Sunday, December 22, 2013
town of Mojave
which was the entryway to the great Tehatchapi Pass. Mojave is in the
valley formed by the desert plateau descending to the west with the high
Sierras straight ahead north; the whole place a bewildering view of the
ends of the world, with railroads toiling in all directions in the
vastness and sending up smoke-signals like nation to nation. The Okie
woke up and told funny stories; sweet little Alfred sat smiling. Okie
told us he knew a man who forgave his wife for shooting him and got her
out of jail, only to be shot for a second time. We were passing a
women’s prison when he told it. Up ahead we saw the Tehatchapi Pass
starting up. Neal took the wheel and carried us clear to the top of the
world. We passed a great shroudy cement factory in the canyon. Then we
started down. Neal cut off the gas, threw in the clutch and negotiated
every hairpin turn and passed cars and did everything in the books
without the benefit of acceleration. I held on tight. Sometimes the road
went up again briefly: he merely passed cars without a sound. He knew
every rhythm and every kick of a first class pass. When it was time to
U-turn left around a low stonewall that overlooked the bottom of the
world he just leaned far to the right making Louanne and me lean with
him and negotiated thus. In this way we floated down to the San Joaquin valley. It lay spread a mile below, virtually the floor of California,
green and wondrous from our aerial shelf. We made thirty miles without
using gas. It was very cold in the Valley that winter. Suddenly we were
all excited. Neal wanted to tell me everything he knew about Bakersfield
as we reached the city limits. He showed me rooming-houses where he
stayed, watertanks where he jumped off the train for grapes, Chinese
restaurants where he ate, park benches where he met girls and certain
places where he’d done nothing but just sit and wait around. “Man I
spent hours on that very chair in front of that drugstore!” He
remembered all…every pinochle game, every woman, every sad night. And
suddenly we were passing the place in the railyards where Bea and I sat
under the moon drinking wine, on
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