Tuesday, December 24, 2013
around the house rubbing his hands together eagerly. When everybody got
up and dressed Bill’s day was finished, all his energy had run out, the
orgones had slipped out of the million orifices in his weaseled flanks
and withered arms where he plied the morphine needle. Joan tried to find
him. He was hiding in his room taking the first fix of the morning. He
came out glassy-eyed and calm. Neal did all the driving; from the moment
he met Bill he was his chauffeur. They had a jeep. They drove to
crossroads stores and bought groceries and Benzedrine inhalers. Hunkey
came along with them hoping they’d go as far as Houston so he could slip
into the streets and mingle with the characters. He was tired of
wearing a straw hat and carrying buckets of water for Joan. There’s a
photo of him raking the marijuana garden with his immense straw hat; he
looks like a coolie; the shack is in the background with wash buckets on
the porch and little Julie shading her eyes to watch. There’s another
photo of Joan simpering over a cook pot; her hair is long and unkempt;
she’s high on benny and God knows what she’s saying as the camera is
snapped… “Don’t point that nasty old thing at me.” Neal wrote me long
letters on a crate telling me everything. He sat at Bill’s feet in the
front room. Bill snuffed down his nose and told long stories. When the
sun turned red Bill always whipped out a stick of homegrown tea for the
general appetite. Everybody blasted as they ran hither and yon in the
shack at various chores. Then Joan cooked a lovely supper. They sat over
the remains---beady-eyed Allen brooding and saying “Hmm” in the big
Texas night; eager Neal yelling “Yes! Yes!” to everything everybody
said, sulky Hunkey in his purple pants fishing around old drawers for a
roach, weary Joan turning her face away, and Bill---Uncle Bill they
called him---sitting with his long legs crossed and fingering his
shotgun. He suddenly leaped up and let go a double barrel blast out of
the open window. A spavined old runaway horse ran across his line of
fire. The buckshot ripped through a rotted Bayou trunk. “My Gawd!” cried
Bill “I’ve shot a horse!” They all ran out; the horse was galloping
into the swamps. “You mean that wormy old nasty old thing” scoffed Joan.
“That’s not a horse.” “What is it if it ain’t a horse.” “Alistair says
it’s
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