Out In The Be-Bop
1950s Night- The Time Of Motorcycle Bill-Take Two
From The Pen Of
Joshua Lawrence Breslin
[My old friend, Sam Lowell, whom I know
from the summer of love days out in Frisco days in the late1960s and who hails
from Carver down in Massachusetts asked me to fill in a few more details about
this relationship between Motorcycle Bill and Lily. He thought I was originally
kind of skimpy on why a nice Catholic girl would go all to pieces over a motorcycle
guy, would get on his bike like she was some low-rent tart from the wrong side
of town the usual type that went for motorcycle guys in his book. Sam didn’t get
the idea that when that cycle surge came lots of ordinary teens went with the
flow. So here is a little extra, a take two for Sam, and maybe for others who missed
that big motorcycle moment.]
********
There was a scourge in the land, in the
1950s American land. No, not the one you are thinking of from your youth of
from your history book, not the dreaded but fatalistically expected BIG ONE,
the mega-bomb that would send old mother earth back to square one, or worst, maybe
only the amoebas would survive to start the long train of civilization up the
hill once again. Everybody expected that blow to come if it did come and we in
America were not vigilant, did not keep our shoulders to the wheel and not ask questions
from the nefarious Russkies (of course we that were just coming to age in the
rock and roll night would not have had a clue as to what questions to ask if
asking questions was acceptable then and it was not and we as young as were
knew that it was not from parents to teachers to Grandpa Ike and his cabinet).
From a guy named Joe Stalin which one of our teachers said meant “steel” in Russian
but it could have been from any Russian guy as we learned later after Stalin died
and other atomic bomb-wielding guys took over in Red Square.
Sure that red scare Cold War was in the
air and every school boy and girl had their giggling tales of having to hide,
hide ass up, under some desk or other useless defense in air raid drill
preparations for that eventually. I wasn’t any revolutionary or radical or “red”
although one teacher looked at me kind of funny but I couldn’t the purpose of
hiding under some old-timey elementary school wooden desk when every film I
ever saw of what an atomic blast looked like said you might as well not have your
ass sticking up in the air when Armageddon came. Like I said one teacher looked
at me very funny. So sure the air stunk of red scare, military build-up cold
war “your mommy is a commie turns her in (and there were foolish kids who did
try to use that ploy when dear mother said no to some perfectly reasonable
request and junior thought to get even he would rat her out)”
But the red scare, the Cold War ice
tamp down on society to go along to get along was not the day to day scare for
every self-respecting parent from Portsmouth to the Pacific. That fear was
reserved for the deadly dreaded motorcycle scare that had every father telling
his son to beware of falling under the Marlon Brando sway once they had seen
the man complete with leather jacket, rakish cap and surly snarl playing Johnny
Bad in The Wild One at the Strand Theater
on Saturday afternoon and deciding contrary to the cautionary tale of the film
that these Johnnies were losers spiraling down to a life, a low life of crime
and debauchery (of course said son not knowing of the word, the meaning of
debauchery, until much later just shrugged his innocent shoulders).
More importantly, more in need of a
five alarm warning, every mother, every blessed mother, self-respecting or not,
secretly thinking maybe a toss in with Marlon would bring some spice to her otherwise
staid ranch house with breezeway existence warned off their daughters against
this madness and perversity in leather. Warned those gleaming-eyed daughters
also fresh from the Saturday afternoon matinee Stand Theater to not even think
about hanging with such rascals contrary to the lesson that cute waitress in
the film gave about blowing Johnny off as so much bad air. (Of course
forgetting, as dad had with junior, to bring up the question of sex which is what
Sissy had on her mind after one look at that cool attire of Johnny and her
dream about how she could get that surly smirk off of his face.)
Of course that did not stop the wayward
sons of millworkers slated for work in the mills when their times came from
mooning over every Harley cat that rode his ride down Main Street, Olde Saco
(really U.S. Route One but everybody called it Main Street and it was) or the
daughters slated for early motherhood under proper marriage or maybe sales
clerks in the Monmouth Store from mooning (and maybe more) over the low- riders
churning the metal on those bad ass machines when they went with their girlfriends
over to Old Orchard Beach on sultry sweaty weekend nights in summer.
This is how bad things were, how the
cool cats on the bikes sucked the air out of any other guys who were looking
for, well, looking whatever they could get from the bevies of girls watching
their every move like hawks. Even prime and proper Lily Dumont, the queen of
Saint Brigitte’s Catholic Church rectitude on Sunday and wanna-be “mama” every
other waking minute of late. Now this Lily was “hot” no question so hot that my
best friend in high school Rene Dubois, the best looking guy around the Acre
where we all lived and who already had two girlfriends (and later in life would
have four, count them, four wives before he gave the marriage game up and just
shacked up with whatever romantic interest he had at the moment), would go to
eight o’clock Mass every Sunday and sit a couple of rows in back of her and
just watch her ass. (I know because I was sitting beside him watching that same
ass). He never got anywhere with her, she knew about the two girlfriends since
they were friends of hers, and neither did I. Lily was a classic French-Canadian
beauty long thin legs, petite shape but with nice curves, long black hair and
pop-out blue eyes. Nice but like I said but strictly the ice queen as far as we
could tell. Especially when she would constantly talk about her friendship with
Jesus and the need to say plenty of rosaries and attend many novenas to keep in
touch with him.
