Friday, December 20, 2013
to a fanning dawn; we were hurling up to it. Neal’s rocky dogged face as
ever bent over the dashlight with a bony purpose of its own. “What are
you thinking Pops?” “Ah-ha, ah-ha same old thing, y’know---gurls gurls
gurls. Together also with a flitting thought and vagrant
dreams-bedeviled with broken promises- -hup! ahem!” There was nothing to
say in a good boat like that. I went to sleep and woke up to the dry
hot atmospheres of July Sunday morning in Iowa, and still Neal was
driving and driving and had not slackened up his speed the least bit
except the curvy corndales of Iowa at a minimum of 80 and the
straightaway 110 as usual unless bothways traffic forced him to fall in
line at a crawling and most miserable 60. When there was a chance he
shot ahead and passed cars by the half-dozen and left them behind in a
cloud of dust. A mad guy in a brand new Buick saw all this on the road
and decided to race us. When Neal was just about to pass a passel he
shot by us without warning and howled and tooted his horn and flashed
the tail lights for challenge. We took off after him like a bird dog.
“Now wait” laughed Neal “I’m going to tease that sonofabitch for a dozen
miles or so. Watch.” He let the Buick go way ahead and then accelerated
and caught up with it most impolitely. Mad Buick went out of his mind:
he gunned up to 100. We had a chance to see who he was. He seemed to be
some kind of Chicago hipster traveling with a woman old enough to be,
and probably actually his mother. God knows if she was complaining but
he raced. His hair was dark and wild, an Italian from Old Chi; he wore a
sports shirt. There was probably an idea in his mind that we were a new
gang from LA invading Chicago, maybe some of Mickey Cohen’s men,
because the limousine looked every bit the part and the license plates
were California. Mainly it was just road kicks. He took terrible chances
to stay ahead of us, he passed cars on curves and barely got back in
line as a truck wobbled into view and loomed up huge. Eighty miles of
Iowa we unreeled in this fashion and the race was so interesting that I
had no opportunity to be frightened. Then the mad guy gave up, pulled up
at a gas station, probably on orders from the old lady, and as we
roared by he waved gleefully and acknowledged everything. On we
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