Wednesday, December 25, 2013
just to chance meeting a deer---Henri had seen deer around, the Marin
country being wild even in 1947---when I heard a frightening noise in
the dark. It was a huffing and a puffing. I thought it was a rhinoceros
coming for me in the dark. I grabbed my gun, I grabbed my balls. A tall
figure appeared in the canyon gloom; it had an enormous head. Suddenly I
realized it was Henri with a huge box of groceries on his shoulder. He
was moaning and groaning from the enormous weight of it. He’d found the
key to the cafeteria somewhere and just got his groceries out the front
door. I said “Henri I thought you were home. What the hell are you
doing?” And he said “You know what President Truman said, we must cut
down on the cost of living.” And I heard him huff and puff into the
darkness. I’ve already described that awful trail back to our shack up
hill and dale; he hid the groceries in the tall grass and came back to
me. “Jack I just can’t make it alone. I’m going to divide it into two
boxes and you’re going to help me.” But I’m on duty.” “I’ll watch the
place while you’re gone. Things are getting rough all around. We’ve just
got to make it the best way we can and that’s all there is to it.” He
wiped himself. “Whoo! I’ve told you time and time again Jack that we’re
buddies, and we’re in this thing together. There’s just no two ways
about it. The Dostioffskis, the chief Davies, The Texes, the Dianes, all
the evil skulls of this world are out for our skin. It’s up to us to
see that nobody pulls any schemes on us. They’ve got a lot more up their
sleeves besides a dirty arm. Remember that. You can’t teach the old
maestro a new tune.” “Whatever are we going to do about shipping out?” I
finally asked. We’d been doing this thing for ten weeks. I was making
fifty-five dollars a week and sending my mother an average of forty. I’d
spent only one evening in San Francisco in all that time. My life was
wrapped in the shack, in Henri’s battles with Diane, and in the middle
of the night in the barracks. Henri was gone off in the dark to get
another box. I struggled with him on that old Zorro road. We piled up
the groceries a mile high on Diane’s kitchen table. She woke up and
rubbed her eyes. “You know what President Truman said? He said for us to
cut down on the cost of living.” She was
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