Monday, December 23, 2013
but which will be very clear someday if scientists get on the ball. The
bastards right now are only interested in seeing if they can blow up the
world.” We told Joan about it. She snuffed. “It sounds silly to me.”
She plied the broom around the kitchen. Bill went in the bathroom for
his afternoon fix. Out on the road Neal and Al Hinkle were playing
basketball with Julie’s ball and a bucket nailed on the lamppost. I
joined in. Then we turned to feats of athletic prowess. Neal completely
amazed me. He had Al and I hold a bar of iron up to our waists, and just
standing there he popped right over it holding his heels. “Go ahead,
raise it.” We kept raising it till it was chest-high. Still he jumped
over it with ease. Then he tried the running broad jump and did at least
20 feet. Then I raced him down the road. I can do the hundred in 10.3.
He passed me like the wind. As we ran I had a mad vision of Neal running
through all of his life, his arms pumping, his brow sweating, his legs
twinkling like Groucho Marx, yelling “Yes! Yes man, you sure can go!”
But nobody could go as fast as him, and that’s the truth. Then Bill came
out with a couple of knives and started showing us how to disarm a
would-be shiver in a dark alley. I for my part showed him a very good
trick, which is, falling on the ground in front of your adversary and
gripping him with your ankles and flipping him over on his hands and
grabbing his wrists in a full nelson. He said it was pretty good. He
demonstrated jiu jitsu. Little Julie called her mother to the porch and
said “Look at the silly men.” She was eight years old. She was such a
cute sassy little thing Neal couldn’t take his eyes off her. “Wow. Wait
till she grows up! Can you see her cuttin’ down Canal street with a
hincty eye. Ah! Oh!” He hissed through his teeth. We spent a mad day in
downtown New Orleans walking around with the Hinkles. Neal was out of
his mind that day. When he saw the T&NO freight trains in the yard
he wanted to show me everything at once. “You’ll be a brakeman ’fore I’m
thru with you!” He and I and Al Hinkle ran across the tracks and hopped
a freight; Louanne and Helen were waiting in the car. We rode the
freight a half mile into the piers waving at brakemen and firemen. They
showed me the proper way to jump off
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