Sunday, December 22, 2013
Alfred. We wished him luck and godspeed to Oregon.
He said it was the best ride he ever had. It was: he ate royally; he
was at a party in a ranch; he rode horseback; he heard stories; he felt
pretty good about it, but looked awful forlorn when we put him down
where we’d found him, on the side of the road with his thumb stuck out,
and darkness coming. We had to make Frisco. The golden goal loomed
ahead. Neal Louanne and I leaned forward in the front, all alone again,
and zoomed. It seemed like a matter of minutes when we began rolling in
the foothills before Oakland and suddenly reached a height and saw
stretched out ahead of us the fabulous white city of San Francisco on
her eleven mystic hills with the blue Pacific and its advancing wall of
potato patch fog beyond, and smoke and goldenness in the late afternoon
of time. “There she blows!” yelled Neal. “Wow! Made it! Just enough gas!
Give me water! No more land! We can’t go any further cause there ain’t
no more land! Now Louanne darling you and Jack go immediately to a hotel
and wait for me to contact you in the morning as soon as I have
definite arrangements made with Carolyn and call up Funderbuck about my
railroad watch and you and Jack buy the first thing when you hit town a paper for
the want ads and…and…and...” and he drove onto the Oakland Bay-Bridge and
it carried us in. The downtown office buildings were just sparkling on
their lights; it made you think of Sam Spade. The fog rolled in, the
buoys went B-O in the bay. Market Street was a riot of crowds and
sailors and girls; smells of hotdogs and food; noisy bars; screeching
traffic; cable-cars---and all of it in soft delightful air that made us
drunk when we staggered out of the car on O’Farrell Street
and sniffed and stretched. It was like getting onshore after a long
voyage at sea; the sloppy street reeled under our feet; secret chop
sueys from Frisco Chinatown floated in the air. We took all our things
out of the car and piled them on the sidewalk. Suddenly Neal was saying
goodbye. He was bursting to see Carolyn and find out what happened.
Louanne and I stood dumbly in the street and watched him drive away.
“You see what a bastard he is?” said Louanne. “Neal will leave you out
in the cold any time it’s in his interest.” “I know” I said, and I
looked back East and sighed. We had
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