Chapter III : CARTHAGE
/wanted
movement and not a calm course of existence. I wanted excitement and danger and
the chance to sacrifice myself for my love. I felt in myself a superabundance of
energy which found no outlet in our quiet life.
Leo
Tolstoy, "family happiness" passage highlighted in one of the books
found with Chris McCandless's remains
It
should not be denied. . . that being footloose has always exhilarated us. It is
associated in our minds with escape from history and oppression and law and
irksome obligations,
with absolute freedom, and the road has always led west.
Wallace
Segner, the american west as living space Carthage, South Dakota,
population 274, is a sleepy little cluster of clapboard houses, tidy yards, and
weathered brick storefronts rising humbly from the immensity of the northern
plains, set adrift in time. Stately rows of cottonwoods shade a grid of streets
seldom disturbed by moving vehicles. There's one grocery in town, one bank, a
single gas station, a lone bar—the Cabaret, where Wayne Westerberg is sipping a
cocktail and chewing on a sweet cigar, remembering the odd young man he knew as
Alex.
The
Cabaret's plywood-paneled walls are hung with deer antlers, Old Milwaukee beer promos,
and mawkish paintings of game birds taking flight. Tendrils of cigarette smoke rise
from clumps of farmers in overalls and dusty feed caps, their tired faces as
grimy as coal
miners'. Speaking in short, matter-of-fact phrases, they worry aloud over the
fickle weather
and fields of sunflowers still too wet to cut, while above their heads Ross
Perots sneering
visage flickers across a silent television screen. In eight days the nation
will elect Bill Clinton president. It's been nearly two months now since the
body of Chris McCandless turned up in Alaska.
"These
are what Alex used to drink," says Westerberg with a frown, swirling the
ice in his White Russian. "He used to sit right there at the end of the
bar and tell us these amazing stories of his travels. He could talk for hours.
A lot of folks here in town got pretty attached to old Alex. Kind of a strange
deal what happened to him."
Westerberg,
a hyperkinetic man with thick shoulders and a black goatee, owns a grain elevator
in Carthage and another one a few miles out of town but spends every summer running
a custom combine crew that follows the harvest from Texas north to the Canadian
border. In the fall of 1990, he was wrapping up the season in north-central Montana,
cutting barley for Coors and Anheuser-Busch. On the afternoon of September 10,
driving out of Cut Bank after buying some parts for a malfunctioning combine, he
pulled over for a hitchhiker, an amiable kid who said his name was Alex
McCandless. McCandless was smallish with the hard, stringy physique of an
itinerant laborer. There was something arresting about the youngster's eyes.
Dark and emotive, they suggested a trace of exotic blood in his heritage—Greek,
maybe, or Chippewa—and conveyed a vulnerability that made Westerberg want to
take the kid under his wing. He had the kind of sensitive good looks that women
made a big fuss over, Westerberg imagined. His face had a strange elasticity:
It would be slack and expressionless one minute, only to twist suddenly into a
gaping, oversize grin that distorted his features and exposed a mouthful of
horsy teeth. He was nearsighted and wore steel-rimmed glasses. He looked
hungry. Ten minutes after picking up McCandless, Westerberg stopped in the town
of Ethridge to deliver a package to a friend. "He offered us both a
beer," says Westerberg, "and asked Alex how long it'd been since he
ate. Alex allowed how it'd been a couple of days. Said he'd kind of run out of
money." Overhearing this, the friend’s wife insisted on cooking Alex a big
dinner, which he wolfed down, and then he fell asleep at the table. McCandless
had told Westerberg that his destination was Saco Hot Springs, 240 miles to the
east on U.S. Highway 2, a place he'd heard about from some "rubber
tramps" (i.e., vagabonds who owned a vehicle; as distinguished from
"leather tramps," who lacked personal transportation and were thus
forced to hitchhike or walk). Westerberg had replied that he could take
McCandless only ten miles down the road, at which point he would be turning
north toward Sunburst, where he kept a trailer near the fields he was cutting.
By the time Westerberg steered over to the shoulder to drop McCandless off, it was
ten-thirty at night and raining hard. "Jeeze," Westerberg told him,
"I hate to leave you out here in the goddamn rain. You got a sleeping
bag—why don't you come on up to Sunburst, spend the night in the trailer?"
McCandless
stayed with Westerberg for three days, riding out with his crew each morning as
the workers piloted their lumbering machines across the ocean of ripe blond grain.
