Thursday, December 26, 2013
Divide at midnight at Creston, arriving Salt Late City at dawn, a city
of sprinklers, the least likely place for Neal to have been born; then
out to Nevada in the hot sun, Reno by nightfall, its twinkling Chinese
streets; then up to Sierra Nevada, pines, stars, mountain lodges
signifying Frisco romances---a little boy in the back seat crying to his
mother “Mother when do we get home to Truckee?” And Truckee itself,
homey Truckee and then down the hill to the flats of Sacramento. I
suddenly realized I was in California. Warm palmy air---air you can
kiss---and palms. Along the storied Sacramento river on a superhighway;
into the hills again; up, down; and suddenly the vast expanse of
bay---it was just before dawn---with the sleepy lights of Frisco
festooned across. Crossing the Oakland Bay Bridge I slept for the first
time since Denver soundly; so that I was rudely jolted in the bus
station at Market and Third into the memory of the fact that I was in
San Francisco three thousand two hundred miles from my mother’s house in
Ozone Park, Long Island. I wandered out like a haggard ghost, and there
she was Frisco, long bleak streets with trolley wires all shrouded in
fog and whiteness. I stumbled about a few blocks. Weird bums (it was
Mission Street) asked me for dimes in the dawn. I heard music somewhere.
“Boy am I going to dig all this later! But now I’ve got to find Henri
Cru.” And following his instructions I took a bus and rode out over the
Golden Gate Bridge to Marin City. The sun was making a terrific haze
over the Pacific as we crossed the Golden Gate, a haze I couldn’t look into,
and so this was the shining shield of the China-going world ocean and
it wore a terrible aspect especially as I was scheduled to sail out on
it. Marin City where Henri Cru lived was a collection of shacks in a
valley, housing project shacks built for Navy yard workers during the
war; it was really a canyon, and a deep one, treed profusely on all
slopes. There were special stores and barbershops and tailor shops for
the people of the Project. It was, so they say, the only community in
America where whites and Negroes lived together voluntarily; and that
was so, and a wild joyous place I’ve never seen since. On the door of
Henri’s shack was the note he had pinned up there three weeks ago. “Jack
Claptrap!” (in huge letters,
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