Saturday, December 21, 2013
suddenly Neal’s eyes grew tearful and he got up and left his food
steaming there and walked out of the restaurant. I wondered if he was
just wandering off forever. I didn’t care I was so mad---I had flipped
and turned it down on Neal. But the sight of his uneaten food made me
sadder than anything in years. “I shouldn’t have said that…he likes to
eat so much…he’s never left his food like this..What the hell. That’s
showing him anyway.” Neal stood outside the restaurant for exactly five
minutes and then came back and sat down. “Well” I said “What were you
doing out there?” Knotting up your fists, cursing me, thinking up new
gags about my kidneys.” Neal mutely shook his head. “No man, no man,
you’re all completely wrong. If you want to know, well---“ “Go ahead,
tell me.” I said all this and never looked up from my food: I felt like a
beast. “I was crying” said Neal. “Ah hell you never cry.” “You say
that? Why do you think I don’t cry?” “You don’t die enough to cry.”
Every one of these things I said was a knife at myself. Everything I had
ever secretly held against Neal was coming out: how ugly I was and what
filth I was discovering in the depths of my own impure psychologies.
Neal was shaking his head, “No man, I was crying.” “Go on, I bet you
were so mad you had to leave.” “Believe me, Jack, really do believe if
you’ve ever believed anything about me.” I knew he was telling the truth
and yet I didn’t want to bother with the truth and when I looked up at
him I think I was cockeyed from cracked intestinal twistings in my awful
soul. Then I knew I was wrong. “Ah man, Neal, I’m sorry, I never acted this
way before with you. Well now you know me. You know I don’t have close
relationships with anybody much. I don’t know what to do with these
things. I hold things in my hand like they was pieces of turd and don’t
know where to put it down. Let’s forget it.” The holy con man began to
eat. “It’s not my fault! it’s not my fault!” I told him. “Nothing in
this lousy world is my fault, don’t you see that? I don’t want it to be
and it can’t be and it won't be.” “Yes man, yes man. But please harken
back and believe me.” “I do believe you, I do.” This was the sad story
of that afternoon. All kinds of tremendous complications arose that
night when Neal went to stay with the Okie family. These had
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