Searching For Todo El Mundo –With Jack Kerouac’s
Big Sur In Mind -Take One
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Sam Lowell,
a man long known among his friends and in the small and dwindling Cambridge bookstore
circles where he had been a fixture for some years to be interested in such
historical literary concerns, had when he had thought about the matter when a
friend’s request brought it to mind, found it hard to believe that it had
already been seven years since the literary world, and not just the literary
world, commemorated the 50th anniversary of the publication of Jack Kerouac’s 1957
classic coming-of-age road saga, On The
Road. Sam’s memory of that event, which was commemorated with great fanfare
in now Jack-proud Lowell, his hometown about thirty miles up the road from
Cambridge, with a week-long festival, had been triggered by a piece of writing
send to him by his recently reconnected corner boy from his high school hang
out days in front of Jack Slack’s bowling alleys, Josh Breslin.
Josh, a corner
boy back from in the days back in growing up North Adamsville, a town near
Boston, when that term meant somebody that you would go through some shades of
hell for and he you and not just a guy who you casually hung around on Friday
or Saturday night, maybe more nights in the summer depending on this and that, no
money in your pocket, no girl dated up, no car if you were in such a condition,
dated up that is, and thus reduced to walking to the ancient tattered crumbling
seawall at Adamsville Beach precluding any serious sexual activity, and helped
hold up the brick wall in front of Jack Slack’s bowling alleys up in North
Adamsville Center, although in the course of things a corner boy did all that
as well. What made corner boys though was the code, not exactly the Omerta code
that everybody who has watched any modern gangster films, or read Dennis Lehane
novels would be led to believe, although on some corners one could see that
played idea out and even among the Jack Slack corner boys a few guys worked under
that premise. The code was simplicity itself, that go through seven shades of
hell for a fellow corner boy naturally first of all, but also no snitching
under severe penalty best left unsaid and which only had to invoked once, take
care of a down and out brother (usually broken up over some lost flame if
memory served), don’t mess with a guy’s girl (although that was on occasion
honored in the breech, not the observance and might have been the cause of more
than one down and out brother episode), share your worldly goods when possible
although the old communist idea of such sharing was not on display, not in
those red scare Cold War times, but just an old-fashion working-class
solidarity among the downtrodden which permeated the ethos of the town, and defend
the “turf “ to the death although that had never gone more than to the
theoretical stage at Jack Slack’s. Oh yes, when somebody, since this was a
corner boy group made of smart, “street smart,” and regular smart guys who
hovered together against the biker, bad ass, and midnight sifter gangs, asked
for a literary critique ( Sam said he was being high-blown in that description
here) you gave it up, no holes barred. So the Sam-Josh reconnection worked at
that level as well, although in sunnier times Josh usually was the one being
asked. Such is life.
While time
and tide had diminished that corner boy ethos dramatically, like most aging
things, as part of their reconnection Josh had “go through hell”-like asked Sam
to look his manuscript over, make some comments, and say truthfully what he
thought of the work like he used to do in the old days when Josh had written
short pieces to get a small name for himself in the local literary milieu. This
manuscript, this piece of writing, Josh had started back in the 1980s when he
was trying to unsuccessfully fight his demon addictions, cocaine at that time
mainly and its interconnected con artist larcenies and lies to keep his nose
full, had left the writing dead for a long time and had a only couple of months
before begun to work on it again. So Sam was to read something somewhere
between a first rough draft and a more polished although not final draft.
So Sam read.
The work itself, with a working title of Searching
for Todo El Mundo, first of all impressed Sam with how much Josh had been
influenced by Kerouac, and his ocean-etched writing in Big Sur written at a time when he himself was trying to alcohol dry
out around 1960. Strangely Josh said that he had not read that classis dry out
sketch until he began his piece again. Sam nevertheless found it ironic that an
American “dead white man,” a “Neanderthal with a typewriter” as some like novelist
Truman Capote called him, “a social misfit world- class fellahin” would over
fifty years later cast his sardonic spell over an old former corner boy devotee
and fellow world- class sufferer for humankind. And also what did Jack call his
avocation, oh yeah, a fellow “moaner for man.”
The read
through made Sam think back to that On
The Road commemoration time in 2007 when there had been a plethora of books
and articles about the meaning of it all, about the place of the book, and of
the author, in the American literary pantheon. Sam, like many another baby
boomer who came of age in the 1960s, had also found it hard to think about the
passing of his time too as he thought about his own “on the road” dreams from
that time. Dreams influenced by that book and by the “beats,” although really
only the vaguest echo of those pioneers as their adventures passed through to him
and his old friends from high school, North Adamsville High, in the early
1960s, Frankie Riley, the leader of the corner boy pack at Jack Slack’s, his acknowledged
leader in the old Irish working class neighborhoods where every guy, every
smart guy, every “street smart” guy committed himself to some corner, and some
leader, and Josh both of whom he had travelled with on the roads west under
Jack’s book’s influence.
At the time
of the anniversary any number of writers, including the dwindling few who knew
Jack, or, what was more likely, the great number almost two generations later who
had been influenced by him chimed in about subjects related to the book from
the story behind the story real origins of each individual episode in that
“beat” travelogue to the various literary tropes that Jack used in his writing
(you know “the holy fool,” the goof, the zen master wisdom king, Catholic
notions of salvation, urban rootlessness, perennial wanderlust, and so on).
Others took a different tact and spoke to the meaning of the book for their
psychological well-being by having emulated the trappings of what Sal/Jack,
Dean/Neal, Carlo/Allen, Bull/William did, or did not, do for them on their
individual searches for the blue-pink great American West night.
Yeah, guys
(and gals too on the 1960s roads, if not so much on the 1940s “beat” road
except as while away the time company) took some lonesome longing lost dreams time
now well past to express what it meant to be out on the open road that first
time, that first time when they broke, maybe for an eternity or maybe for just
that moment when everybody thought the world was going to turn upside down,
from that predestined path everybody else had set for them and tried to find
out, tried to come of age, and to find out if they had the stuff of the road,
had the stuff to take the road not
taken. So, sure, they told of the hassles of being left in some woe-begotten
spot to wait hours in heat or darkness for a ride, about the time they did not
have two quarters to rub together out in some Iowa cornfield left off by a
kindly Farmer Brown heading north and they wanted west, about the time too when
luscious Sally Ann accompanied him and hell you almost had half the truckers on
U.S. 80 jack-knifing to the break-down lane to pick you two up just to have
some eye-candy to look at seventy-five miles per hour, fed you too, just for
the company. Other times, though, single times, lost in some slough plastic
chair, yesterday’s newspaper a pillow for your laid-down head, or when truck-worthy
by some guy who said you reminded him of his wayward son, and talked non-stop,
high on benny, sucking down coffee to make Truckee by daybreak. Of the hassles
too from the local cops, hungry mean-spirited cops who had seen what their
brethren could do down south to your like, had seen what guys like you had put
them through in the big city New York/ Washington demonstration riots as the
brethren wailed with mace, gas and the beloved billy-club against a passive
mass, cops looking for that one granule of grass to put your ass on the county
farm, cops always willing to “vag” strangers in long hair and jeans to meet
their monthly quotas.
But spoke too
of the delights of getting picked up by kindred in the then plentiful minivans
and converted school buses, there had been times on the corridor from Boston to
Washington and all along the Pacific Coast Highway from San Diego to Mendocino
when you barely had time enough to put your thumb out before some long-haired
brother stopped, somebody opened the door and in you went, grabbed a passed
joint, maybe had some off-hand stew, maybe some ripped wine and you would spent a few days going north
or south or west or east wherever they were going just for the company. Too
speak nothing of the incredible vistas going across, once you crossed the holy
father Mississippi, got passed the long sad ears of corn and chaffed wheat
blowing in the wind and hit the Rockies, fell back to primal times in stone age
death places Utah and Nevada, caught that first whiff of ocean around high
desert Joshua Tree (site of a strange midnight drug-high re-groupment with
ancient Apache warriors) and then strolling up the coast highways with jagged
canyons, crevices, and hairpin turns every other minute.
Reflecting
too on smoking their first dope smoke (and usually coughing the rookie cough that
hit even cigarette smokers from the harsh smoke if the dope was righteous and
not some rip-off oregano or something), and unlike in Jack/Neal/Allen times no
be-bopping off the high to some cold breeze seeking the high white note sexy
sax jazz but cranked-up guitar-strung rock, trying to see the faces of the
gods, trying to keep in time with that wicked back-beat the drummer was
flailing out. Making the dope pray, making heads twist when somebody scored
some acid/mescaline/peyote. So more high holy dope more than Jack million word work
high, or Neal cruising at one hundred and ten miles per hour head high/or Allen negro streets, holy moloch
screaming against the machine poem high. And the dope flashing into sex dreams,
about having their first bouts with loose take-what- you-want- happy-go-lucky sex
when the old rules were broken about who was exclusively with whom like some
chattel, where women could initiate the mating ritual without rancor or slur,
where the adventuresome trotted out the hidden desire secrets of the Kama Sutra and expanded the universe
beyond the missionary position. No Jack/Neal road women as adornments, woman as
housewives to pick up slatternly messes for sex-exhausted guys, women as sex
toys paying their way in trade, the times, the Pill freedom times, would not
stand for such behavior, nor would women but it was a close thing for a long
time, and for a lot of Jack/Neal-fed guys, guys like Frankie Riley, Sam Lowell
and Josh Breslin who grew up in Jack/Neal ways a tough habit to break.
