs into a mythological world of gods and demons, manifested as bikers, prophets, gun runners, drug smugglers, shady businessmen and neo-Nazis. Empowered by a
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Key to the Highway - Richard Andrews
Praise for Key to the Highway
"Key to the Highway has moments of intensity and insight and a feel for the world and those years we all went out looking for something big in the far corners and hidden nooks, and lived with abandon, living like every song was the most important one. Parts of it took me right back to those days."
Carl Hoffman, author of Savage Harvest, The Last Wild Men of Borneo, and Liar’s Circus
A fast-paced episodic adventure tale, with the narrator’s harmonica providing an endless variety of entertaining ways to get him into and out of trouble.
Brendan Power, composer, recording artist, harpmeister for Sting and Van Morrison
Evocative and astute observations about home, travelling and a life lived to the full. The driving rhythm of the music, which creates a great ambient sound throughout the novel, is a wonderful structural device as well as being such an encompassing central theme.
Jonathan Holmes, School of Creative Arts and Media, University of Tasmania
This is an extraordinary romp of the Hero’s Journey, so strap yourselves in!
Dr. Grant Caldwell, School of Culture and Communication, University of Melbourne
A page-turning journey around the globe that reminds us to follow our heart and seize the day. Andrews beautifully captures the magic of being on an adventure; chance encounters, close calls and the traveler’s notion of connection with the universe. The writing is invigorating, making this captivating story a great page turner. Although I’m a younger reader, I still enjoyed the ‘70s blues and biker universe mixed with the Greek classics and other ancient gods. Turning the last page left me sad that the blues odyssey had ended and at the same time inspired me to follow my passion.
Thor F. Jensen, Danish adventurer, writer and award-winning explorer
"Richard Andrews’ Key to the Highway is fresh and original. He spins an enthralling tale that merges the haunting strains of the blues with the kind of wild journeys that many of us dreamed of in the 1970s and ‘80s. We travel with him from the vast spaces of Outback Australia through the colour and chaos of Asia to end in South America. It’s a fascinating journey accompanied by the roar of motorbikes and the music of the mysterious harmonica."
Margaret Farrell, journalist and travel photographer
Read it in one go. Loved it! Key to the Highway is a voyage of self-discovery as seen through actual events. This is the book for you if romping through the freedom of one’s childhood in post-war Australia, a taste of the hippie trail and winging it on gut feeling is to your liking.
Clive Scott, traveller, raconteur
"Couldn’t stop reading it! Really well written. [Key to the Highway kept] the action going and the pacing is great."
Angela Leuck, Tanka poet and author of More Grows in a Crooked Row
"An edgy novel with quirky, realistic characters, confrontations, caustic observations, and vivid scenes, Key to the Highway unlocks inner desires, and exposes the nature of friendships, love and ambition."
Kevin McQuillan, Melbourne writer and television producer
The reader is bombarded with allusions to ancient Greek and Roman myths, to Yemanja worshipped by African slaves transported to Brazil, to Sanskrit poems and to threads of the Aboriginal Dreamtime. Freya and Lockie, gods from the Norse Tree of Life are also referenced. These allusions serve to underline Chris’ quest and to remind us of its karmic nature. In each of his significant settings the author provides a quirky vignette to intensify the context, which imbues the account with drama and humour.
Bruce Tamagno, writer and geographer
Key to the Highway
Richard Andrews
Untimely Books LogoUntimely Books
Untimely Books LogoUntimely Books
untimelybooks.com
An imprint of Cosmos Cooperative
PO Box 3, Longmont, Colorado 80502
Copyright © 2023 by Richard Andrews
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher.
Book design by Kayla Morelli
Cover art by Vytas Kapociunas vytasfineart.com
Vesica art by Anthony Morelli @greensoapandham
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Publisher Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Andrews, Richard, 1947 March 18-, author.
Title: Key to the Highway / Richard Andrews.
Description: Longmont, CO : Untimely Books, 2023. | Summary: An erotic motorbike fantasy and a magical blues harp take Chris Hunter on a wild, Orphic odyssey through the Australian Outback to Indonesia, India, Bangkok, Borneo and Rio. His reality morphs into a mythological world of gods and demons, manifested as bikers, prophets, gun runners, drug smugglers, shady businessmen and neo-Nazis. Empowered by an ancient esoteric secret, his journey to self discovery climaxes in a battle with Alt-Right forces.
Identifiers: LCCN 2023939208 | ISBN 9781961334991 (paperback) 9781961334007 (hardback) 9781961334984 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Quests (Expeditions) -- Fiction. | Self-realization -- Fiction. | Good and evil -- Fiction. | LCGFT: Road fiction. | Mythological fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Visionary & Metaphysical.
Classification: DDC 813.6
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2023939208
To Marie, my Muse and Fellow Traveller:
Thy aid was the Key to my ‘advent’rous Song’
"Death closes all: but something ere the end,
Some work of noble note, may yet be done,
Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods."
—Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Ulysses
Travel far enough, you meet yourself.
—David Mitchell
Harmonica helps me escape reality.
