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Song of the Sausage Creature
by Hunter S. Thompson
There are some things nobody
needs in this world, and a bright-red, hunch-back, warp-speed 900cc cafe racer
is one of them - but I want one anyway, and on some days I actually believe I
need one. That is why they are dangerous.
Everybody has fast
motorcycles these days. Some people go 150 miles an hour on two-lane blacktop
roads, but not often. There are too many oncoming trucks and too many radar
cops and too many stupid animals in the way. You have to be a little crazy to
ride these super-torque high-speed crotch rockets anywhere except a racetrack -
and even there, they will scare the whimpering shit out of you... There is,
after all, not a pig's eye worth of difference between going head-on into a
Peterbilt or sideways into the bleachers. On some days you get what you want,
and on others, you get what you need.
When Cycle World called me to
ask if I would road-test the new Harley Road King, I got uppity and said I'd
rather have a Ducati superbike. It seemed like a chic decision at the time, and
my friends on the superbike circuit got very excited. "Hot damn," they said.
"We will take it to the track and blow the bastards away."
"Balls," I
said. "Never mind the track. The track is for punks. We are Road People. We are
Cafe Racers."
The Cafe Racer is a different breed, and we have our own
situations. Pure speed in sixth gear on a 5000-foot straightaway is one thing,
but pure speed in third gear on a gravel-strewn downhill ess-turn is quite
another.
But we like it. A thoroughbred Cafe Racer will ride all night
through a fog storm in freeway traffic to put himself into what somebody told
him was the ugliest and tightest decreasing-radius turn since Genghis Khan
invented the corkscrew. Cafe Racing is mainly a matter of taste. It is an
atavistic mentality, a peculiar mix of low style, high speed, pure dumbness,
and overweening commitment to the Cafe Life and all its dangerous pleasures...
I am a Cafe Racer myself, on some days - and it is one of my finest addictions.
I am not without scars on my brain and my body, but I can live with
them. I still feel a shudder in my spine every time I see a picture of a
Vincent Black Shadow, or when I walk into a public restroom and hear crippled
men whispering about the terrifying Kawasaki Triple... I have visions of
compound femur-fractures and large black men in white hospital suits holding me
down on a gurney while a nurse called "Bess" sews the flaps of my scalp
together with a stitching drill.
Ho, ho. Thank God for these
flashbacks. The brain is such a wonderful instrument (until God sinks his teeth
into it). Some people hear Tiny Tim singing when they go under, and some others
hear the song of the Sausage Creature.
When the Ducati turned up in my
driveway, nobody knew what to do with it. I was in New York, covering a polo
tournament, and people had threatened my life. My lawyer said I should give
myself up and enroll in the Federal Witness Protection Program. Other people
said it had something to do with the polo crowd.
The motorcycle
business was the last straw. It had to be the work of my enemies, or people who
wanted to hurt me. It was the vilest kind of bait, and they knew I would go for
it.
Of course. You want to cripple the bastard? Send him a 130-mph
cafe-racer. And include some license plates, he'll think it's a streetbike.
He's queer for anything fast.
Which is true. I have been a connoisseur
of fast motorcycles all my life. I bought a brand-new 650 BSA Lightning when it
was billed as "the fastest motorcycle ever tested by Hot Rod magazine." I have
ridden a 500-pound Vincent through traffic on the Ventura Freeway with burning
oil on my legs and run the Kawa 750 Triple through Beverly Hills at night with
a head full of acid... I have ridden with Sonny Barger and smoked weed in biker
bars with Jack Nicholson, Grace Slick, Ron Zigler and my infamous old friend,
Ken Kesey, a legendary Cafe Racer.
Some people will tell you that slow
is good - and it may be, on some days - but I am here to tell you that fast is
better. I've always believed this, in spite of the trouble it's caused me.
Being shot out of a cannon will always be better than being squeezed out of a
tube. That is why God made fast motorcycles, Bubba....
So when I got
back from New York and found a fiery red rocket-style bike in my garage, I
realized I was back in the road-testing business.
The brand-new Ducati
900 Campione del Mundo Desmodue Supersport double-barreled magnum Cafe Racer
filled me with feelings of lust every time I looked at it. Others felt the same
way. My garage quickly became a magnet for drooling superbike groupies. They
quarreled and bitched at each other about who would be the first to help me
evaluate my new toy... And I did, of course, need a certain spectrum of
opinions, besides my own, to properly judge this motorcycle. The Woody Creek
Perverse Environmental Testing Facility is a long way from Daytona or even
top-fuel challenge-sprints on the Pacific Coast Highway, where teams of
big-bore Kawasakis and Yamahas are said to race head-on against each other in
death-defying games of "chicken" at 100 miles an hour....
No. Not
everybody who buys a high-dollar torque-brute yearns to go out in a ball of
fire on a public street in L.A. Some of us are decent people who want to stay
out of the emergency room, but still blast through neo-gridlock traffic in
residential districts whenever we feel like it... For that we need Fine
Machinery.
Which we had - no doubt about that. The Ducati people in
New Jersey had opted, for some reasons of their own, to send me the 900ss-sp
for testing - rather than their 916 crazy-fast, state-of-the-art superbike
track-racer. It was far too fast, they said - and prohibitively expensive - to
farm out for testing to a gang of half-mad Colorado cowboys who think they're
world-class Cafe Racers.
The Ducati 900 is a finely engineered
machine. My neighbors called it beautiful and admired its racing lines. The
nasty little bugger looked like it was going 90 miles an hour when it was
standing still in my garage.
