When Your Rooster Crows At The Break Of Dawn-Hold On To Your
Wallet-Or Shallow And Swallow Down Your Love
By Ronan Saint James
That goddam rooster down the road, I am not sure how far
down that road but this the fourth day running the sleepy bastard has broken
the hell out of my sleep, thought Jack Dolan as he once again, for the fourth
time running tried to shake off the tepid sleep of the weary. Yeah, like the
song said, Dylan wasn’t it, always that gravelly-throated bugger has an apt
phrase to speak to what wearied a man, probably reflecting his own weariness,
yeah, his own woman trouble what else would drive a man to write prose or lyric
about his malaise blame farmyard animal for his discontents -“when your rooster
crows at the break of dawn look out your window and I’ll be gone.” That is what
had been keeping one John Dolan weary and wary four days running and not some
fucking stone cold-eyed rooster yelling his brains out for whatever he yelled
his brains out for at dawn. That Jack weariness wariness too had a name.
Lucinda, Lucinda Jolly, the so-called love of his life who had walked out that
door four days before without not so much as a by your leave. Left him high and
dry in not to be alone Naples, down in Florida, broke and broken-hearted.
He should have seen it coming should have seen that Lucinda
had been distracted by something. When they had argued, screamed really, that
last night before she took a powder something they generally did not do since
both had come up in households where the screaming and disorder had made them
very reticent to argue, to yell at each other and maybe that was the problem,
maybe what called the day done, she had mentioned that he seemed to be
“distant, “ seemed to have been off his “meds” his drugs that kept him on keel.
He denied it as usual and maybe that was the day done deal that finally broke
things in her overheated head.
Hell that was all bullshit, all crap, what it was she had
found another guy, a guy he did not see coming either although he should have
since lately she had been going out by herself and coming in late. Didn’t make
any excuses, lame excuses anyway, about being over at some girlfriend’s house
but that she needed to be alone. That was when they decided to take whatever
money they had and head to Naples, not a natural place like Big Sur out in the
California coast where they could wish the Japan seas would solve whatever ailed
their relationship and be washed clean by the fresh air and dreams of Jack
Kerouac. dreams she had been spoon-fed on growing up in the French-Canadian
Acre section of Lowell, Jack’s hometown, but what they could afford and had
been a place to head for in fast sunnier days. Now she was gone, left him with
no dough in godforsaken Naples of all places.
Maybe Jack should have taken those rooster crows for a sign,
better should have listened to the whole Dylan lyric where he talks about it
not being him (her) he (she) was looking for-after having given their, her, his
bet shot, best shot maybe not up to some abstract standard they could never
reach and a while back had both agreed could never reach that the whole thing
had been a house of cards, had been a waystation for both after divorces, his
three her pair and after those deep unhappy childhoods that seemed to glue them
for a while. The whole thing had been so freaking fragile from the night they
met in The Garden of Eden bar in downtown Albany near Russell Sage College when
he had had plenty of dough and a full to the brim credit card that got them
within a couple of days out to Big Sur, out to where he believed he had been
washed clean and wanted her to see life through the prism of Pfieffer State
Park complete with stone ass totems once she mentioned Jack Kerouac and that
Lowell Jack park set in stone too with some his words, especially about looking
for some dead-beat father they never knew. Hit right home with that one.
