Sunday, December 22, 2013
him, and dodged a truck and bounced over the city limits. Across the
river were the jewel lights of Juarez. Louanne was watching Neal as she
had watched him clear across the country and back. Out of the corner of
her eye---with a sullen sad air, as though she wanted to cut off his
head and hide it in her closet, an envious and rueful love that she knew
would never bear fruit because he was too mad. Neal was convinced
Louanne was a whore; he confided in me that she was a pathological liar.
But when she watched him like this it was love, too; and when Neal
noticed he always turned with his false flirtatious smile where a moment
ago he was only dreaming in his eternity. Then Louanne and I both
laughed---and Neal gave no sign of discomfiture, just a goofy glad grin
that said to us “Ain’t we getting our kicks anyway?” And that was it.
Outside El Paso, in the darkness, we saw a small huddled figure with
thumb stuck out. It was our promised hitchhiker. We pulled up and backed
to his side. “How much money you got kid?” The kid had no money; he was
about seventeen, pale, strange, with one undeveloped crippled hand and
no suitcase. “Ain’t he sweet” said Neal turning to me with a serious
awe. “Come on in fella, we’ll take you out---“ The kid saw his
advantage. He said he had an Aunt in Tulare, California, who owned a
grocery store and as soon as we got there he’d have some money for us.
Neal rolled on the floor laughing, it was so much like the kid in
Carolina. “Yes! yes!” he yelled. “We’ve all got aunts; well let’s go;
let’s see the aunts and the uncles and the grocery stores all the way
along the road and get our kicks.” And we had a new passenger, and a
fine little guy he turned out to be, too. He didn’t say a word, he
listened to us. After a minute of Neal’s talk he was probably convinced
he had joined a car of madmen. He said he was hitching from Alabama to
Oregon, where his home was. We asked him what he was doing in Alabama.
“I went to visit my Uncle; he said he’d have a job for me in a lumber
mill. The job fell through so I’m coming back home.” “Goin’ home,” said
Neal, “goin’ home, yes I know; we’ll take you home, far as Frisco
anyhow.” But we didn’t have any money. Then it occurred to me I could
borrow five dollars from my old friend Alan Harrington in Tuc-
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