—Slogan on T-shirt sold by Amazon
Contents
Foreword
In the Beginning…
Showtime
Call to Adventure
Seven Steps to Heaven
A Journey to the West
The Dead Heart
The Destroyer
Die at the Right Time
Back to Earth
A Hooded Cobra lies in Wait
Amigo de Xango
A False God
The Blur
‘We live in two realities’
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Foreword
My friend Tom was an ex-biker who quoted the classics, played blues and sometimes sold his paintings. We returned from long journeys one winter and shared a shabby bedsit in London.
One cold, wet evening, Tom stopped eating his Spam dinner, surrendered our last coin to the power meter and asked:
What would it take, to return home just once, fit and tanned on a new BMW, with a gorgeous companion on the back—instead of turning up broke and scrawny on the Hackney bus?
I lost contact with Tom when we travelled on. But his question was the genesis of a fantasy that took over my life.
Mate, if you’re reading this book, here’s how it goes...
In the Beginning…
Midnight. Pacific Highway. By the ocean that links the dreamtimes of ancient continents. A sensual, summer night when anything is possible. Youth before the Fall.
The sea breeze carries a distant drumbeat. A call for freedom shipped to Brazil with the Yoruban slaves. The rhythm builds up, joined by the song of the Amazon rainforest. The voices of the primeval jungle greet the slaves who escaped the plantations.
The music flows from a speeding white motorbike, bathed in lights. A searing blues harmonica soars like a condor above the Arion Custom and swoops over the mountain. The 1100 cc engine throbs a bass counterpoint. It changes key as the bike descends from the heavens.
The rider appears alone. A centaur on wheels. But as he leans into the bend, a figure with long, dark hair emerges. She holds him closely. A tress of hair blows forward to caress his face. The scent lingers a moment and then wafts away.
Aroused, the bike hugs the curves of the road as the bay opens up. The full moon sambas on a million ripples. Like Rio’s floating candles that drift out to the sea goddess, Yemanja. Worshippers swirl and chant along the distant ocean of Atlantis. Her spirit enters their bodies.
The road straightens out and the woman presses closer. As the tacho nudges red, the beast’s high octane energy flows through the rider. The drums crescendo as the wind carries him beyond the horizon. He has joined the gods. Invincible!
The alarm buzzes. Back to earth.
Showtime
Cheap wine, dope and clove cigarettes now perfume what was once the roughest pub in Melbourne’s inner suburbs. A stripped-back wooden floor has replaced the white tiles in the public bar, which previously allowed the day’s piss and blood to be hosed away after closing.
The Camelot Hotel’s new décor looks like a Templars’ shopping spree in Furniture City. Refectory tables and high-backed wooden chairs line up against walls that sport shields and crossed swords. A wrought-iron chandelier with electric candles hangs from a ceiling beam by three black chains—thick enough to support the owner on the late nights he forgets his mission to change the hotel’s raffish image.
A tough, Cretan lawyer has converted the labyrinth of rooms and passageways into a sanctuary for his three main passions: music, drinking and tax minimisation.
I’m fronting HellHound, the house band. We play a mixed bag of Chicago blues, Afro-Latin and Rock-Goes-East. The place is packed out tonight and the crowd’s intoxicated energy fires up the group. A Malaysian didgeridoo player had joined us for the last set, droning an eerie mix of music that flowed from the Murray River to the Mississippi. Rami was an exchange student who skipped TESOL classes to go feral and learn circular breathing.
We finish a Muddy Waters bracket and Dion gives me the nod from behind the bar. It’s time for his song. I nod back, but don’t look forward to it. Just after hiring the group, he challenged us to play a tango, of all things. Ignoring my scepticism, he’d thrust the yellowing notes of an old Astor Piazzolla number into my hands.
Try it!
You learn to say yes, to keep a regular gig.
It took a solid week to adapt the bandoneon parts for harmonica and master the complex runs. Good for technique, but will it go down well with a hipster audience? Laszlo the guitarist is the only band member not worried about appearing uncool.
It’ll take me back to my roots,
he jokes. I learned that song years ago on violin. Tango works if you forget shopping-mall muzak and think Buenos Aires desperates.
The crowd is buzzing with anticipation for the next set. I squeeze past the bass player’s wheelchair and step up to the mike.
We’re going to play another blues.
(Cheers.)
Not from Chicago this time, but the bars and brothels of Argentina.
(More cheers.)
It’s called Libertango.
Smirks and disbelieving groans.
Laszlo ignores the response. He unstraps his guitar, shoulders an electric violin and winds up the amp.
If old Astor got death threats for playing this number, we’ll have to do it justice.
I take a deep breath and start a long, slow, minor run. The come-on. A taunting violin responds. The notes circle and tease each other with hints of the pleasures in store. Harp and violin move closer together and the two competing melodies become one. Bass and drums join the thrusting tempo.
The dark melody carries us to the poor, violent carnality of the Rio de la Plata waterfront. A song fed by the longing and suffering of 19th-century immigrant workers. Ghosts of knife-wielding compraditos strut the smoky room. In a deadly dance they contend for the favours of a beautiful woman. Harp duels violin as Laszlo and I trade solos against the heartbeat of the bass. The drums acclaim each clash and peak.
I’m wielding my Excalibur: a solid metal chromatic that unleashes four octaves plus that bend like