Monday, December 23, 2013
then some. Louanne and Neal and I sat in front and had the warmest talk
about the goodness and joy of life. Neal suddenly became tender. “Now
dammit, look here all of you, we all must admit that everything is fine
and there’s no need in the world to worry, and in fact we should realize
what it would mean to us to UNDERSTAND that we’re not REALLY worried
about ANYTHING. Am I right?” We all agreed. “Here we go; we’re all
together…what did we do in New York…let’s forgive.” We all had our spats
back there. “That’s behind us, merely by miles and inclinations. Now
we’re heading down to New Orleans to dig old Bill Burroughs and ain’t
that going to be kicks and listen will you to this old tenor man blow his
top”---he shot up the radio volume till the car shuddered---“and listen
to him tell the story and put down true relaxation and knowledge.” We
all jumped to the music and agreed. The purity of the road. The white
line in the middle of the hiway unrolled and hugged our left front tire
as if glued to our groove. Neal hunched his muscular neck, T-shirted in
the winter night, and blasted the car along. In no time we were at the
approaches of Philadelphia. Ironically we were going over the same road
to North Carolina for the third time; it was our route. I kept wondering
what it was I had forgotten to do back in New York; it unrolled behind
me more and more and I forgot more and more what it was. I brought it
up. Everybody tried to guess what I had forgotten. It was no use. We had
forty dollars to go all the way. All we had to do was pick up hitch
hikers and bum quarters off them for gas, as soon as we got rid of
Rhoda. Rhoda began saying she wanted to come to New Orleans; with Al
Hinkle’s wife already waiting there for him; that was a fine idea. Neal
said nothing; he knew in his own mind he was going to throw her out in
Washington. In Philadelphia we lost Route One and suddenly found
ourselves groping down a narrow little tar road in the woods. “We’ve
suddenly come into fairytale Route One in the Mother Hubbard Woods. Dig
it…gingerbread houses ahead…” We had no idea where we were. Neal was
pleased to go on with the fairytale awhile; finally the road came to a
dead end in a swamp. “The end of the road?” I said, kidding. He wheeled
the car around and we roared
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