Those others,
like Sam Lowell, Frankie Riley, and Josh Breslin, maybe also telling the blasted
world as well about their travails of
the road, the dusty back road Neola/Moline/Prestonsburg
Junction/Eureka/Durango/Virginia City/Fresno (that is enough for to name those
few is to name all bus stations with their papers strewn over for the bus-waiting
seats used for pillows against the hard plastic, the sugar-laden vending machines,
the smell of some kind of lava washing soap and always, always that men’s room
Lysol smell trying to cover up missed piss urinals and flatulence). Sam
reflecting back on that time when he and Josh were stuck in Winnemucca in the
Nevadas for a couple of days when the winds blew through the canyons and any
traffic going through was either not stopping for road warrior bravos or could
not see far enough ahead to stop and they all dusty cadging sleep and getting
out of the dusts times in the half-baked bus station which also served as a gas
station and so they never got serious sleep on the hard wooden benches with the
every ready newspapers for pillows, a trick learned early on taught by an old
hobo who seemed to know every little trick to survive on the road. That
hobo-learned knowledge included serious tips on evading the local
law-remembering that time sleeping,
better half-sleeping like the hobo wisdom taught him, guarding against some
errant cop ready to put you in the local pokey as a “vag,” out along the side
of road of some wayward Iowa cornfield waiting for dawn to start again on the
hitchhike road, two dollars in his pocket, hoping as the sun came up that he would be left off at some Aunt
Betty’s diner (there are a surprising number of Aunt somebody diners out there
on the back roads, out on Route 20, Route 66 ) to catch the ninety-nine cent
breakfast special with unlimited coffee refills. Of being left off in the
middle of nowhere which happened plenty of times by some sex-starved trucker
who was heading south when you were heading west if he decided that he needed
to see his girlfriend in Louisville while you were trying to make Chicago
before dark. Of the endlessly poor diet either from “on the run” quick meal
foods bought at some Mom and Pop pre-7/11 variety store, truckers’ steamed to
perdition diner fare, some charity handout Sally (Salvation Army) soup line, or
worst, heading for the railroad trestles and some hobo “jungle” stew made of
who knows what.
Spoke too of
the endless talkings, midnight dust-laden, dream-smeared, hung head, about that
angst and alienation that drove all of them to the road looking, hell, just
looking for something, something different, some kicks somebody simply said one
time and it stuck, “get your kicks on Route 66” (now a historic highway, so
designated). Of, speaking more soberly, talking about that addiction you picked
up along with the “on the road” life (dope, booze, sex, gambling, you name it) that
you could not quite break the first time, or the second. That second the one that broke up your home, your life
whatever it was that held you together in the dark night, losing some she who
called it quits when you messed up one too many times for her to put up with. All
taken in stride now, all missed now, all nostalgia missed now, all “wouldn’t it
be great to do again” now except the universal crying in the rain that you have
grown long of tooth now, have that house now, that spouse now (after letting
that good thing go, that woman who almost saw you through but left, you more in
love with that damn addiction before you went “cold turkey” than her-every
night still wondering where she is tonight, yeah, wondering if she ever thinks
of you in her new world, wondering silently as you think your thoughts), those
kids now, that looming college tuition crisis to content with now and so the frenzied
search for that great blue-pink American West night which you’re your youth
worthwhile dropped off the radar.
Still others,
and this had been why Sam Lowell has been especially attuned to the passing of
time lately, the passing of his time, rather than writing about what On The Road meant personally, socially, or
as flat out literature wrote their own quirky little pieces that reflected the
heat from Jack’s sun. Josh Breslin, now far removed from the road and from his
hundred addictions, not really one hundred but it seemed like it back then, was
a guy who had decided that he liked to write as he fought off his “romance of the road”
addictions, although his main professions were elsewhere. That youthful “romance
of the road,” a road which Sam had gotten off of by the early 1970s had led Josh
by the early 1980s to a distorted view of life as a victim po’ boy whom the
world owed something, as a “grab what
you could grab and keep moving no matter what” guy, and included a certain
confused, no, hell-bent and evil, notions about what road comradeship meant
when he let his wanting habits get the best of him (all of which he freely
admitted to Sam later, who had also fallen victim to his needs lending his much
unpaid back money). Let his whole freaking life from “from hunger” childhood on
get the best of him on the road in the early 1980s when he would sneak thief
stuff from the communal stash (rent money, gas money, bus fares, food money,
drugs), would lie to others about working, or rather getting paid and saying he
didn’t, in order not to put in the communal kitty, would old corner boy con,
mostly women, into giving him money or buying him stuff which he would then
sell after he had bedded them (he had about five girlfriends at the time, and
at least one wife, maybe two when the smoke cleared). All to feed his growing
drug addictions
Josh said he
that it helped to write as he fought off his addictions, about six variations
of dope, mostly heavily and insidiously cocaine, although not crack, and booze,
mostly whisky drunks. Fought off unsuccessfully for a long time, including
bouts of not “on the road” type homelessness and “jungle” campfires with the
lost fellahin hobos, bums, and tramps mainly on the West Coast, not once or
twice but about five times all though the early 1980s and not finally fully contained
until near the end of that decade. Fought unsuccessfully, which had been the
central theme of the piece Josh sent Sam, that first time Jack K. (no full last
name given even now since Josh claimed that since he has passed on there was no
reason to invoke that brother’s full-hearted name) lent Josh his cabin shack at
Todo El Mundo when Jack K. expected him to dry out through isolation and
reflection after Jack K., exasperated, had carried out the booking-binding and print
shop business they operated over on Market Street in Frisco essentially by
himself for several years.
The mere mention
of Todo El Mundo in Josh’s working title had brought back better memories to
Sam of a time and place when he, Josh, and the late Frankie Riley had headed
west that second time in the very early 1970s and found “Eden.” And thoughts of
that trip triggered his thinking back to earlier times to the first time going
west just after the summer of love 1967 when they were all crazy to break out
from small town, small house, small dreams and see what it was all about, see
what the flamed-out western rebellion was all about. Josh, from what Sam could
tell on his initial glance-through, had written his own version of the “beat”
travelogue, although Josh agreed later after Sam had read the rough draft that the
sketches were in the end more influenced by Jack’s 1960 addiction dry out book,
Big Sur, rather than Road. Thinking about it after Josh had said
that Sam thought that was true but also thought that short novel, with its Road-like list of characters and
adventures only confined to the West Coast, was really a last extension of the
road saga so Josh’s little sketches could have squeezed in under the anniversary
wire when people were hopped up to write something.
Josh said he
had written that “damn thing” (his words), his plainsong, to the tune of his
generation, the generation after Kerouac’s “beats,” the generation of ‘68, the
“hippies” in their flower, their dope-soaked musical flower, to give them a
known name if not entirely accurate to describe the whole scene. Reflecting
that it had been a scene filled with good-hearted intentions to fight the
monsters, to “turn the world upside down” and not just youthful self-indulgence
if anybody was asking. Trying to change the way they lived to a more communal
existence complete, to break from the binds of the nuclear family, trying
to change the way they loved, broader
than that laid out in film, magazines, novels, and their parents’ examples,
trying too to break from dog eat dog, cutthroats stuff that he knew very well
from the corners. By the 1980s that had been forgotten except by some small
remnant, forgotten by him too as he delved to the depths. But it had started
out so beautifully, with so much promise, and he thought he would be carried
along by the tide. Josh thought too that that ‘hippie” experience had been more
than colors, music and dope just as “beat,” chain-smoking, wine and coffee
drinking cafes with small platforms filled with minor poets crying out for the
new dispensation did not reflect that whole “beat” scene as it had been
filtered through to him via the television, what he read in magazines and his
eternal wandering around Harvard Square early on trying to see what “best” was
all about. Josh’s sketches, that word signifying to him that these were small
patches of words reflecting moods and events not short stories with some
over-arching point, played to his nostalgic mood when he began to re-write his
piece.
Sam thought
later as well, after he had finished reading that rough final draft, that it
was hard to not be overcome by the fact that Josh’s efforts to try to find some
life lessons in writing Searching For Todo
El Mundo were driven by his oversized wanting habits, wanting habits that
small town, small house, small dreams could not satisfy, could not douse the
flames in his wicked soul, driven by his addictions, one, two, three whatever
he got into. Driven too, except when the drugs got the better of him (and which
had strained their relationship for several years through the mid-1990s after Josh
got in over his head and borrowed a ton of money from Sam that he could not pay
back), destroyed the better angel of his nature to say it simply, Abe Lincoln
simple, by sex, or really what to do about the opposite sex in his life. Sam,
having just shortly before Josh’s request finished a flame-out affair with an
old high school classmate of theirs, Melinda Loring, whom he had met via a
class website although neither he nor Josh knew her in high school since she
had hung around with the social butterfly set. The flame out was set up when
she could not understand why he could not stay with her despite both
acknowledging that their thing was “written in the stars,” which made Sam pause
thinking about Josh’s wanting habits. Thinking that everybody could use a primer,
any help at all, male or female, in that sex struggle but anyone who would read
his piece would have been struck by how early on that male-female thing as the
core of existence played a role in Josh’s sketches.
