Saturday, December 21, 2013
in
the tenements in the back of Howard. His wife was asleep when we came
in. The only light in the apartment was the bulb over her bed. We had to
get up on a chair and unscrew the bulb as she lay smiling beneath us.
She was about 15 years older than Walter and the sweetest woman in the
world. Then we had to plug in the extension over her bed and she smiled
and smiled. She never asked Walter where he’d been, what time it was,
nothing. Finally we were set in the kitchen with the extension and sat
down around the humble table to drink beer and tell the stories. We told
Walter to tell us his story. He said he was in a whore house in LA
where they had a monkey at the entrance that you had to place a bet with
and if you lost the monkey gave it to you up the back. If you won the
girl was yours for free. He insisted this was a true story. “That
monkey” he said “ain’t never seen such a monkey. Place the bet in the
cage, you know and monkey roll the cage and dice come out. Man lose a
bet to that monkey and gets himself britched. I ain’t telling you no
lie. That’s the monkey.” Neal and I were delighted with the story. Then
it was time to leave and move the extension back to the bedroom and
screw back the bulb. Walter’s wife smiled and smiled as we repeated the
thing all over again. She never said a word. Out on the dawn street Neal
said “Now you see, man, there’s a real woman for you. Never a harsh
word, never a complaint, her old man can come in any hour of the night
with anybody and have talks in the kitchen and drink the beer and leave
any old time. This is a man, and that’s his castle.” He pointed up at
the tenement proudly. We stumbled off. The big night was over. A
cruising car followed us suspiciously for a few blocks. We bought fresh
buns in a bakery and ate them in the gray ragged street. A tall
bespectacled well-dressed fellow came stumbling down the street with a
Negro in a truck driving cap. They were a strange pair. A big truck
rolled by and the Negro pointed at it excitedly and tried to express his
feeling. The tall white man furtively looked over his shoulder and
counted his money. “It’s Bill Burroughs!” giggled Neal. “Counting his
money and worried about everything, and all that other boy wants to do
is talk about trucks and things he knows.” We fol-
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