Saturday, December 21, 2013
at the woman’s house and drinking Scotch.) Neal immediately took over
the responsibility of selecting and naming the price of the car, because
of course he wanted to use it himself so as of yore he could pick up
girls coming out of high school in the afternoons and drive them up to
the mountains. Poor innocent Okie Johnny was always agreeable to
anything. The following afternoon Neal called up from the country and
said “Man I don’t want to bother you but I swear and swear my shoes are
no longer wearable, I absolutely need another pair of shoes, what shall
we do?” By a wonderful coincidence I had a pair of old shoes sitting
around Clementine’s closet. I said to her, holding the phone, “Listen
Neal absolutely needs shoes- -I’m going to give him the old pair. How
about letting him come over and pick them up?” “No, definitely no” she
said and how forewarned can you get but we agreed that I could meet him
on the corner down the street and hand them over. “Yass, o yass” said
Neal sensing all this, and he hitched in from the country and met me
half an hour later on the corner. It was a beautiful warm sunny
afternoon. I had also been dispatched to get a quart of vanilla ice
cream for Clementine’s supper party with friends and came to Neal, whom I
found playing baseball with a bunch of kids while he waited, carrying
an old pair of shoes in a brown paper bag and a quart of vanilla ice
cream. “There you are man---oh yes, oh yes vanilla ice cream, lemme
taste.” I put the ice cream on the ground and began firing hard ones at
the kid catcher, then I took over the catcher’s mitt and squatted by the
lubrication pit of the gas station and Neal fired some in. We were
having a great time. We showed the kids how to fashion curves and make
them drop. Then we played high flies and Neal went scattering among the
traffic of 27th St. with his thumb stuck breast-high like a shield and
the glove upheld for the fly ball that dribbled down through branches and
leaves of high old trees. Suddenly I noticed the ice cream was melting.
“Say Neal what am I, a con man? I think I’ll move in with you and
Johnny tonight.” “Why of course man, what did you do it in the first
place for?” “I thought I had some loyalty I owed Clementine---she gave
me money to go to Frisco. I don’t know.” I didn’t
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