What Josh told
Sam got him started though, got him to see going back to re-writing some of the
small sketches that he had started back in the 1980s as a mission on behalf of
his generation’s ebbs and flows had been a trip with his lady friend, his
companion, Laura, that they had taken back to Todo El Mundo. (In the interest
of full disclosure that apparently is necessary to state today for anybody to
be half-believed about their intentions, any intentions, Sam had always been interested
in Laura since he had met her when Josh and he reconciled in the mid- 1990s and
would have pursued her if she had ever fallen off of Josh’s boat, a fact that
Josh knew, she never had but now you know.) Todo El Mundo, a little south of
Jack Kerouac’s Big Sur on a secluded stretch off the Pacific Coast Highway was a
place loaded with memories for him, from that first time he and Sam had
“discovered” it on their second trip west
and a place where he returned to
for a while several times after Sam and his road days there were over. Josh
however had not been back there since that time in the 1980s, the time when
Jack K. lent him his cabin in order to dry him out, had not been there since his
first unsuccessful fight against his demons. (Sam had not been back there since
the late 1970s when he took his first wife there to try to sort things out
after a bad stretch.)
He told Sam
about that trip with Laura one long night in the bar at Jimmy’s Grille over in
Cambridge, Sam’s drinking hole these days, while they were drinking high-shelf
whiskies. That trip had led Josh to revise his original sketches which he had begun re-writing in the winter of
2013 a little not so much in the content
of the eternal sketches he was always ready to write but he said let’s say to
bring out a certain tribal spirit about those long gone days. Sam, a guy who
liked to write too although he as well had had his professions elsewhere, wrote
down what Josh said that night and later put the notes in some order to
“celebrate” his friend’s remembrances. Here is what Sam had to say:
Recently my old friend from North
Adamsville high school days Josh Breslin (full name Joshua Lawrence Breslin but
nobody ever called him anything but Josh except his mother, what do you expect,
and some old time WASP girlfriend who tried like hell to make him, him of “the
projects” born, more presentable to her leafy suburbs parents), told me about a
trip that he and his longtime companion Laura took to ocean spray Todo El Mondo just south of Big Sur out in California
and a place that when he mentioned the name brought memories of parties, dope,
the splash of the ocean and a fetching girl named “Moon-glow” I half-loved for
a while in the early 1970s (don’t laugh such monikers were common then as we
tried to re-invent ourselves, lose our “slave” bourgeois names. I went by the
moniker “Flash Dash” and Josh by the name “Prince Love” for a while). Josh had
not been out there in that part of California for many years (and neither have
I although I have been to California many times since then but with not enough
time to get there and chill out for a few days) but he had earlier in the year
been under the spell of old “beat” king of the West Coast ocean night, Jack
Kerouac, after re-reading his Big Sur,
a book about his unsuccessful attempts to dry out in Big Sur after the
notoriety of his classic On The Road
literally drove him to drink (or drink more is a better way to put it).
That “under the spell of” got an added
boost by viewing a film based on Kerouac’s work, Big Sur, after reading the book. While the film was not nearly as
evocative as the book it did provide vivid shots of Jack and company on one of
the Big Sur beaches, the one off of Sycamore Canyon Road. That scene enflamed
Josh making him think of the even more foreboding and dangerous ocean riptides
at very secluded Todo El Mundo where we had
spent time frolicking and later he alone, well kind of alone, while trying to
dry out of a “snow” addiction (cocaine for the unknowing) that had gotten the
better of him. That beach at Todo El Mundo,
as Josh reminded me, is as hard to get to now and the surrounding area is as
sparsely populated with a few hardy solitude-seeking cabin dwellers, some with
cars, some without, as back in the days since you still are better off to leave
your car up on the Pacific Coast Highway and walk the couple of miles down a
mainly dirt single lane winding and overgrown road, not hard miles going down
but tough coming back up, at least that is what I remember but that hardness
may have been the drugs/booze/sleepiness/sex exhaustion working in overdrive
after a night of revelry. And so Josh and Laura went, went to retrace the
meaning that Todo El Mundo had had for him in his youth in the long gone days
when he had his break-out wanting habits on and later the first fight to curb
the nasty parts of those wanting habits.
Josh’s wishes for Laura, since she had never
been to Todo El Mundo, or for that matter that part of coastal California
before and only to Los Angeles down a couple of hundred miles south of that
spot a couple of times once with her ex-husband on a business trip and once
with her daughter to go to Disneyland, had been for her to try understand how he
was before she met him in the early 1990s. For him to tell her some stuff in
that spot, that meditative, that human suffering, that at one with the homeland
the sea, that night of revels and sweet fucks spot that he had fudged on discussing
over the years since they had been together.
Laura, a few years younger that Josh’s six
plus decades although she looked no more than about forty-five or so, although
perhaps I should not mention her age since that fact may be a national security
top secret matter to her, a not uncommon stance for our generation, not uncommon
for women of a certain age, in case she reads this. I have told her that she had
always seemed to me to look too young for the now craggy-faced Josh, that line-
etched face reflecting his defeats in his fights against his addictions. In any
case she had been something of a homebody in her own youth, had never travelled
or liked to travel much. Had not been a member in good standing of the
generation of ’68, now generically called baby-boomers, those born between 1946
and 1964, putting the ‘68ers in with kids who were barely born when the seas
changed, and ebbed too. So Laura only knew the stories that Josh would tell her
about the old Frisco hell-raising “hippie” days, about he and his corner boys heading
west days (me and Frankie Riley, and one time Jimmy Jenkins), about the
serenity and meditative pull of that section of the California coast, and vaguely
about the unexplained evil spirits that had existed within him back then as
well. All she knew, all Josh had told her about those evil spirits in that
mumbled way guys have when they don’t want to lie but don’t want to drag that
devil’s truth from the deep recesses of their minds, was that during the 1980s he
had been part of a book-binding and print shop collaborative, along with Jack
K. and others to begin with and then just with Jack K. and that business
arrangement had not worked out due to lots of things, some of them which he
told her he was responsible for. He did not include talk of the addictions as a
reason for the break-up, or rather downplayed the drugs to an over-indulgence
of marijuana and a little coke and left it at that. And no talk of the one
wife, Betty, maybe two, married during that period although he always claimed
to me that the second wife, Miranda, was strictly a common law arrangement he
married during those frenzied times (he had long before, back in the 1970s,
divorced his first wife, Martha, whom he only lived with for a short time before
he left to head West again, alone, after she turned out not to be pregnant as
she had told him as a way to keep him in up in Maine, Portland if I remember
correctly ). He did say he had been married, the thing had not worked out and was
too painful to discuss and left it at that. And Laura, sweet innocent trusting
Laura let it go at that. Teflon, pure Teflon when Josh put his charm hat on.
When Laura had met him, as a customer
on the recommendation of a mutual friend looking to have some work done, wedding
invitations and the like for her daughter’s wedding, in the small print shop
that Josh ran in Worchester all she knew was that he had been out West, had
struggled and failed at marriage and everything else, had succumbed to his
addictions, had fought them, gotten clean and had moved back east first to
Boston where he had worked in a print shop downtown and then, through a contact
had bought the place where she had met him when the owner decided to retire. So
she was very curious about the mystery of Todo El Mundo, about what the place had
to do with her man, how it had help screw him up or whatever it had done to him.
Yeah, Laura is like that. Damn.
Whatever Todo El Mundo had to do with
Josh’s troubles they had begun long before, went back to childhood times. But
that is a story for another time. See, like I said, Josh and I go back to North
Adamsville High days here in Massachusetts, but more importantly later on the
American West hitchhike highway where in the summer of love 1960s we were
searching for, well, searching for something that we did not find then at
least. But the time he told me of his journey with Laura when we met over at
Jimmy’s Grille in Boston we both agreed that the search was the important thing
and we had no regrets about trekking out to the coast many times looking for
Eden, “looking for the garden” as we used to call it. We also agreed that we
both were still looking, still had those ancient wanting habits on, and that we
probably would until the end. Josh noted as he told of his time out there with
Laura that while he was thrilled to “channel” the ghost of Jack Kerouac, Neal
Cassady, Allan Ginsberg and the rest of the “beat” gang who held forth on that
sacred Big Sur beach up the road and of our times at Todo El Mundo in the time
before we even had any real idea that we too wanted to be rebels against our
part of society he was almost more taken by Cannery Row in Monterey, the
ancient site of John Steinbeck’s classic Cannery
Row although today only small fragments of that area exist unsullied by a
tourist hungry theme park.
He and Laura had stayed in Monterey so Josh
was able to get a better grasp of that ancient ground that he had not
investigated much before, mostly the vagrant beaches and skid row haunts. He
had been there last in the late 1980s toward the end of his time in California before
the theme park explosion when that ocean front was run down with closed canning
factories and derelict housing. He
wanted to talk about Cannery Row, the fellahin cannery rows of the world that
he had found himself once again fatally attracted to, wanted me to see that the
Todo El Mundo scene had been a package that we had only grasped part of, that
the ghosts of what we were looking for in Todo El Mundo dwelled in Monterrey as
well. And here is what he impressed on me after he told me this part of his
story:
Josh Breslin was no question the
illegitimate son of the kindred that John Steinbeck wrote about in his book Cannery Row and maybe if you dug down
deep enough, grabbed some genealogy chart, went back enough generations,
kindred of those Okie/Arkies he wrote about in The Grapes Of Wrath that migrated west in the dustbowl 1930s and
landed in sunny Southern California and whose progeny would go on to fill up
the surfer boy, hot rod Lincoln, biker angels, casting couch starlet blanks in
the blue-pink western sky night. But maybe we should not press the relationship
too stronger since his people on his mother’s side were hearty French-Canadians
from up in upper Saint Lawrence River Quebec who came south to the mills along
the rivers, Nashua, Saco, Merrimack mainly, looking for precious work before in her father’s generation giving up in the
Depression and heading farther south looking for work in the shipyards and his
father from hillbilly mountain, coal mountain Kentucky. Those brethren, his
father’s forbears, thrown out of Europe for every possible reason stayed put in
the hills and hollows and did not have the energy to move west. Josh, ocean
grown himself, felt in Monterey the kinship that one feels for those who
society threw on the scape heap with the decline of the fishing industry out
there and the decline of shipbuilding in our old hometown of North Adamsville
which left his father, and his family, on the same scape heap in the “golden
age of America” 1950s. (And mine too although my father had a semi-skill as a
machinist that kept the wolves from the door for a while.)
