Thursday, December 19, 2013
ver side-street cottage with the beads hanging in the doors and the
overstuffed furniture in the parlor. He was as white as a sheet. He was
still calling Frank. There was something extremely paralyzed about all
his movements and for this reason he did nothing about leaving the
doorway but just stood in it muttering the name “Frank” and “Don’t go”
and looking after us anxiously as we rounded the corner. “God Jeff, I
don’t know what to say.” “Never mind!” he moaned. “He’s always been like
that. I wish you hadn’t seen him. My mother’s leaving him as soon as
she gets straightened out.” “That poor old man’ll go mad if she leaves
him.” “She’s too young for him anyway” said Frank. We met his mother at
the bank where she was surreptitiously drawing money for him. She was a
lovely white-haired woman still very young in appearance. She and her
son stood on the marble floor of the bank whispering. Frank was wearing a Levi outfit jacket and all and looked like a man going to Mexico sure
enough. This was his tender existence in Denver and he was going off
with the flaming tyro Neal. Neal came popping around the corner and met
us just on time. Mrs. Jeffries insisted on buying us all a cup of
coffee. “Take care of my Frank” she said “no telling what things might
happen in that country.” “We’ll all watch over each other” I said. Frank
and his mother strolled on ahead and I walked in back with crazy Neal:
he was telling me about the inscriptions carved on shithouse walls in
the east and in the west. “They’re entirely different, in the East they
make cracks and corny jokes of all kinds; in the West they just write
their names, Red O’Hara, Bluffton, Montana, came by here, date, the
reason being the enormous loneliness that differs just a shade and
cunt hair as you move across the Mississippi.” Well there was a lonely
guy in front of us, for Jeffries’ mother was a lovely mother and she
hated to see her son go but knew he had to go. I saw he was fleeing his
father. Here were the three of us---Neal looking for his father, mine
dead, Frank fleeing his and going off into the night together. He kissed
his mother in the rushing crowds of 17th and she got in a cab and waved
at us. Goodbye, goodbye. We got into our old Ford heap and went back to
Bev’s. here we spent a planned hour just sitting and
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