Thursday, December 19, 2013
irrigation ditches and shady dells---the places where little boys go
swimming---produce a bug like the bug that bit Frank Jeffries. He had
his arm draped over the broken door and was just riding along and
talking happily with us when suddenly a bug flew into his arm and
imbedded a long stinger in it that made him howl. It had come out of an
American afternoon. He yanked and slapped at his arm and dug out the
stinger and in a few minutes his arm had begun to swell. He said it
hurt. Neal and I couldn’t figure what it was. The thing was to wait and
see if the swelling went down. Here we were heading for unknown southern
lands and barely three miles out of hometown, poor homely old hometown
of childhood, a strange feverish exotic bug rose from secret corruptions
and sent fear in our hearts. “What is it?” “I’ve never known of a bug
around here that can make a swelling like that.” “Damn!” It made the
trip seem sinister and doomed. It was a parting farewell from our native
land. Did we know our native land so well? We drove on. Frank’s arm got
worse. We’d stop at the first hospital and have him get a shot of
penicillin. We passed Castle Rock, came to Colorado Springs at dark. The
great shadow of Pike’s Peak loomed to our right. We bowled down the
Pueblo hiway. “I’ve hitched thousands and thousands of times on this
road” said Neal. “I hid behind that exact wire fence there one night
when I suddenly took fright for no reason whatever.” We all decided to
tell our stories, but one by one, and Frank was first. “We’ve a long way
to go” preambled Neal “and so you must take every indulgence and deal
with every single detail you can bring to mind---and still it won’t be
all told. Easy, easy,” he cautioned Frank who began telling his story
“you’ve got to relax too.” Frank swung into his life story as we shot
across the dark. He started with his experiences in France but to round
out ever-growing difficulties he came back and started at the beginning
with his boyhood in Denver. He and Neal compared times they’d seen each
other zooming around on bicycles. Frank was nervous and feverish. He
wanted to tell Neal everything. Neal was now arbiter, old man, judge,
listener, approver, nodder. “Yes, yes, go on please.” We passed
Walsenburg; suddenly we passed Trinidad where Hal Chase
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