By that Illegitimate mentioned above by
the way I had not meant by some fallen birth, although I insist that he was
born under some ill-meant star, but because these days Josh no longer, nor do I,
like in the old days travel west, travel to California using just his thumb, or
maybe if he had a little dough taking the bus some of the way, or, one time,
going east to west hopping on the old freight trains (which I never did). That
last a nasty way to travel and he told me once that after that experience he
would no longer berate tramps, bums, and hoboes for enduring such a method of
getting west. But enough of “old days” transportation for Josh now flies to
California when he feels that periodic urge to head west. Flies and has always
marveled (and was thankful that he now had the wherewithal) that he could start
out on the East Coast Atlantic Ocean, usually Boston, and be on the West Coast
Pacific Ocean a few hours later a trip that used to take anywhere from about
five days (if he, we, grabbed a fast run to the coast trucker looking for
company, even “hippie boy” company) to a couple of weeks if he got unlucky and
was left in some place like Winnemucca in Nevada where he had to sleep on the
side of the road when it got too dark while waiting for a ride after being left
there by a Native American trucker who lived up in the mountains near there. (I
had once been left on a side road in Moline in a rain storm and waited almost
two days while Middle America, a term of derision back then, passed by in
self-satisfied distain so I knew exactly what he meant although that never
happened when we were together).
This latest trip west had been spurred
by a recent re-reading of Jack Kerouac’s “trying to dry out from a drunk” book Big Sur so Josh had that destination,
that secluded section of the coast, on his mind when the urge hit him again. Of
course along with the “don’t thumb anymore” days he no longer sleeps on the
side of the road in some crusted piss- smelling, sweat-smelling, newspaper-
strewn bus station, or in some make-do lean-to tent but now seeks refuge in
hotels and motels which he also does not mind doing. The problem this trip was
that he could find no place listed in Big Sur for he and Laura to stay so they
had to stay in Monterey which led to that earlier illegitimate Okie/Arkie
fellahin reference because the last time he had stayed in that town he had
slept on the beach, slept on the vagrant “jungle beach,” no money in his pocket
trying yet again to shake off a jones, slept on the beach to the sound of the
sea lions barking or whatever they call the sound sea lions make. Slept near
the wharf where iterant fishermen brought their goods to market from the
troublesome seas (and explained why the lazy sea lions like lazy humankind
hovered near that landing area not having to work too hard for a hand-out
meal). Slept the ragged sleep of the tramps, bums, and hoboes, feeding off
their ragged stews, and drinking their rotgut Ripple. And feeling at home there
even though out in the “jungle,” especially for the younger iterant, you were as
likely to face a knife from some half-crazed rummy as a friendly “hello brother”
career road man.
But means of travel and methods of
accommodation, hell, the eating habits of sea lions, were not what was
bothering Josh of late but rather that almost never-ending sense he always had
that he shared plenty with the ghost of those old time denizens of the cannery
rows of the world, the skid rows. So all thoughts of flights, of rental car
drives, and hotels drifted from his horizon as he got off of Exit 402B on the
Pacific Coast Highway and headed into downtown Monterey. He needed to stop at
the CVS on Lighthouse Road in what passes for Main Street in the town for a few
provisions and while there he noticed that that street had not changed that
much since the last time he had seen it maybe twenty-five odd years before.
Downtown Monterey is really just an adjunct to the Cannery Row dress-up theme
park which attracts the tourists and still has that hard-scramble feel of
having missed something. Josh knew he was home, was among kindred he thought
when a relic from the 1960s, a guy, who knows a rummy or a dope-head it was
hard to tell, with a ZZ Top beard (long in other words), a tie-dyed tee shirt
and a Hawaiian hat came up to him as he was leaving the CVS and asked him for a
cigarette. Since Josh no longer smoked he had to say “no” but gave the guy a
buck toward his efforts.
As the relic passed on Josh said he thought
in a flash about all the corner boys from his youth (starting out behind the elementary
school gym in fifth grade, Doc’s Drugstore in junior high, Jack Slack’s bowling
alleys in high school where we hung together after having met in class and where
he introduced me to Frankie Riley the king of the corner boy night (and later our
fellow road companion) a goodly number of them who slipped through the cracks
and wound up on some skid row somewhere. Or wound up like his best friend from
elementary school, Pete Markin, face down in some dusty Mexican town, Sonora,
with two bullets in his heart after a drug deal went awry, went bad when he
decided to go “independent” with a two kilo brick of the hermanos’ cocaine.
Thought too about the “brothers under the bridge,” guys, fellow veterans, who
did not make it back to the “real world” from Vietnam days who set up an
alternative world in the arroyos, along the riverbanks, along the railroad
trestles of Southern California. And of guys, tramps, bums, and hoboes whom he
wandered with when he had his own addictions to fight, his own lost “real
world.” That got him thinking that he should take a walk along the street, see
whether any more ghosts showed up. He would not go to the Cannery Row façade
since after reading brochures and seeing how everything pointed to that
destination that place was strictly for touristas but rather walk Lighthouse
after leaving Laura off at the motel to freshen up.
And he was not mistaken. In a few
blocks, maybe ten, he passed the usual Goodwill, Salvation Army (the Sallies
had saved his skin more than one time with a hot meal, some clothes, a bunk bed
for a few days at a time all for the price of having to listen to their version
of the “good book” a small price to pay then for what ailed him, what addiction
he was trying to go “cold turkey” on and he had always afterward, after he “got
well,” put a few bucks in their buckets at Christmas time), and assorted used
clothing stores (back in the day in places like Harvard Square, Telegraph Avenue
in Berkeley, Soho in New York City, such stores along with the ubiquitous Army
and Navy used surplus outlets were prized places to “re-invent” yourself to go
along with your new moniker as a dreamlike fantasy soldier, a swarthy pirate, a Victorian gentleman or lady, a prairie pioneer
complete with gingham dress or buckskin jacket,
or some 1930s movie actress but now such places are for those a step below Wal-Mart
in the bustling world), run down cafes (dark lights to hide the dirt, rough
food, poor service unlike even the most
poorly run Hayes-Bickford where the food was rough, aged before your eyes, and
the coffee unspeakable but the company was worth the price of admission), the
barely surviving pizza parlors (one on every corner it seemed run by someone in
the latest wave of immigrants hungry to make it in America and willing to work
long hours but coming up short on the art of pizza-making unlike back in the North
Adamsville corner boy night when Tonio Rizzo, the owner and pizza chef of Salducci’s,
twirled the dough and made your senses come alive with the smell of freshly
baked tomato and cheese slathered doughs), the ubiquitous tattoo parlors
(despite the current craze for identity tattoos some of them quite elaborate
and comment-worthy by everybody from high-end
celebrities to low-end hoodlum bikers these places still looked like you
had better check with your doctor, maybe show up in the emergency room, after
leaving), the used book and record stores all looking like they were ready to
close their doors forever with the next ill economic wind that came through the
town (those old used books with their musty smells and broken bindings hiding
many treasures which may not survive the digital age and the records scratched and wobbly but
again holding many treasures which may not survive the age of download YouTube
or whatever comes next). Even what passed for one of the “upscale” places, a
1950s and 1960s retro-hamburger place where he stopped for a light lunch was
barely making it although the food, the service, the posters of the usual
suspects James Dean, Marilyn Monroe, Marlon Brando, Elvis and the like, and the
be-bop music spinning some stuff from early Motown to doo wop to Beatles from
that period told him that in another locale like Harvard Square or maybe in
Frisco they would be standing in line out around the block to get in. Such is
the fate of cannery row towns when the main industry goes south and all that is
left is the relics, buildings and people.
A Cannery Row flashback: As Josh turned around after a few blocks to head back to the motel to do his own freshening up some of the ghosts of the past passed by in his head; tramps, bums, and hoboes met on Monterey pebbled beaches (and remembrances of some old time hobo, Lightning Shorty, telling him and all who would listen the differences between those three categories of wayfarers, taking the gaff from a couple of guys whom he called bums who stood just below his royal hobo status, yeah Shorty, a guy who was later was found on the beach newspapers for a pillow dead as a doornail, heart attack at forty-three when he looked about eighty to youthful eyes), sweet sand interrupted by belches and sea lion barks (we agreed “or whatever they call that sound” and that the buggers were lazy just waiting on the rocks for the trawlers to come in and throw their refuge into the sea), smoke fire at night to ward off the chill burning down to embers as dawn came up, maybe make an olio mishmash from the meat and vegetable leavings found behind some grocery store (no food pantries or heroic soup line kitchens peopled by kindly church people then, not that he remembered anyway), drinking Ripple wine (or worse –“what’s the word, Thunderbird, what’s the price, forty twice”), smoking old Bull Durham rolled [really nasty smoke and what the hell Josh had never learned how to roll right, always left too much paper unrolled or did not twist the ends right, same with mary jane rolls despite his many experiences]. Where had that brethren gone, gone with the tide maybe, gone after “catching some westbound freight” (going to be with Father Death for those who are clueless about what that expression means), or to some push-out Southern Pacific trestle for a new home. Adios, pals.
