Friday, December 27, 2013
squeeze and stop on a dime at the brickwall, and jump out, snake his way
out of close fenders, leap into another car, circle it fifty miles an
hour in a narrow space, shift, and back again into a tight spot with a
few inches each side and come to a bouncing stop the same moment he’s
jamming in the emergency brake; then run clear to the ticket shack like a
track star, hand a ticket, leap into a newly arrived car before the
owner is hardly out, leap literally under him as he steps out, start the
car with the door flapping and roar off to the next available parking
spot: working like that without pause eight hours a night, evening rush
hours and after theater rush hours, in greasy wino pants with a frayed
fur-lined jacket and beat shoes that flap. Now he’d bought a new suit to
go back home in; blue with pencil stripes, vest and all, with a watch
and watch chain, and a portable typewriter with which he was going to
start writing in a Denver roominghouse as soon as he got a job there. We
had a farewell meal of franks and beans in a 7th Avenue Riker’s and
then Neal got on the bus that said Chicago on it and roared off into the
night. I promised myself to go the same way when Spring really bloomed
and opened up the land. There went our wrangler. And this was really the
way that my whole road experience began and the things that were to
come are too fantastic not to tell. I’ve only spoken of Neal in a
preliminary way because I didn’t know any more than this about him then.
His relation with Allen I’m not in on and as it turned out later, Neal
got tired of that, specifically of queerness and reverted to his natural
ways, but that’s no matter. In the month of July, 1947, having finished
a good half of my novel and having saved about fifty dollars from old
veteran benefits I got ready to go to the West Coast. My friend Henri
Cru had written me a letter from San Fransisco saying I should come out
there and ship out with him on an around-the-world liner. He swore he
could get me into the engine room. I wrote back and said I’d be
satisfied with any old freighter so long as I could take a few long
Pacific trips and come back with enough money to support myself in my
mother’s house while I finished my book. He said he had a shack in Marin
City and I would have all the time in the world to write there
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