In this time of the motorcycle craze
though something awoken in her though, maybe just the realization that Jesus
was okay but guys who thought she was hot maybe needed some tending too. In any
case, and I didn’t find this out until several years later after Lily had left
town, my sister who was one of Lily’s close friends then and Lily could confide
girl talk to her during this motorcycle dust up Lily would find herself restless
at night, late at night and contrary to all good Catholic teachings would put
her hand in a place where she shouldn’t (this is the way my sister put it you
know Lily was just playing with herself a
perfectly natural feeling for teenagers, and older people too) and she was embarrassed
about it, didn’t know if she could go to confession and say what sin she
committed to old Father Pierre. I don’t know if she ever did confess or things
got resolved a different way and that idea was out of play but there you have
it.
And the object of her desire? One
“Motorcycle Bill,” the baddest low- rider in all of Olde Saco. Now baddest in
Olde Saco (that’s up in ocean edge Maine for the heathens and others not in the
know) was not exactly baddest in the whole wide world, nowhere as near as bad
as say Sonny Barger and his henchmen outlaws-for- real bikers out in Hell’s
Angels Oakland as chronicled by Doctor Gonzo (before he was Gonzo), Hunter S.
Thompson in his saga of murder and mayhem sociological- literary study
Hell’s Angels. But as much is true in life one must accept the context. And
the context here is that in sleepy dying mill town Olde Saco mere ownership,
hell maybe mere desire for ownership, of a bike was prima facie evidence of
badness. So every precious daughter was specifically warned away from
Motorcycle Bill and his Vincent Black Lightning 1952 (although no mother, and
maybe no daughter either, could probably tell the difference between that sleek
English bike and a big pig Harley). But Madame Dumont felt no need to do so
with her sweet sixteen Lily who, maybe, pretty please maybe was going to be one
of god’s women, maybe enter the convent over in Cedars Of Lebanon Springs in a
couple of years after she graduated from Olde Saco High along with her Class of
1960.
But that was before Motorcycle Bill
appeared on the horizon. One afternoon after school walking home to Olde Saco’s
French- Canadian (F-C) quarter, the Acre like I said where we all lived, all
French-Canadians (on my mother’s side, nee LeBlanc for me) on Atlantic Avenue
with classmate and best friend Clara Dubois (my sister was close to Lily but
not as close as Clara since they had gone to elementary school together), Lily
heard the thunder of Bill’s bike coming up behind them, stopping, Bill giving
Lily a bow, and them revving the machine up and doing a couple of circle cuts
within a hair’s breathe of the girls. Then just a suddenly he was off, and
Lily, well, Lily was hooked, hooked on Motorcycle Bill, although she did not
know it, know it for certain until that night in her room when she tossed and
turned all night and did not ask god, or any of his associates, to guide her in
the matter (the matter of that wayward hand for those who might have forgotten).
One thing about living in a sleepy old
town, a sleepy old dying mill town, is that everybody knows everybody’s
business at least as far as any person wants that information out on the public
square. Two things are important before we go on. One is that everybody in town
that counted which meant every junior and senior class high schooler in Olde
Saco knew that Bill had made a “play” for Lily. And the buzz got its start from
none other than Clara Dubois who had her own hankerings after the motorcycle
man (her source of wonder though was more, well lets’ call it crass than Lily’s,
Clara wanted to know if Bill was build, build with some sexual power, power like
his motorcycle. She had innocently, perhaps, understood the Marlon mystique).
The second was that Bill, other than his bike, was not a low life low- rider
but just a guy who liked to ride the roads free and easy. See Bill was a
freshman over at Bowdoin and he used the bike as much to get back and forth to
school from his home in Scarborough as to do wheelies in front of
impressionable teenage girls from the Acre.
One day, one afternoon, a few days
after their Motorcycle Bill “introduction,” when Lily and Clara were over at
Seal Rock at the end of Olde Saco Beach Bill came up behind them sans his bike.
(Not its real name but given the name Seal Rock because the place was the local
lovers’ lane at night and many things had been sealed there including a fair
share of “doing the do,” you know hard and serious sex. During the day it was
just a good place to catch a sea breeze and look for interesting clam shells which
washed up in the swirling surf there.) Now not on his bike, without a helmet,
and carrying books, books of all things, he looked like any student except
maybe a little bolder and a little less reserved.
He started talking to Lily and
something in his demeanor attracted her to him. (Clara swore, swore on seven
bibles, that Lily was kind of stand-offish at first but Lily said no, said she
was just blushing a lot.) They talked
for a while and then Bill asked Lily if she wanted a ride home. She hemmed and
hawed but there was just something about him that spoke of mystery (who knows
what Clara thought about what Lily thought about that idea). She agreed and
they walked a couple of blocks to where he was parked. And there Lily saw that
Vincent Black Lightning 1952 of her dreams. Without a word, without anything
done by her except to tie her hair back and unbutton a couple of buttons from
her starched white shirt she climbed on the back of the bike at Bill’s beckon.
And that is how one Lily Dumont became William Kelly’s motorcycle “mama.”
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