Before McCandless and Westerberg went their separate ways, Westerberg told the young
man to look him up in Carthage if he ever needed a job. "Was only a couple
of weeks that went by before Alex showed up in town," Westerberg
remembers. He gave McCandless employment at the grain elevator and rented him a
cheap room in one of the two houses he owned. "I've given jobs to lots of
hitchhikers over the years," says Westerberg. "Most of them weren't
much good, didn't really want to work. It was a different story with Alex. He
was the hardest worker I've ever seen. Didn't matter what it was, he'd do it:
hard physical labor, mucking rotten grain and dead rats out of the bottom of
the hole—jobs where you'd get so damn dirty you couldn't even tell what you
looked like at the end of the day. And he never quit in the middle of
something. If he started a job, he'd finish it. It was almost like a moral
thing for him. He was what you'd call extremely ethical. He set pretty high standards
for himself.
"You
could tell right away that Alex was intelligent," Wester-berg reflects,
draining his third drink. "He read a lot. Used a lot of big words. I think
maybe part of what got him into trouble was that he did too much thinking.
Sometimes he tried too hard to make sense of the world, to figure out why
people were bad to each other so often. A couple of times I tried to tell him
it was a mistake to get too deep into that kind of stuff, but Alex got
stuck on things. He always had to know the absolute right answer before he
could go on to the next thing."
At
one point Westerberg discovered from a tax form that McCandless's real name was Chris,
not Alex. "He never explained why he'd changed his name," says
Westerberg. "From things he said, you could tell something wasn't right
between him and his family, but
I don't like to pry into other people's business, so I never asked about
it."
If
McCandless felt estranged from his parents and siblings, he found a surrogate family
in Westerberg and his employees, most of whom lived in Westerberg's Carthage home.
A few blocks from the center of town, it is a simple, two-story Victorian in
the Queen Anne style, with a big cottonwood towering over the front yard. The
living arrangements were loose and convivial. The four or five inhabitants took
turns cooking for
one another, went drinking together, and chased women together, without
success. McCandless
quickly became enamored of Carthage. He liked the community's stasis, its
plebeian virtues and unassuming mien. The place was a back eddy, a pool of
jetsam beyond
the pull of the main current, and that suited him just fine. That fall he
developed a lasting bond with both the town and Wayne Westerberg.
Westerberg,
in his mid-thirties, was brought to Carthage as a young boy by adoptive parents.
A Renaissance man of the plains, he is a farmer, welder, businessman,
machinist, ace mechanic, commodities speculator, licensed airplane pilot,
computer programmer, electronics troubleshooter, video-game repairman. Shortly
before he met McCandless, however, one of his talents had got him in trouble
with the law. Westerberg had been drawn into a scheme to build and sell
"black boxes," which illegally unscramble satellite-television
transmissions, allowing people to watch encrypted cable programming without
paying for it. The FBI caught wind of this, set up a sting, and arrested
Westerberg. Contrite, he copped a plea to a single felony count and on October
10, 1990, some two weeks after McCandless arrived in Carthage, began serving a
four-month sentence in Sioux Falls. With Westerberg in stir, there was no work
at the grain elevator for McCandless, so on October 23, sooner than he might
have under different circumstances, the boy left town and resumed a nomadic
existence.
The
attachment McCandless felt for Carthage remained powerful, however. Before departing,
he gave Westerberg a treasured 1942 edition of Tolstoy's War and Peace. On
the title page he inscribed, "Transferred to Wayne Westerberg from Alexander.
October, 1990. Listen to Pierre." (The latter is a reference to Tolstoy's
protagonist and alter ego, Pierre Bezuhov—altruistic, questing, illegitimately
born.) And McCandless stayed in touch with Westerberg as he roamed the West,
calling or writing Carthage every month or two. He had all his mail forwarded
to Westerberg's address and told almost everyone he met thereafter that South
Dakota was his home.
In
truth McCandless had been raised in the comfortable upper-middle-class environs
of Annandale, Virginia. His father, Walt, is an eminent aerospace engineer who
designed advanced
radar systems for the space shuttle and other high-profile projects while in
the employ of NASA and Hughes Aircraft in the 1960s and 70s. In 1978, Walt went
into business for himself, launching a small but eventually prosperous
consulting firm, User Systems, Incorporated. His partner in the venture was
Chris's mother, Bil-lie. There were eight children in the extended family: a
younger sister, Carine, with whom Chris was extremely close, and six
half-brothers and sisters from Walt's first marriage.
In
May 1990, Chris graduated from Emory University in Atlanta, where he'd been a columnist
for, and editor of, the student newspaper, The Emory Wheel, and had distinguished
himself as a history and anthropology major with a 3.72 grade-point average. He
was offered membership in Phi Beta Kappa but declined, insisting that titles and
honors are irrelevant. The final two years of his college education had been
paid for with a forty-thousand dollar bequest left by a friend of the family's;
more than twenty-four thousand dollars remained at the time of Chris's
graduation, money his parents thought he intended to use for law school.
"We misread him," his father admits. What Walt, Billie, and Carine
didn't know when they flew down to Atlanta to attend Chris's commencement—what
nobody knew—was that he would shortly donate all the money in his college fund
to OXFAM America, a charity dedicated to fighting hunger.
The
graduation ceremony was on May 12, a Saturday. The family sat through a
longwinded commencement address delivered by Secretary of Labor Elizabeth Dole,
and then Billie snapped pictures of a grinning Chris traversing the stage to
receive his diploma. The next day was Mother's Day. Chris gave Billie candy,
flowers, a sentimental card. She was surprised and extremely touched: It was
the first present she had received from her son in more than two years, since
he had announced to his parents that, on principle, he would no longer give or
accept gifts. Indeed, Chris had only recently upbraided Walt and Billie for
expressing their desire to buy him a new car as a graduation present and
offering to pay for law school if there wasn't enough money left in his college
fund to cover it. He already had a perfectly good car, he insisted: a beloved
1982 Datsun B210, slightly dented but mechanically sound, with 128,000 miles on
the odometer. "I can't believe they'd try and buy me a car," he later
complained in a letter to Carine,
or
that they think I'd actually let them pay for my law school if I was going to go....I've
told them a million times that I have the best car in the world, a car that has
spanned the continent from Miami to Alaska, a car that has in all those
thousands of miles not given me a single problem, a car that I will never trade
in, a car that I am very strongly attached to—yet they ignore what I say and
think I'd actually accept a new car from them! I'm going to have to be real
careful not to accept any gifts from them in the future because they will think
they have bought my respect.
Chris
had purchased the secondhand yellow Datsun when he was a senior in high school.
In the years since, he'd been in the habit of taking it on extended solo road
trips when classes weren't in session, and during that graduation weekend he
casually mentioned to his parents that he intended to spend the upcoming summer
on the road as well. His exact words were "I think I'm going to disappear
for a while." Neither parent made anything of this announcement at the
time, although Walt did gently admonish his son, saying "Hey, make sure
you come see us before you go." Chris smiled and sort of nodded, a
response that Walt and Billie took as an affirmation that he would visit them
in Annandale before the summer was out, and then they said their goodbyes.
Toward
the end of June, Chris, still in Atlanta, mailed his parents a copy of his
final grade report: A in Apartheid and South African Society and History of
Anthropological Thought;
A minus in Contemporary African Politics and the Food Crisis in Africa. A brief
note was attached:
[Here
is a copy of my final transcript.]
Gradewise
things went pretty well and I ended up with a high cumulative average. Thankyou
for the pictures, the shaving gear, and the postcard from Paris. It seems that
you really enjoyed your trip there. It must have been a lot of fun. I gave
Lloyd [Chris's closest friend at Emory] his picture, and he was very grateful; he
did not have a shot of his diploma getting handed to him. Not much else
happening, but it's starting to get real hot and humid down here. Say Hi to
everyone for me.
It
was the last anyone in Chris's family would ever hear from him. During that
final year in Atlanta, Chris had lived off campus in a monkish room furnished
with little more than a thin mattress on the floor, milk crates, and a table.
He kept it as orderly and spotless as a military barracks. And he didn't have a
phone, so Walt and Billie had no way of calling him. By the beginning of August
1990, Chris's parents had heard nothing from their son since they'd received
his grades in the mail, so they decided to drive down to Atlanta for a visit.
When they arrived at his apartment, it was empty and a FOR RENT sign was taped to
the window. The manager said that Chris had moved out at the end of June. Walt
and Billie returned home to find that all the letters they'd sent their son
that summer had been returned in a bundle. "Chris had instructed the post
office to hold them until August 1, apparently so we wouldn't know anything was
up," says Billie. "It made us very, very worried."
By
then Chris was long gone. Five weeks earlier he'd loaded all his belongings
into his little car and headed west without an itinerary. The trip was to be an
odyssey in the fullest sense of the word, an epic journey that would change
everything. He had spent the previous four years, as he saw it, preparing to
fulfill an absurd and onerous duty: to
graduate
from college. At long last he was unencumbered, emancipated from the stifling world
of his parents and peers, a world of abstraction and security and material
excess, a world in which he felt grievously cut off from the raw throb of
existence.
Driving
west out of Atlanta, he intended to invent an utterly new life for himself, one
in which he would be free to wallow in unfiltered experience. To symbolize the
complete severance from his previous life, he even adopted a new name. No
longer would he answer to Chris McCandless; he was now Alexander Super-tramp,
master of his own destiny.
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