âThe naked truth is much better than the best-dressed lie.â
Birthday Suit
LIKE EVERY OTHER HUMAN on earth, I came into this world in the buff. According to my brothers and sisters, I stayed that way throughout much of my early childhood. For whatever reason, I never liked to wear clothes when I was a boy, so I ran around our farm buck nekkid. I guess I figured since God brought me into this world in my birthday suit, I might as well wear it. Hey, some people have it, and some people donât. Iâve always had it, Jack!
When I was born on April 27, 1948, my parents, Merritt and James Robertson, were living in a log cabin outside of Vivian, Louisiana. The cabin was really rustic; we used an outhouse and didnât even have hot water to take baths. I was the youngest of five sons: Jimmy Frank was the oldest boy, followed by Harold, Tommy, and Phil. I had an older sister, Judy, and then my younger sister, Jan, came along a few years after I was born.
Our log cabin sat on top of a hill and was surrounded by about four hundred acres. Marvin and Irene Hobbs, Mommaâs brother-in-law and sister, lived at the bottom of the hill. They had several kids: Billy, Mack, Sally, and Darrell, who were our first cousins. When Momma and Daddy played dominoes at the Hobbsesâ house, Jimmy Frank was put in charge of the younger kids. Our cabin became a prison, and Jimmy Frank was the warden. Heâd walk outside the cabin, as if on patrol, making sure none of the younger kids escaped, so we always called him the warden! We younger kids wanted to go to the Hobbsesâ house to play with our cousins, but Jimmy Frank was under strict orders to keep us inside.
There were only two windows in the cabin, and they were our routes of escape. As the warden marched around the log cabin, one of us captives would watch him through the cracks in the walls. When he made his way around the right corner of the house, weâd all jump through the window and run down to the Hobbsesâ place. At least there werenât any sirens when we made our getaway!
My daddy started working in the oil industry when he was young, first as a roughneck, then as a driller and tool pusher, and eventually he became a drilling superintendent. It was really hard work, but I never heard him complain about it. It was an honest living, and even though we never had a lot of money, we always had enough food to eat, which mostly came from the fields and gardens on our farm. And with so many kids around, we were never bored and always seemed to find something to keep us busy.
When I was a little bit older, we left the log cabin and moved to Dixie, Louisiana, which is about fourteen miles north of Shreveport. We made the move because Momma suffered a nervous breakdown and was diagnosed as manic-depressive. Living in Dixie made it easier for her to get the treatment she needed; she spent a lot of time in hospitals and the state mental institution. I loved my momma dearly, and my brothers and sisters always say I was her favorite child. Hey, what can I say? Iâve always had that effect on women!
A lot of my fondest childhood memories occurred in Dixie. I can still remember the day we drove to our house for the first time. We unloaded out of a 1957 Chevrolet and a couple of kids from the neighborhood walked up. We introduced ourselves to the boys, and the only way I can describe them is, well, they were geeks. We wandered around the yard, exploring the place, and noticed a big patch of woods about two miles from the railroad tracks in front of our house. We asked the boys, âHey, whatâs over there?â
âWe have no idea,â they told us.
âWhat do you mean you have no idea?â I asked them. âHave you not been over there?â
âNo, weâve never been over there,â one of them said.
The next thing they knew, Tommy, Phil, and I were racing across the railroad tracks and into the woods. We drove the farmers around our house slap insane by hunting on their land without permission. One of the farmers loved to chase us out of the woods in his pickup truck. Every time we heard his pickup coming, weâd take off running like deer through the woods. We hid behind logs and in underbrush, looking for his truck at the top of a hill or in the pecan orchard. It was like Wile E. Coyote chasing the Road Runner. He never did catch us.
Years later, we found out that chasing us was one of the farmerâs favorite things to do. Momma sold Avon cosmetics for a while, and one day she was at the farmerâs house selling products to his wife. Momma apologized to the farmer for our hunting on his land, but he told her we were allowed to hunt on any of his property. Momma thanked him and was getting ready to walk out the door.
âHey, wait a minute,â he said. âDonât tell them.â
âWell, you gave them permission,â she said.
âOh, yeah, they can hunt on all of my land whenever they want,â he said. âBut donât tell them I gave them permission. If they know they have my permission, they wonât run from me.â
That farmer loved the chase. We ran from him for about fifteen years and didnât even have to!
Phil, Tommy, and I were always hunting or fishing. One of the best things we did happened when the sun went down. When Phil was ten years old, he got an air rifle for Christmas. I was eight and got a Daisy BB gun. We spent every day going around the neighborhood, shooting anything we could kill. When the sun went down, we got our flashlights and shined them under the awnings over the windows of our neighborsâ houses. Birds loved to fly up there and go to sleep. Guess what? We loved to shine our flashlights on the birds and shoot them! Every night, our neighbors would be awakened by the clank! clank! clank! sounds.
Imagine their surprise when they opened the curtains and saw a bare-bottomed gunman!
