Wednesday, December 25, 2013
grapes in the cool California mornings hit me right. But there were no
jobs to be had and much confusion with everybody giving us innumerable
tips and places to go that didn’t materialize a job. Nevertheless we ate
a Chinese dinner and set out with reinforced bodies. We went across the
SP tracks to Mexican town. Bea jabbered with her brethren asking for
jobs. It was night now, and the little Mextown street was one blazing
bulb of lights: movie marquees, fruit stands, penny arcades, five and tens. Hundreds of rickety trucks and mud-spattered jalopies were parked.
Whole Mexican fruit-picking families wandered around eating popcorn. Bea
talked to innumerable Mexicans and got all kinds of confused information.
I was beginning to despair. What I needed, what Bea needed too, was a
drink, so we bought a quart of California port for 35¢ and went to the
boxcars in back to drink. We found a place where hobos had drawn up
crates to sit over fires. We sat there and drank the wine. On our left
were the boxcars, sad and sooty red beneath the moon; straight ahead the
lights and airport pokers of Bakersfield proper, to our right a
tremendous aluminum quonset warehouse. I mention this because exactly a
year and a half later I came right by there again with Neal and I
pointed it out to him. Ah it was a fine night, a warm night, a
wine-drinking night, a moony night, and a night to hug your girl and
talk and spit and be heaven-going. This we did. She was a drinking little
fool and kept up with me and passed me and went right on talking until
midnight. We never budged from those crates. Occasionally bums passed,
Mexican mothers passed with children, and the prowl car came by and the
cop got out to piss but most of the time we were alone and mixing up our
souls ever more and ever more till it would be terribly hard to say
goodbye. At midnight we got up and goofed towards the highway. Bea had a
new idea. We would hitch-hike to Selma her hometown and live in her
brother’s garage. Anything was all right with me. On the road, not far
from that damned and fated Spanish style motel- -that great good motel
that hung me up and made me meet Bea---I made Bea sit down on my bag to
make her look like a woman in distress. Right off a truck stopped and we
ran for it
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