Friday, December 27, 2013
he let me off at Longmont, Colorado. I was feeling normal again and had even
started telling him about the state of my own travels. He wished me
luck. It was beautiful in Longmont. Under a tremendous old tree was a
bed of green lawngrass belonging to a gas station. I asked the attendant
if I could sleep there and he said sure; so I stretched out a wool
shirt, lay my face flat on it, with an elbow out, and with one eye
cocked at the snowy Rockies in the hot sun for just a moment, I fell
asleep for two delicious hours, the only discomfiture being an
occasional Colorado ant. “And here I am in Colorado!” I kept thinking
gleefully. “Damn! Damn! Damn! I’m making it!” And after a refreshing
sleep filled with cobwebby dreams of my past life in the East I got up,
washed in the station men’s room, and strode off fit and slick as a
fiddle to get me a rich thick milkshake at the roadhouse to put some
freeze in my hot tormented stomach. Incidentally a very beautiful
Colorado gal shook me that cream, she was all smiles too; I was
grateful; it made up for last night. I said to myself, “Wow! What’ll
Denver be like!” I got on that hot road and off I went to Denver in a
brand new car driven by a Denver businessman of about thirty five. He
went seventy. I tingled all over; I counted minutes and subtracted
miles. In a minute just over the rolling wheatfields all golden beneath
the distant snows of Estes I’d be seeing old Denver at last. I pictured
myself in a Denver bar that night, with all the gang, and in their eyes I
would be strange and ragged and like the prophet that has walked across
the land to bring the dark Word, and the only Word I had was Wow. The
man and I had a long warm conversation about our respective schemes in
life and before I knew it we were going over the Denargo fruitmarkets
outside Denver; there was smoke, smokestacks, railyards, redbrick
buildings and the distant downtown graystone buildings and here I was in
Denver. He let me off at Larimer Street. I stumbled along with the most
wicked grin of joy in the world among the old bums and beat cowboys of
Larimer Street. It was also the biggest city I’d seen since Chicago and
the bigcity buzz made me jump. As I say, in those days I didn’t know
Neal as well as I do now, and the first thing I wanted to do was look up
Hal Chase immediately, which I did. I
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment