Thursday, December 19, 2013
arrival of Gargantua; preparations had to be made to widen the gutters
of Denver and foreshorten certain laws to fit his suffering bulk and
bursting ecstasies. It was like an old fashioned movie when Neal arrived.
I was in Beverly’s crazy house in a golden afternoon. A word about the
house. Her mother was away in France. The chaperone aunt was an old
Austice or whatever, she was 75 years old and spry as a chicken. In the
Burford family which stretched from here to Iowa she was continually
shuttling from one house to another and making herself generally
unuseful. At one time she’d had dozens of sons. They were all gone,
they’d all abandoned her. She was old but she was interested in in
everything we did and said. She shook her head sadly when we took slugs
of whiskey in the living room. “Now you might go out in the yard for
that, young man.” Upstairs---it was a kind of boarding house that
summer---boarded a mad guy called Jim who was hopelessly in love with
Beverly. He actually came from Connecticut, from a rich family they
said, and had a career waiting for him there and everything but he
preferred where Bev was. The result was this: in the evenings he sat in
the livingr oom with his face burning behind a newspaper and every time
one of us said anything he heard but made no sign. He particularly
burned when Bev said something. When we forced him to put down the paper
he looked at us with incalculable boredom and suffering. “Eh? Oh yes, I
suppose so.” He usually said just that. Austice sat in her corner
knitting watching us all with her birdy eyes. It was her job to be
chaperone, It was up to her to see that nobody sweared. Bev sat giggling
on the couch. Ed White, Jeffries and I sprawled around in various
chairs. Poor Jim suffered the tortures. He got up, yawned and said “Well
another day another dollar, goodnight” and disappeared upstairs. Bev
had no use whatever for him; she was in love with Ed White. He wriggled
like an eel out of her grasp. We were sitting around like this on a
sunny afternoon towards suppertime when Neal pulled up in front in his
jalopy and jumped out in a tweed suit with vest and watch chain. “Hup!
hup!” I heard out in street. He was with Bill Tomson who’d just returned
from Frisco with his wife Helena and was living in Denver again. So was
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