Next night, a Friday night, a trip that he did not want to take, a Laura-urged trip, to Cannery Row proper. And even before he could sulk his sulk as they walked along bang, bang, kindred appeared, maybe the long lost progeny of those long gone brethren showed up on the streets. Most of the old wayfarers that he had had met in the 1980s “jungle” on the beach, those blessed hobos, tramps and bums, had kids strewn across the land mainly still in California from what they had said although how they would know is anybody’s guess since they left no forwarding addresses or telephone numbers. When the brethren high-tailed it they were moving fast, moving away from anchored life, from bills and mortgages, from the damn nagging wife and whining children. Some men are not built for such things, not built for much but that wandering gene deeply embedded in their DNAs, a gene that could have been easily passed on to that Friday night’s refugees. All the father-less children looking for their moment in the sun, for somebody to look their way and for them to show the world that they had made it without the wandering old men.
Yeah, Josh saw generational kindred seeking momentary immortality cruising Cannery Row in hopped-up (and loud hopped-up to boot) canary yellow Camaros, two-toned ’57 Chevys, chrome-infested Harleys, sporty Triumphs, sportier MGs, sleek Plymouths from back in the 1950s when such cars were sleek also two-toned, Mustangs invoking memories of other Sallys, Sallys to ride in the freshen air Adamsville Beach summer nights coming up for air after a hard night’s exertions, Jags that looked like Jags and not like one of twelve other cars, hell, the works showing off their sense of the past, their mechanical abilities, their desire, and their showmanship.
Funny Josh mentioned to Laura, as the bonking cavalcade passed by for the third time, California back a generation before ours, ours the generation of ‘ 68 for those asking, the generation before ours that came of age after the blight of the Great Depression and who survived a slogging war looking for kicks, looking for something other than “from hunger” took to the great blue-pink American West night and in little back lot garages or in some permissive father’s garage put together their “hot rod” to seek kingdoms in the drive-in movies, drive-in restaurant, drive-in everything if you had that “boss” car that would get you noticed. Here the now long-toothed progeny, those who could not shake their youthful fantasies and why not, were hovering the air of the night remembering back to those ancient times when such horsepower meant you were king (or queen now too) of the road, the great edge city highway looking for the heart of Saturday night. Old Tom Wolfe, the guy who explored the western wild boy hot-rod valley boy scene (and the surfer scene Pacific coast highway scene too), would have surely gotten a chuckle out seeing blonde-wigged grandmothers, grizzly-bearded old pappies, handkerchief-hatted greying bikers, riding in tandem reviving ancient thoughts (and gathering many flash photos from convenient tourista cellphone cameras). Josh knew he did.
But enough of city scenes and on to the Todo El Mundo grail. On Sunday morning he and Laura got up early and after breakfast took off to trek the thirty odd miles to that day’s destination, the beach at Big Sur, the one that leads down from Sycamore Canyon Road, on the winding, curvaceous Pacific Coast Highway which Josh admitted he was always a little terrified of navigating (me too) on some spots what with impatient travelers up against the car bumper behind and sharp turns against guardrail-less slopes the seas beckoning below. Of course the trek that day had to be a stop at Big Sur, a stop at vagabond Jack’s errant sea (although Jack could have been a proper Cannery Row denizen as well, an East Coast Lowell mill town boy who would have no trouble with cannery kin, with the whole fellahin scene that he wrote about in the Road book except on the Row it would not have braceros and Spanish Johnnies like down in the Fresno fields or up here the Salinas farmlands but gringo guys, those long lost Okie descendants).
Big Sur, Jack’s great big walloping zen-om-splish-splash wash, bing bong swish splash against the great big white- crested sand blasting away rock waves from eternity sea making sounds like some big old Johnny Hodges tenor sexy sax blowing, reaching for that high white note, not once in an evening but every other crashing boom, and Jack’s dry out love sea. Each wave tearing into the hard granite like- stone (stone that looked as etched and scrolled as in old eastern fast river flow to the sea towns, towns like Josh grow up North Adamsville in the bay , not far from Jack’s river of life, Merrimac River of life and maybe haunted in the back of his mind that those torrents washing over his mill town river land and those torrents washing the craggy stone clean were kindred and speak, speak mighty torrents), endlessly searching for that soft spot, that place where the stone like some ancient New England grist mill mashes the rock to the shore, makes the rock humble before the great waves. And too before those rocks crumbled, turned to sand in ten thousand, hell, a million washings, turned to pebbles, they first turned to human- sized rocks, rocks, piles of rocks, piles of rocks spaced apart almost like some human cemetery, piled in such a totemic manner that some cranky anthropologist in ten thousand years will remark, remark to a candid world, if candor still holds some virtue, that weren’t those “primitives” crazy to worship the sea gods, that like old Pharaoh down among the rushes they craved that kind of immortality. And the wind provided the protection so that some future vandals would not scourge the grains of sand when they desired to pay homage to their own sense of immortality. Who needed to say more. Even dry land, born away from fetid marshlands, mephitic swamps and adjoining seas, Laura had been impressed by the fury of the wave action, the defenseless stone rubbed down over ten million washings (her number) and that wind that spoke of no tender mercies when Mother Nature got up on her teach them a lesson mood.
The long-trek down to Todo el Mundo the next day, after retracing the Pacific Coast Highway route but with several miles more of knuckle-gripping curves, swerves, and those non-guardrail stops luring one and all to the endless sea, echoed those previous day‘s thoughts in Josh’s mind. Just like in the old days Josh, old days after his final “cold turkey” for his cocaine addiction took hold before he headed back east for a new start in well-known quarters, when he would visit the place just to seek some serious solitude in an over-heated world he parked the rented car above the canyon on the Pacific Coast Highway and he and Laura made the jaunt down the hill.
[As I thought about what Josh had said had been triggered by that walk down the hill about freshly made memories of his first lost battle with coke I could not help but yell out, “Yeah, yeah ‘snow’ is not addictive, so they say, but just to set the record straight if you had seen Josh then, seen the desperate look when he needed money to get an eight-ball, needed to get money from me with daggers in his eyes, you know he was addicted even if the term technically didn’t apply.”-Sam]
Although he had taken cars down the dirt road, including a couple of times grabbing Jack K.’s car which Jack K. had parked for use at his cabin, the cabin he had let Josh use when he first tried to dry out and at a time when no way in hell should he have been behind the wheel, usually it was easier and more “romantic” to just walk down to the beach since you had to leave the car behind for the last third of a mile or so anyway.
By the way the view from that canyon road, the place where you leave your car is spectacular, breathe-taking, a view you do not take in as well on the beach itself. (Laura took photos on her digital camera and e-mailed them as attachments to me, a nice gesture since I had forgotten how beautiful the area was.) You can see why some long ago Spanish explorers, conquistadores, some grandees from the Monterey outpost went there to claim the beauty for whoever was brave and hearty enough to keep it. Although the ancient Spanish influence was marked all along that section of the coast you hardly see any more recent influence except the sweated bracero laborers who tend the industrial size farm fields on the flatlands or in Monterrey doing the service work for the tourista trade. Josh and I always in the old days, having grown up by the ocean ourselves and thought about such things as kids, told each other midnight tales, maybe when we were high, maybe not, used to fantasize about those Spanish explorers and what they thought when they hit that stretch, what secret desire to break away (ancient jail-breakers just like us) from the outposts and hold up there taking on all comers, keeping the place pristine.
So Josh and
Laura walked gingerly (his word so we will accept that although the night at
Jimmy’s Grille he looked unsteady on his feet as a result of fairly recent knee
replacement surgery which had affected his sense of balance at times as he
entered the lounge area) and it seemed at each turn in that desolate road Josh
would flash back to some remembrance, especially when they passed Jack K.’s cabin
which back in the 1980s was little more than a lean-to, subject to whatever
weathers Mother Nature’s furies commanded and now had become an expanded shingled,
water-tight structure and some kind of second or third home to a big name real
estate guy in Carmel. A walk a little farther down the road rekindled the time
when Josh had “fallen off the wagon” the second time when he and a party of
several guys and gals, all stoned one way or another, thought it would be
“cool” to dance naked in a little clearing. The result: everybody suffered from
gnat bites, bee stings, one wasp whatever they call what wasps do to make you
suffer when angered. He chuckled that this stretch was still filled with little
clearings, some freshly made, some like the area of that long ago clearing now well overgrown with bushes and
fairly large trees. The deeply rusted hand –painted “pull off for on-coming
cars,” recently re-painted by some worthy denizen the only surviving sign that
some serious descendants of Tommy Wollaston, his maypole revels, and his band
of “wild boys and girls” soon to be exiled from Puritan settlements in proper
17th century Boston had run amok there some thirty years
before.