Taking it on the road, though, was a
genuinely terrifying experience. I had no sense of speed until I was going 90
and coming up fast on a bunch of pickup trucks going into a wet curve along the
river. I went for both brakes, but only the front one worked, and I almost went
end over end. I was out of control staring at the tailpipe of a U.S. Mail
truck, still stabbing frantically at my rear brake pedal, which I just couldn't
find... I am too tall for these new-age road racers; they are not built for any
rider taller than five-nine, and the rear set brake pedal was not where I
thought it would be. Mid-size Italian pimps who like to race from one cafe to
another on the boulevards of Rome in a flat-line prone position might like
this, but I do not.
I was hunched over the tank like a person diving
into a pool that got emptied yesterday. Whacko! Bashed on the concrete bottom,
flesh ripped off, a Sausage Creature with no teeth, fucked-up for the rest of
its life.
We all love Torque, and some of us have taken it straight
over the high side from time to time - and there is always Pain in that... But
there is also Fun, the deadly element, and Fun is what you get when you screw
this monster on. BOOM! Instant take-off, no screeching or squawking around like
a fool with your teeth clamping down on our tongue and your mind completely
empty of everything but fear.
No. This bugger digs right in and shoots
you straight down the pipe, for good or ill.
On my first take-off, I
hit second gear and went through the speed limit on a two-lane blacktop highway
full of ranch traffic. By the time I went up to third, I was going 75 and the
tach was barely above 4000 rpm....
And that's when it got its second
wind. From 4000 to 6000 in third will take you from 75 mph to 95 in two seconds
- and after that, Bubba, you still have fourth, fifth, and sixth. Ho, ho.
I never got to sixth gear, and I didn't get deep into fifth. This is a
shameful admission for a full-bore Cafe Racer, but let me tell you something,
old sport: This motorcycle is simply too goddamn fast to ride at speed in any
kind of normal road traffic unless you're ready to go straight down the
centerline with your nuts on fire and a silent scream in your throat.
When aimed in the right direction at high speed, though, it has unnatural
capabilities. This I unwittingly discovered as I made my approach to a sharp
turn across some railroad tracks, saw that I was going way too fast and that my
only chance was to veer right and screw it on totally, in a desperate attempt
to leapfrog the curve by going airborne.
It was a bold and reckless
move, but it was necessary. And it worked: I felt like Evel Knievel as I soared
across the tracks with the rain in my eyes and my jaws clamped together in
fear. I tried to spit down on the tracks as I passed them, but my mouth was too
dry... I landed hard on the edge of the road and lost my grip for a moment as
the Ducati began fishtailing crazily into oncoming traffic. For two or three
seconds I came face to face with the Sausage Creature....

But somehow the brute
straightened out. I passed a school bus on the right and got the bike under
control long enough to gear down and pull off into an abandoned gravel driveway
where I stopped and turned off the engine. My hands had seized up like claws
and the rest of my body was numb. I felt nauseous and I cried for my mama, but
nobody heard, then I went into a trance for 30 or 40 seconds until I was
finally able to light a cigarette and calm down enough to ride home. I was too
hysterical to shift gears, so I went the whole way in first at 40 miles an
hour.
Whoops! What am I saying? Tall stories, ho, ho... We are
motorcycle people; we walk tall and we laugh at whatever's funny. We shit on
the chests of the Weird....
But when we ride very fast motorcycles, we
ride with immaculate sanity. We might abuse a substance here and there, but
only when it's right. The final measure of any rider's skill is the inverse
ratio of his preferred Traveling Speed to the number of bad scars on his body.
It is that simple: If you ride fast and crash, you are a bad rider. And if you
are a bad rider, you should not ride motorcycles.
The emergence of the
superbike has heightened this equation drastically. Motorcycle technology has
made such a great leap forward. Take the Ducati. You want optimum cruising
speed on this bugger? Try 90mph in fifth at 5500 rpm - and just then, you see a
bull moose in the middle of the road. WHACKO. Meet the Sausage Creature.
Or maybe not: The Ducati 900 is so finely engineered and balanced and
torqued that you *can* do 90 mph in fifth through a 35-mph zone and get away
with it. The bike is not just fast - it is *extremely* quick and responsive,
and it *will* do amazing things... It is like riding a Vincent Black Shadow,
which would outrun an F-86 jet fighter on the take-off runway, but at the end,
the F-86 would go airborne and the Vincent would not, and there was no point in
trying to turn it. WHAMO! The Sausage Creature strikes again.
There is
a fundamental difference, however, between the old Vincents and the new breed
of superbikes. If you rode the Black Shadow at top speed for any length of
time, you would almost certainly die. That is why there are not many life
members of the Vincent Black Shadow Society. The Vincent was like a bullet that
went straight; the Ducati is like the magic bullet in Dallas that went sideways
and hit JFK and the Governor of Texas at the same time.
It was
impossible. But so was my terrifying sideways leap across the railroad tracks
on the 900sp. The bike did it easily with the grace of a fleeing tomcat. The
landing was so easy I remember thinking, goddamnit, if I had screwed it on a
little more I could have gone a lot farther.
Maybe this is the new
Cafe Racer macho. My bike is so much faster than yours that I dare you to ride
it, you lame little turd. Do you have the balls to ride this BOTTOMLESS PIT OF
TORQUE?
That is the attitude of the new-age superbike freak, and I am
one of them. On some days they are about the most fun you can have with your
clothes on. The Vincent just killed you a lot faster than a superbike will. A
fool couldn't ride the Vincent Black Shadow more than once, but a fool can ride
a Ducati 900 many times, and it will always be a bloodcurdling kind of fun.
That is the Curse of Speed which has plagued me all my life. I am a slave to
it. On my tombstone they will carve, "IT NEVER GOT FAST ENOUGH FOR ME."
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