âI like a dog that fits my personality: well-groomed, handsome, a natural-born killer, and one that doesnât mind taking a nap once in a while.â
Dynamic Dog Duo
MARK TWAIN ONCE SAID the difference between a cat and a lie is that a cat only has nine lives. Hey, let me tell you something: where I grew up, cats didnât have nine livesâthey generally had just one! There werenât many second chances when the Robertsons were involved!
We always had a lot of animals around our house, whether it was chickens, cows, pigs, rabbits, or horses, but I had two favorite family pets. Maimey was a Wiedemeyerâor a Weimaraner as they call themâand she was a good hunting dog. Bullet was a cur, a Louisiana Catahoula leopard dog, which is a fancy way of saying she was a mutt. The breed is actually named after Catahoula Parish on the Ouachita River, which runs in front of the house where Phil and Kay live today.
The Catahoulas are believed to be the first dogs bred in North America; some people even suspect that Native Americans bred their dogs with the molossers and greyhounds that Hernando de Soto brought to Louisiana in the sixteenth century. Curs really arenât true hounds, but theyâre great hunting dogs and terrific at tracking wild boar. Many of them have spotted coats, and nearly all of them have distinctive marbled glass eyes. Bullet had one glass eye and a black and yellow coat. We always knew our toast was perfect when it was the color of Bulletâs coat.
I remember the day Bullet died. A truck hit him on the road in front of our house. Phil and I saw it and were crying as we climbed onto the school bus. By the time we got to school, everybody on the bus was crying and then everybody in our class was crying. All the kids knew Bullet because they were always hanging out at our house.
Maimey was a much bigger dog than Bullet and had a slick silver coat. Now, one of the problems with the Weimaraner breed is that the dogs are typically stubborn and not very smart. But Maimey was quite the exception. Not only would she listen to our commands, she would even talk to us on occasion!
In fact, Maimey was Mommaâs alarm clock when we were young. Every morning, Momma would wake up early to cook us breakfast before we left for school. While Momma was cooking eggs, bacon, and buttermilk biscuits, she talked to our dogs.
âHow are you this morning?â she would ask them. âAre you having a good day?â
Even though none of us believed her, Momma insisted the dogs talked back to her.
When it was time for us to wake up for breakfast, Momma would send Maimey to our room.
âOkay, wake them up,â Momma told her.
Maimey liked to leap into our beds and put her cold, wet nose on our faces to wake us. Once she received Mommaâs command, sheâd take off running around the corner in the kitchen and then sprint down the long hall to our beds. Most of the time, we heard Maimeyâs claws scratching the hardwood floors before she jumped on our beds. This was our fair warning to pull the quilts over our heads. Our house was always cold in the winterâthere were only a few floor heaters scattered through the shotgun houseâand Maimeyâs nose was ice-cold after being outside. Once Maimey found an opening in the blankets, sheâd root her way under them and there we wereâjumping out of bed!
It was impossible to keep Maimey out of the house. When we tried to put her outside, sheâd open the front door. I guess she learned to open it by watching us turn the doorknob; she finally realized she could do it with her paws. When Maimey was ready to come inside, weâd hear scratching on the doorknob and then sheâd waltz into the front room!
By the time we moved from the log cabin to our house in Dixie, Louisiana, Jimmy Frank and Harold were in school at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. One night, Tommy, Phil, and I were sitting at the dinner table with Pa and Granny (thatâs what we called my parents after their first grandchildren were born). It was one of the rare occasions when Maimey was outside.
As soon as we started eating dinner, the front door opened and Maimey came running in. She looked at Momma and growled something I didnât understand.
âWhat did she say?â Momma asked us. âI think she just said, âHarold is home.â â
A couple of minutes later, we heard a car door shut and then Harold walked in through the front door.
My brothers and I were dumbfounded. Nobody said anything as we looked at each other.
âHey, Iâve been telling you I talk to her all the time,â Momma told us. âAnd she talks back to me.â
Finally, I believed her.
When Daddy worked as a driller, he was on the graveyard shift and some of his workers would occasionally come to our house before their shift. One night, one of our distant cousins, Wade Childs, was sitting in a dark green chair next to the fireplace. He didnât know it was Maimeyâs bed. Our front door was glass, so we could see through it from top to bottom. Wade was facing the door and saw the knob turning. Since it was nighttime, he couldnât see Maimey because of her dark coat.
Wade must have thought a ghost was opening the door. His eyes got bigger and bigger, and then Maimey walked through the door. She walked straight toward him and sat in front of the chair. Then she started growling at him. She didnât bark; it was only a low growl in her throat.
âMerritt!â Wade screamed. âMerritt!â
Mamma walked in from the kitchen and asked him what was wrong.
âI didnât do anything,â he said.
âOh, you need to get out of her chair,â Momma told him. âSheâs telling you sheâs ready to go to bed.â
Wade got out of the chair, and Maimey jumped into it....