Finally Laura
and Josh reached the rutted dusty somewhat overgrown area to where the hearties
who ventured down the road in a vehicle parked, only one car there that day
meaning the beach would be theirs. (Laura, by the way, crazily taking pictures
of every interesting thing along the path). The third of a mile flat road lay
ahead and a few minutes later they were at the high tide sea beach. Josh
immediately thought back to the times when he and whoever was around (sometimes
me) would go down in the late afternoon, jugs of wine and whatever dope was
handy and cavort until the next dawn before heading back up the hill. Josh also
remembered some saucy sexual adventures in a couple of sea swirl dug-out caves
with Lydia from Carmel when he wasn’t so stoned although he decided not to
share that information with Laura. (Not that bee-stung revel described before
either.)
Josh spied a
make-shift tee-pee made up of various tree limbs strewn along the shoreline either
washed in from the turbulent sea or downed in some howling wind night which
plagued the place on certain days that had been gathered to protect against the
Japan sea winds that also kept the place cooler than most of the places along
this stretch of shoreline. Josh, playing the gallant, or remembering those old
time Spanish grandee swash-buckler tales we swapped as we swapped dope he was
not sure, invited Laura into the tee-pee to sit and ponder the sea as the vast swirled
around them, as the cavernous rocks which acted as something of a break-water
took their beating, took their million poundings into sand dust. Once settled Josh
started reciting various lines from the poem that Jack Kerouac attached to the
end of his book, Big Sur. Soon Laura
was picking up the ocean moaning groaning sounds as well and so they spent the
afternoon at one with our homeland the sea.
Laura
remarked later that that was the closest they have ever gotten to be as one and
Josh agreed with a slight smile. This is when he gave some more details about
his life before Laura, about the evil spirits that at one time had possessed
his soul. Laura took the whole conversation in stride, said she suspected that
he had more to say about his past that he let on but that she was happy with
him, he treated much better than her ex-husband had and so she had let it ride.
Damn. As the sun dipped they headed back up the road, the road up now not as
tough as Josh remembered it.
Although at it turned out Josh, kind of
embarrassed at his age about his reticence, continued to fudge on some of those
sweet fucks and revels part, had tried to speak about them but was unable to
separate even now the sweet fucks parts from the hells and craziness he put
those women through, especially Miranda, before she cried “uncle” after he had
sold her car, her main possession in life, to feed his demons. He said when he
tried to bring his hellish ways with
Miranda up he kept seeing images of their last meeting in Frisco, she
looking back in sorrow, his head bent down, and began to think about where she
was that night, not a good thought sitting as one with another woman. I could
see his point, although when he mentioned Miranda and the sold car that brought
up my own travails with Josh and the night he stole a rare set of old books
from me and sold them for a pittance and never until this day said he was sorry
about that one. So not ever the white-capped swirl of the ocean smashing to the
waiting arms of the shore endlessly making ethereal sounds and soothing savage
souls could ease some ancient hurts.
And then back
to Cannery Row. Next day sitting where some old sardine factory had stood
unused and unloved after many years of service (including a copper-plated
turned green searing memorial to deep-sea divers lost in the struggle against
the sea, the struggle to bring the strange sardines in for canning), broken and
torn down after years of bringing the fish in Josh looked up and saw a
sculpture, a sculpture centered on the novelist John Steinbeck. Steinbeck who
in his time made infamous Cannery Row famous (although the numbers who would be
able to identify his name with the place or the great everyman and everywoman
Joad Okie California migration classic that he wrote, The Grapes of Wrath, is probably a couple of generations later
fairly slim except for English majors and an off-hand skid row aficionado like
Josh who had spent time there before he got some of his addictions under
control and abandoned the places where skid row and its inhabitants survived)
and his friend, a marine biologist, immortalized in Cannery Row, a handful of skid row bums made so after the sardine
industry went south, and they, unskilled in their time for other gainful
employment went on the bum, made themselves local characters by the time Josh met
them along the beachfronts and along the flop house and charity soup line
circuit. He told me he would tell me about that later, some other time.
What Josh did
tell me about that night was about “Madame” Fiona (and although she was British
she was no noble figure so you know what kind of Madame she was) who ran the
best, the fairest, and the easiest to enter if you had the money whorehouse on
that section of the coast back in the day. Right across from the Monterey
Police Station so you knew Madame was a sport and “connected.” As Josh remembered Madame and her sweet place he
had to also remember Thea, or at least that is what she called herself when he knew
her, Madame’s best girl.
Thea had been
caught up in the whole West Coast hippie thing (she had been in Frisco when the
summer of love exploded in 1967 a couple of years before we got there), had
later developed a serious cocaine habit (after going through the alphabet of
lesser drugs, legal and illegal mostly illegal) and had taken to “muling” like
a lot of snow freaks to feed the habit, got burned when her man decided that he
was smarter that the damn Mexican braceros he was working for as a distributor
and found himself face down in a back alley of Tia Juana with his face blown
off when he thought ripping off a brick was an easy road to independence, and
she then needed to make her own way. (Josh cringed when he related that part of
the story since he knew I knew about Peter Markin and what had happened to him
down in Sonora.) Her own way then being given a room at Madame’s who saw in Thea’s
airy funny ways and still good looks a cash cow (good looks especially in dark
rooms with guys with serious dough and serious and unusual wanting habits which
Thea had the book on, the Kama Sutra
book).
Josh said
that in those days, the days of his struggling with his addictions, well after
the days when we were carefree in California and thought the new world we were
exploring would last forever rather than at the ebb where we caught the tide
going out as we headed west Thea reminded him of Butterfly Swirl. That name, the
moniker of a hippie princess from Carlsbad down in Southern California, whom we
met (and fought over) in Frisco brought instant recognition. She after spending
some time with Josh eventually went with me and we lived in Oakland for a while
before she headed back south to her surfer boyfriend when it turned out that
the hippie princess life was not for her. Butterfly Swirl was this vision out
of some Botticelli painting all ethereal, all wispy and virginal although she
knew how to make a man’s toes curl. No question Josh would be drawn to such a
woman even if she was a faded version of some youthful lust.
Thea proved
to be resourceful at what she did, and so she had worked her way up to Madame’s
best girl when Josh ran into her in Carmel a short time after his own struggle
with a snow addiction had finally been conquered. He was working again with
Jack K. in the print shop on a regular basis, was pulling his weight with the
concern (and best of all making money sending me along some of what he had borrowed
although I was still sore about the way he played me to get it), had been
delivering a load of books that they had rebound to the Big Sur Library (whose
main benefactor would turn out to be Henry Miller, not the writer but the
sculptor whose work both Josh and I had liked when we saw it at some local
exhibition on the Pacific Coast Highway) and had stopped on the way back up to
Frisco in Carmel for dinner at a Greek place that he had liked when he was with Miranda. Thea had
stopped there in order to buy some jewelry and he had spotted her on the street
looking lost (directions lost), asked her if she needed help with directions,
and they struck up a conversation winding up sitting in a café drinking coffee
and wine for a while. Once she told Josh her profession, which she was up front
about and not bashful about describing, after they had talked for a while he told
her as they parted that he might come to see her at Madame’s sometime. She
smiled. And he did. And Thea, a child of
the 1960s and of some sense of sexual adventure, some sense that there was more
than the missionary position to the sex act took him around the world.
He would run
into her every once in a while and they would go out for a few drinks. But Josh
always paid the freight when he saw her at Madame’s for his occasional trips
around the world. Josh, a bit melancholy when describing her talents, said she
was something else, not some hooker with a heart of gold but a smart
intelligent woman who took what she could do best and rode with it. Then one
night Josh went to Madame’s and she was gone, had left with some guy in a three-piece
suit who Madame said had promised Thea the world. Adios Thea, adios pal.
**********
Josh got tired that night at Jimmy’s Grille
(they had been drinking high-shelf scotch toward the end while Josh was telling
his story), told Sam once again that whole trip with Laura had brought back
memories of that little shack, Jack K.’s shack, he had lived in on that Todo El
Mundo dirt road to the beach where he fought off his first “snow” addiction, and
his first bout with going “cold turkey” a fight which proved unsuccessful until
much later. Since Sam had not been there in the 1980s when this was going on, had
been situated comfortably in Cambridge ready to finish up law school and make
some money (and his peace with society) Josh wanted to give him that story, the
unfinished story that he had recently picked up again. Josh said he had written
some sketches, some writings to keep him from going stir crazy back then which
he had kept and which he had found up in his attic when he was looking for some
old North Adamsville High stuff, mostly his yearbook. So as the hour was late he
told Sam to read it and tell him what he thought about it. Here is what Josh passed
on to Sam, who has already described his take on the piece and who left most of
the screed as he received it in that rough final draft, telling him about what
he had to say about searching for Todo El Mundo dreams:
The rain came tumbling down slashing
against the cabin windows, came tumbling down like the “Rains of Ranchipur” that
he had begun to called such rains after seeing Lana Turner going through her
Lana Turner thing twisting old fake Indian Doc Richard Burton around her little
finger in the movie of the same name. Those beastly rains that used to keep him
indoors on childhood rainy days nose up against the window, him, Josh Breslin
to give him a name and not leave him off in some anonymous cloud like he was
just some stinking donkey work everyman for what was eating at him, eating the
best of his heart, was no everyman problem, not even in the free-for-all
atmosphere of the depressing 1980s that he was trying to get a grip on. In
those days a fogged window against his nostril breathe wondering whether the
south branch of the Adamsville River would overflow its banks and send the
house afloat down the river, the shack of a house that he had grown up in on
Walnut Street and the only house that he knew, although when he was too young
to remember they had lived across town in Adamsville proper on Pond Street in
another shack of a house that had been torn down. But on those long ago days he
really was hoping that it would let up for the simple reason that he was going stir
crazy in the house what with brother squabbles about loud music, theirs, or
talking too loud, them, so he could not read the book in front of him, and
mother yells, mother yells about anything that a hard-pressed mother of four
closely-aged coming-of-age boys would yell about when the rains came and drove
her charges indoors and to kid squabbles.