In his mind,
in his rooster-disturbed mind as Jack started to meditate, real meditation, and
not just dwell on her being gone, who the hell that other guy was that he had
not seen coming but should have when they were in their down in the mud days
who maybe had not been divorced a million times, maybe didn’t drink, didn’t
need “meds” and even need to meditate to keep an even keel, him with no dough
and Albany many miles north but some old-time Allan Ginsberg in lieu of his now
depleted “meds” he unwound the whole affair. Saw for the first time that what
they had had was made of more smoke and mirrors than he could have figured when
she was like a breath of fresh air coming through the fields after that first
date to Saratoga field the day after they first spent the night together (he
still had a hard time around “sleeping together, damn, sex so spent is what
anybody would get who asked when they “did it”). She had been staying with her
sister, a Russell Sage graduate and former denizen of “the Garden, over in Ballston Spa, a sleepy little town
that suited her just then but she was restless, needed to see some city lights
and so the Garden of Eden had been her stopping place since Guy Williams, an
old favorite, was playing a few sets there and her sister assured her that no
guys would hit on her. Before she got out the door that sister Kate would amend
her statement given what a breath of fresh air beauty he emitted even if she
thought herself not particularly pretty, at least not too hard. Guys hitting on
her. And hence Jack and his credit card and shy manner around her. (Lucinda was
always amazed that he was ready to shake her hand, which he did, softly that
first night and leave it at that he was so shy around women even after three
marriages and a bunch of affairs. She had been the one who mentioned taking a
walk along the Mohawk River to “talk” although that was not the only thing on
her mind that night.)
Jack hoped
that tomorrow, tomorrow the fifth day running that rooster would lay off so he
could gather himself to hit the road back to Albany and pick up the pieces of
his now shattered life. The meditation, a new routine, which she had introduced
him to calm him down when he was wired, when he was distant too but that was
probably too little, too late.
The next
morning Jack did hit the road, well, not really hit the road like he was some
second coming of Jack Kerouac or his buddies Allan Ginsberg and Neal Cassidy
ready to throw caution to the wind and put his thumb out but go on his computer
to look on-line for some ride-sharing opportunity. After setting up a meet with
a guy going to New York City he sat around for a couple of hours in the place
they had rented through Air B&B and which needed to be vacated by noon and
rewound the spool of their two- year relationship now in tatters wishing all
the time that he thought about it that morning that she had given a better
signal, better signals that he was not what she was looking for, not the one
she wanted and Dylan came lyrically back into view with his phrase from some
forgotten 1960s song about “leaving at your own chosen speed.”
Funny she had
actually “discussed” with him several times her feeling she had to leave, no,
that is not right, feeling that they could not go the distance, that they were
too similar in their quiet desperations to stick and that whether he was
expecting too much from her or she had too many non-negotiable demands the
thing had not been despite Kerouac, despite being washed clean at Big Sur and a
few times in Naples as well built to last. She never got to the door then, they
would patch things up by having sex, or doing some dope or something to keep
the embers alive. But he knew deep down that she was looking at that door and
that a time would come, a time would come.
Maybe a couple of months before when
he mentioned that he had after several months had been diagnosed with bladder
cancer and he begged her to leave and find her path since the treatment
procedure, damn, maybe his whole life said he had to face this alone had
triggered something. Or maybe so gallant had seen her and taken his best shot.
Who knows. Just as he was to run a new train of thought he heard the honking of
the car that would take him North-north and aloneness. He put the key in the
mailbox as requested, picked up his suitcase and headed out the door to the
waiting automobile.
As he entered
the vehicle and said hello to his new-found friend driver and savior Jack got
pensive for a while after throwing his knapsack in the backseat and adjusting his
seat-belt. Started recounting, no, re-living all the steps he and she should have
taken to bring them to some understanding, if possible. He was not naïve enough
after three marriages, a million affairs and his stint with her to think that it
would have been a done deal but maybe. How many times had she made it plain
that it was him, him and his mercurial ways that would drive her from his door,
their door when they decided to move in together. How many times had he had the
words in his stinking overactive head that would not come out, would not come
out making any sense.
And about the
night when both high but still in contact with their emotions they talked the
whole night away about his “problem” of not being able to say the words she
wanted to hear, that maybe they would make it with a little more communication.
About too how that mother constant brow-beating made it very reticent to
express any emotions, about the child being future to the man. About how in the
end, she must have taken a hint from her ever practical side and realized that
continuing would not work out, that the percentages were too low for her own
fragile existence to count on.
As Jack
started to talk to that driver he thought well at least he wouldn’t haven’t to listen to
that cocksure rooster and his king kong king of the hill crowing …
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