Sunday, December 22, 2013
son, Arizona. Immediately Neal said it was all settled and we were going
to Tucson. And we did. Passing Las Cruces, New Mexico, in the night, the
same Las Cruces that had been Neal’s pivot on the way east, we arrived
in Arizona at dawn and I woke up from a deep sleep to find everybody
sleeping like lambs and the car parked God knows where because I
couldn’t see out the steamy windows. I got out of the car. We were
parked in the mountains: There was a heaven of sunrise, cool purple
airs, red mountainsides, emerald pastures in valleys, dew, and
transmuting clouds of gold; on the ground gopher holes, cactus,
mesquite. It was time for me to drive on. I pushed Neal and the kid over
and went down the mountain with the clutch in and the motor off to save
gas. In this manner I rolled into Benson, Arizona. It occurred to me
that I had a pocket watch someone had just given me in New York for a
birthday present. At the filling station I asked the man if he knew a
pawnshop in Benson. It was right next door to the station. I knocked,
someone got out of bed, and in a minute I had a dollar for the watch. It
went into the tank. Now we had enough gas for Tucson. But suddenly a
big pistol-packing trooper appeared just as I was ready to pull out and
asked to see my driver’s license. “The fellow in the back seat has the
license,” I said. Neal and Louanne were sleeping together under the
blanket. The cop told Neal to come out. Suddenly he whipped out his gun
and yelled “keep your hands up!” “Officer,” I heard Neal say in the most
unctuous and ridiculous tones, “officah, I was only buttoning my flah.”
Even the cop almost smiled. Neal came out, muddy, ragged, T-shirted,
rubbing his belly, cursing, looking everywhere for his license and his
car papers. The cop rummaged thru our back trunk. All the papers were
square. “Only checking up” he said with a broad smile. “You can go on
now. Benson ain’t a bad town actually, you might enjoy it if you had
breakfast here.” “Yes yes yes” said Neal paying absolutely no attention
to him and drove off. We all sighed with relief. The police are
suspicious when gangs of youngsters come by in new cars without a cent
in their pockets and have to pawn watches. “Oh they’re always
interfering” said Neal “but he was a much better cop than that rat in
Virginia.
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