Yeah, those rains had been slashing
down on Todo El Mundo like that with short periodic let-ups for a couple of
days and it was starting to get the better of him, starting to make him feel
just like he felt when brother squabbles erupted and mother yells raised a din
to match any horrible sound you could think of, some sonic boom mother lode. A couple
of rainy season days and Josh, having been in California for the past few years
now off and on, around Pacific Coast Highway Central California and so subject
to the Japan seas, had expected rain but the deluge was just a tad bit too
symbolic for his pressing needs. His nerve quiet needs, his need to think, to
write just as much as he could to keep the devil demons starting to form in his
head, worse in shadows against the plastered wall, and the worst, the shaking
trees outside looked devilish every time he poked his head out to see if the
damn deluge had stopped, away, to keep them at bay for a while, and not have
that stupid pitter-patter of rain going rapidly down the crusty drainpipes and
driving him to distraction, just like those childhood times when he was stir
crazy to get away from brother squabbles and mother yells, as he tried to go
cold turkey on, well, let’s call it life, his going downhill fast life. That
part.
Hell, let’s call it one of his seven
different addictions also created by childhood wanting habits not abated since
then that drove him rainy day stir crazy, starting in no particular order
although this blasted rainy day he was breaking from his “nose candy” addiction,
coke, snow, blizzard, cousin or whatever
you call it where you make your connections for the stuff, to the exclusion of
the other six (come on now did he have to name them all, the other six, other
than one was women, just then a woman, Miranda, Miranda from Xanadu his
common-law wife but she had faded, had left him when she saw no way out, when
she saw too that it was hopeless to stay with him after he sold her fucking car
from under her just to get an ounce of
flake. And that last time (hell, you know there were other disputes, many other
disputes, when Josh played his junkie hand out) he let her go without a
whimper, let everything go except her memory, that memory stuff, the good
times, the walks on the beaches, the innocent dope times, the sex (the way she
“curled his toes” what he and all his youth time corner boys called it learned
from an old blues number, some guy like Son House or Skip James, one of those
guys), haunting him in sober moments, moments like this freaking rain-blasted
minute. Yeah, his slightly overdone bout of sniffing stuff up his nose until it
was clogged like some drainpipe just like the crusty one taking a rain beating
outside his cabin door to the exclusion of everything else including his
printing and bookbinding business, his going concern business with Jack K.
whose cabin he was watching the rain in.
Had claimed his share of rolled one-dollar
bill sniffing (although at one party in Pacifica just off the beach in some old
hacienda owned, secretly owned, by the cartel as a transit point north but
fronted by gringo bigtime distributors while he had been in the first days of
this round with cousin that he was trying to break out of the well-heeled host
insisted that everybody use the one-hundred dollar bills that he provided to inhale
the damn stuff, and keep the bill as a souvenir). That binge had gone on for
months and now that he was out of cash, out of coke, out of friends with cash
(having done his own version of the pyramid scheme borrowing from friend B to
pay back friend A and friend C to pay back friend B and so on you get the
idea), having run out of women whom he had made a specialty of conning, coming
up with so many improbable cock-eyed stories even he could not get them
straight, conned them until they began to compare notes, the ones who knew each
other, and froze him out, money out, bed out, out of credit with his usually
laid-back dealer friend up in Marin City, who had not only shut him off but had
been making noises about bringing in some “bracero labor,” that is what Marin
City Slim (his moniker) called the hard boys available to high level distributors
like him, to get the dough until he had had to sell most of his rare book
collection to keep the wolves from his door, and out of Miranda (by choice,
hers, and car-less).
So he needed no rain, no pouring rain
dripping satanically off the roof top, off the freaking drainpipes, off the ancient
1965 Volkswagen bug car parked in the back up against the cabin, Jack’s car as
he had no car. Had no car and still squirmed that he had sold Miranda’s out
from under her every time he saw the damn thing out back, hers a 1982
Volkswagen that they had had many a kinky tryst in, in order to score some
cousin which was the open cause of her leaving him although there were one
hundred other possibilities over the past years beginning with those conned women
beds that were now closed to him. Had no need to see and hear the rain purring off
the damn trees when the swirling winds formed around the basin about one foot
below where he was sitting trying to keep from crawling out of his skin as the
urges began to settle down. He had to laugh, Alan, Bix, Muddy, Magic Slim,
goddam Neal, goddam Dean, goddam Jack K., even Miranda in the days when they
would do a few lines just for fun said that cousin, cousin to smack, the Big H,
was not addictive. Like hell as he dove down to the depths again in the
depression, some shrink one time when his wife Betsy forced him to go see him said
that Josh was clinically depressed, probably had been from childhood, but what
good did such knowledge do him just then as that funk would not quit him no
matter how much strong black Chase & Sanborn black coffee he drank and how
many Pall Mall cigarettes he smoked.
So he, to pass the time, started writing
what is presented here among other things, writing to take the edge off, writing in the third person as a convenience,
a shamed convenience since writing in the “I” was too self-conscious and too
capable of being fudged when it came to describing cons, women cons a
specialty, stolen drugs, money taken from random purses, kited checks, bounced
credit cards, figuring too by the time anybody read the stuff he would either
be well writing that next one million words that he had been on the threshold of
doing threatening one and all that he had a blockbuster to end all blockbusters
inside him that would make that 1950s “beat” minute guys and their
cross-country excursions and cavorting seem like some Henry James Boston Yankee
WASP Brahmin Beacon Hill séance. Or, more likely, be in some locked funny
farm, you know some place to cool out with no windows, maybe no bed if he got
feisty, screaming to himself about the injustices of a rational man being
locked up in place with no windows and some mattress strewn every which way on
the floor, crying out for snow, for liquor, some sweet whiskies or wines, hell,
just a goddam cigarette to cut the sound of the scraping fingernails against
chalkboards that he would be fighting.
Maybe too, although very unlikely unless
he came packaged with a new Toyota or something (some deal he could make with
Johnny Callahan, Mr. Toyota down Hull way on Auto Mile about twenty from North
Adamsville his old corner boy who had made good on the straight and narrow
after high school, grabbed Mrs. Toyota, his high school sweetie for a wife
too), said maybe one hundred non-Catholic-etched acts of contrition and took it slow and easy,
meaning no catting around with stray
women looking to curl his toes for a few lines, back under the shiny silky
sheets with Miranda. Or, who knows, and Josh got the shivers thinking about
this one, knowing damn well what had happened to old corner boy (and best
friend from elementary school on), Pete Markin, who let his wanting habits,
aided by a twist, by a woman, who wanted everything in the freaking world to
satisfy her own wanting habits which he thought he could satisfy, get the
better of him and wound up very dead down in sunny Mexico. Nobody to claim his
body, no family, not that twist, no friends, and, hell, not him for sure, for
fear that they/he would wind up beside poor Peter. Him thinking that he could
steal a suitcase full of coke which he was “muling” and get away with it, and
for his troubles turned up face down in some dusty forlorn and forgotten
Mexican town around Sonora way after a drug deal fell through when the guys
whom he was dealing with knew that the dope belonged to the hombres and told
them about it and he got the short end of the stick. But those things were all
future, all too murky right then to think through as he looked out at the glimmer of the Pacific, all
majestic swirls and death spirals, all crashing and moaning, moaning for a
wave, and he moaning to get that idea about those finger-nailed blackboards out
of his head, that he could just make out
(he had to laugh at that one about the swirls for the rain, for the ocean and
for the turmoil in his fucked brain all meshed together) through the big
picture windows.
Big picture windows all the rage now in
rattail California seacoast cabins to make up for the old-timey rustic stuff
that hadn’t worked for years, you know that oil-painted green door that won’t
close right, the spaces between the logs that let in more wind that a
politician’s speech, clogged crusty gutters,
clogged by the shedding trees that threaten to return the place to nature, a
cold stove, clammy floors, all good enough for primitive man Jack K. but
wearisome to a guy trying to keep himself together better than the fixtures,
that window facing out onto the swirling
ocean gathering some unknown verve out in the Japan sea. Seeing that scene,
seeing that he could not handle those damn chalkboard scratches, he thought
maybe he could “score” from Freddy down the road. And just as he was about to
put on that damn yellow fisherman’s gear (over-sized pants, swoshing black
rubber boots, adequate jacket and damn garish yellow flop hat that made him
look like an advertisement for that old
Gloucester fisherman who graced the front of the package of frozen fish
sticks that his mother force-fed him and his brothers when he was growing up
(and dosing the damn things all bread-crusted and soggy by the time they came
out of the oven with blood red ketchup which made him ill just then thinking
about them) some better angel of his nature, maybe some glimmer of hope
channeled from Miranda (funny that he kept coming back to that Miranda reunion,
kept it front and center about how he
would do this and that to change things between them if she came back yet when
she was around he was sullen, distracted, distant, aloof, non-responsive and
toward the end almost comatose), or of an act of God ( a vengeful God like some
great Jehovah witness, all snarls and fury,
that he remembered thinking about one time that came from some old folk song
book, or hymnal book, no, from a Harry Smith Anthology entry recorded from down in backwoods Tennessee singing
some bleak Sunday morning praise to placate that damn rage of his, remembering
too that maybe three hundred years ago when the song was fresh out of the
Protestant Reformation struggles he might very well have been trying to placate
that damn Jehovah himself with some lusty singing praises to his name) like his
mother kept harping into him whenever all hell broke loose in the household and
then magically got resolved without him having to spent his life in purgatory
got hold of him and he went to bed instead after one last look out through
those tell-no-tale big picture windows.
