[ATS] Midnight Beans & Buckets

Stargrace liked night runs. Less traffic, fewer opinions, and the road mostly kept its mouth shut.

She rolled out of Elko with a trailer full of soybeans, the smell faint but unmistakable—earthy, dusty. Ranch delivery up in Logan. Easy money. Short hop. Barely enough time for the coffee to turn against her.

The highway at night was just lines and headlights, the world reduced to what mattered: speed, distance, and whether the engine sounded wrong or just dramatic. The desert slipped by unseen, which was fine by her. She’d already looked at it plenty over the years. Didn’t need a reminder.

She clicked on the radio mic out of habit more than need.
“Melanie Q, you still awake out there, or did Wyoming finally hypnotize you?”

A beat of static, then Melanie’s voice came through, cheerful in that unkillable way.
“Awake and thriving, boss. LoneStar’s purring. I’m haulin’ clamshell buckets.”

Stargrace snorted.
“Buckets for clams that don’t exist. Living the dream.”

“Hey,” Melanie said, mock-offended, “someone’s gotta move the world’s most confusing cargo.”

“Fair,” Stargrace replied. “If the economy collapses, it’ll be because of clamshell buckets.”

They checked routes, traded a few miles and complaints, then signed off.

Logan came up quick. Ranch lights glowing low and warm, the kind of place where the animals knew more about you than the people did. The soybeans were unloaded without fuss—no drama, no broken pallets, no one asking dumb questions. A flawless delivery, which always felt suspicious.

Didn’t take long before she had another trailer hooked up. Short trip, quick turnaround. Wyoming this time. The sign might as well have read You’re Still Awake? Good.

She crossed the line with a yawn and a crooked smile, the engine humming steady beneath her boots. Another night, another stretch of asphalt claimed and conquered.

Stargrace adjusted her grip on the wheel.
“Alright,” she muttered to the truck. “Let’s go disappoint another state.”

And the road, as always, welcomed her back.

[ATS] Fueled by Diesel and Sarcasm

[[ I decided why not start a new roleplay involving American Truck Simulator, since I enjoy these so much with EVE Online. These will be the adventures I’ve done in-game, but in a different format. ATS just announced their next DLC is British Columbia, and I’m VERY excited. So. Enjoy!]]

Stargrace rolled out of Truckee just after dawn, the trailer full of waste paper rattling behind her like it had opinions about the whole situation. Snow still clung to the pines up there, stubborn as an unpaid parking ticket, and she gave it a respectful nod in the mirror. She was Canadian, after all. Cold and stubborn felt like extended family.

She’d been based out of Reno for years now—long enough that the desert dust had worked its way into her boots, her coffee mug, and probably her soul—but the mountains still spoke her language. Elko was the goal today. Long road, easy miles, plenty of time to think bad thoughts and tell worse jokes to herself.

Stargrace wasn’t new to this. The lines on her face were carved by sun glare, sleepless nights, and a lifetime of conversations with inanimate objects. The truck got the worst of it.
“Don’t look at me like that,” she muttered as the engine growled. “You chose this life too.”

Somewhere along the stretch of highway where the scenery turns into a lesson in humility, she pulled in for fuel. One stop. In and out. The pump clicked and whined its way up to 129 gallons, the total flashing $488 like it was proud of itself. Stargrace snorted.
“That’s not gas,” she said. “That’s a small mortgage.”

She didn’t mind, though—the delivery company was covering it. One of the rare mercies in this line of work, right up there with clean restrooms and radio stations that didn’t fade out mid-chorus.

Back on the road, the miles unwound the way they always did. Nevada stretched wide and quiet, the kind of quiet that lets your thoughts roam but never quite escape. She hummed along with a station that played something old and twangy, drummed the wheel with scarred knuckles, and watched the sun crawl across the sky.

By the time Elko came into view, the waste paper had behaved itself, the truck hadn’t thrown a tantrum, and Stargrace felt that familiar, tired satisfaction settle into her bones. Another run done. Another road behind her.

She cracked a grin, slow and crooked.
“Not bad for an old Canadian in the desert,” she said to no one in particular—and the truck, wisely, didn’t argue.