Robert Earl Keen
Shades of Gray
We made Oklahoma a little after three
Randy, his brother Bob, and my old GMC
We had some moonshine whiskey and some of Bob's homegrown
We were so messed up we didn't know if we were drunk or stoned

Randy was a sad sack, tall, kinda frail
Bob was a raving maniac, crazier than hell
We been kicked out of high school several years ago
For kicking over port-o-cans at the 4-H rodeo

Since they done the little dance right outside the law
Popped twice in Oklahoma and once in Arkansas
And I don't know what possessed me to want to tag along
'Cause I was raised a Christian and I knew right from wrong

Right or wrong, black or white
Cross the line you're gonna pay
Into the dawn before the light
Live or die by shades of gray

We stole two charolais heifers
From Randy's sweetheart's pa
And sold them at the livestock sale outside of Wichita
We got nine hundred dollars and never did suspect
The world of hurt we'd be in once we cashed that check
Next day we heard the story on the local radio
And made our plans that very night to go to Mexico
And I swear we would've made it if it wasn't for the shine
I got sick about the time we crossed that Kansas line

Right or wrong, black or white
Cross the line you're gonna pay
Into the dawn before the light
Live or die by shades of gray

I was lying in the bar ditch praying I would die
When a light came on above us and a voice called from the sky
A half dozen unmarked cars came screeching to a halt
They grabbed Bob, he started screaming that it was all my fault

There were men and dogs and helicopters flying all around
They had the brothers on the pickup hood and me down on the ground
Then Bob flew all to pieces, but Randy he held tight
When a black man in a suit and tie stepped into the light

He told his men to turn us loose
And they put down their guns
He said, "These are just some sorry kids
They ain't the ones."

Right or wrong, black or white
Cross the line you're gonna pay
Into the dawn before the light
Live or die by shades of gray
They left us by the roadside downhearted and alone
Randy got behind the wheel, said, "Boys, I'm going home,"
So we turned round and faced our fate, hungover but alive
On that morning, Oklahoma, late April '95