Next morning Josh awoke, yeah the third
day in a row of that slashing rain. Third day “resurrection” still caught up,
despite formal disbelief honed by the depths of modern skepticism with the
free-thinking guys he hung out with lately unlike those high holy day corner
boys of youth, in childhood Catholic incensed myths maybe eternal myths, maybe
all religious groupings had such foundational myths he would have to ask Allen
who had made some studies of the matter. Somehow he thought but the idea made
sense but that resurrection business was too pious for the thing he was
thinking when that first blast of slashing rain hit that drainpipe and his
nerve-endings were almost shattered, nervous system high-ended by the sight of those
swirling oceans down below heedless of soft-core junkies and their frayed
nerves. Heedless, hear me, of a man moaning for himself, moaning in search of
that high white note that had stuck in his head for a while now, moan for that
high white note, go on try to bring all humankind moan into it you faker, for
all of the wicked things he was thinking, break out of this prison thoughts,
getting well with Freddy down the road thoughts, maybe working a deal to mule
for that Marin City dealer he was in hawk to up to his nose (not trying to make
a pun there, no way), maybe working out some deal with Marin City Slim to front dope for him to front dough to Mr.
Toyota and work Miranda back into his
bleeding away life, too many thought s for all the soft felt-tipped angels whom
he could use right then in his wake-up bed.
And, damn, damn, him stuck, stuck hard
this time inside that slight cabin. He swore the place had gotten smaller in
the night like the rain had sogged, wetted, soaked things up so much, he was
getting a bit frayed as he thought his thoughts he could not remember what the
right term for everything wet was, and that finally logged, logs set in the back
bin for his comfort, fire stove had gathered enough heat that shrunk the place
in drying out that wetness. Jack K.’s cabin, or was it Lawrence’s, he was all
confused that second, no, it had to be Jack’s K.’s because Lawrence’s was
several miles back up the road toward Big Sur, back around Sycamore Canyon
Road, which might have been in Big Sur proper. Jack K. had just felt that he needed
the time off from that dastardly project for the print shop, the book
re-binding contract for the Harvard libraries which Lawrence, who had run one
of the libraries before he headed west in the mid-1950s and set up that
bookstore/restoration shop in North Beach, had gotten for them through some
old-time contact, which required him going east for a time, drove him so crazy because
the work had too many moving parts which always confused him. Jack K. usually
took on those jobs, knew how to work magic on old books for cheap money, but he
had been having, Jesus, at forty, mother problems, mother storming about him
not being married (and he not wanting to be married since his was a practicing
homosexual and refused like a lot of Frisco guys to get married as a cover for
his activity), not providing her with grandchildren, and so had begged off). So
Jack took that over, took it over in a huff once Josh met a guy in Harvard
Square (a connection first made through Marin City Slim), who had some blow and that was that, that had
him bent out of shape, had taken the wind out of his sails. Funny how after
Jack K. called wondering what the hell was going on after not hearing from him
for a week, nothing, and what he was hearing about Josh craziness from Allen, Dean,
Greg, Hubby when they came out west, he had left the East in a swirling
rainstorm, hitched in spots until the rains grabbed him in Moline like they
always did that time of year, grabbed a bus in spots from Davenport to Reno and
wound up in Frisco a week later in another swirling rainstorm getting off the
last stop bus down by the Embarcadero and then went over to Third Street to see
some guy that Jack K. knew who was supposed to lend him an apartment for him to
work in for a month or so. Josh figuring that getting away from the East Coast,
thought of Miranda, and cousin would push him forward.
Turned out the guy, no names here
because by the time anybody reads this he will probably have gone up the ladder
in the organization, the Mexican drug cartel, the braceros, los hermanos, those
guys with the heavy artillery weaponry ready to spray said weapons in all
directions just for kicks to keep the new drug of choice, snow, moving steadily
up gringo and gabacho American noses. Well, or in a drug haze, Josh nevertheless
made it a longstanding, well-thought out habit learned back in his corner boy
days with Sam, Jimmy, Johnny Callahan (now big time Mr. Toyota and maybe he really
could swing a deal to get Miranda a car once he got well), sometimes the late
Pete Markin (now gone to his early rest having “caught the westbound train”
after not making the right choices when he tried to go “independent” with a
suitcase with a two kilo brick of the cartel’s goods inside that he was
“muling” and got two slugs to the heart and face down in some dusty backdoor
cantina in Sonora for his efforts), and king hell king leader, Frankie Riley who
had made a few trips west with him and Sam back when the earth was fresh, of
not offending up and coming “connected” guys, not only had no apartment for him
but as a stone-cold drug dealer on the rise turned him on to a sweet ounce
barely cut to make up for that no place to stay bit. Thanks brother maybe
someday I can return the favor.
So for about four days, after he called
few a friends in the city, Allen, Dean, Jasper, Hinck, Buck, but not Jack K.
(who beside mother trouble had been drinking heavily to get over mother
troubles and coke didn’t do it for Jack K. anyway), who had a few women friends as well, especially
Dean who practically had them conned out of
his eyes and they would roll over in the clover for him in a minute (his
supposedly extra-large dong the key to their lusts, according to Dean), Josh
did nothing but stay high in Jason’s rooming house over on Bay Street where no
questions were asked as long as the rent was paid in advance in cash and not
loud noise or gunfire was heard, listening to jazz albums and sweet be-bop talk
he had not heard for a long time. Got laid by some good-looking gone chick
friend of Allen’s, Linny, (her and Allen
just friends according to her although she suspected that he was more
interested in Dean than her but whatever, whatever). Linny, gone yes, gone for
her daddy Josh for a minute anyway, although she was strange retro woman,
dressed all in black, black beret tilted on her head just so like in old films
of Lizabeth Scott, including black bra and underwear saying that she was a
“beat” chick looking for her way back home, looking for kicks, and looking to
curl a guy’s toes for some of those kicks. Strange because she was maybe in her
late twenties and just by rough arithmetic was not even born when Jack, Allan,
Gregory, Gary and all their beat aficionados held forth in North Beach clubs,
dives, cellars, and made new words sprint off the page, old Allan be-bopping
about how he dreamed of negro streets and desolation angels, but like she said
she curled his toes for a few lines and some be-bop patter. And so they went to
the mats a few times, and, get this, Josh in a drug frenzy ill-advisedly drove Dean’s
car off the road down by the Pacific Coast Highway near the Daly City line when
he was taking her back to her sugar daddy or something in Pacifica. He had to
call some errant tow truck to get him out and Linny just sat in the car
listening to Dizzy be-bop about peanuts, staring out at the sea, dressed all in
black (he told you about the black undergarments already).
After that four day blur, a couple of
sober days along the shore in Pacifica with Linny where he stayed with her in
her room (turned out the daddy was her real daddy and Pacifica was her home but
it took Josh a while to absorb that information and so it had come out sugar
daddy first in his twisted mind), the days back in Frisco turned into weeks in
blurs and then Jack K. (or maybe it was Lawrence after all since Jack K. had had
his own problems with the bottle, the scotch whiskey bottle, although he was a
maniac working at the print shop, drunk or sober, and maybe too had had a ten
thousandth falling out with his mother about not being married, about not
giving her grandkids and all that stuff, stuff that Josh had heard the echo of
in his own life so it probably was Lawrence) gave the marching orders to that
rustic cabin he just awoke up in and still felt none too good if anybody,
anybody but the damn seagulls, the occasional field mouse and about seventeen
aggressive squirrels was asking.
Oh yeah and ordered to try to break
that cousin habit, that nose candy habit by Jack K. straight out (funny Jack K.
had as many addictions as he had although not all the same, especially no women)
and Lawrence too (who despite the crowd he hung around with including Jack K., Dean,
Neal, and Irwin nevertheless tended to business in his own bookstore, got the
contracts signed, the books in order and the guys in order- a regular worker
bee as he was fond of calling himself) out there in the great moonless dark
moody Pacific night. Night signifying his mood, day or night, when those
coke-less nerves got frayed of late.
And so here he was in the great
white-capped Pacific night that many years before Josh had started reaching for
when he had first come west, no, that was not right, when he first started
dreaming up in his three brother shared bedroom on sultry summer nights and
cold as hell winter ones too in the staid Eastern night in high school if not
sooner about the great escape, the escape from know-nothing old North
Adamsville where he was spinning his wheels , no project ever got completed,
nobody took him under their wing except one English teacher senior year but by
then he was already half way out the door in his head anyway, getting hell and
damnation from his Puritan-bred mother (yes, Puritan-bred although she was
nothing but a high holy day, high mass complete with incense as the priest
fumigated the congregation Catholic and maybe that is where Josh first learned
what high was all about, Roman Catholic high, but don’t let that fool you since
they were brethren, brethren in close by Pilgrim lands which rubbed off on her,
and him), could do no right. Found Frankie Riley, who would later become a
well-known lawyer after he spent his wild minutes going west with him and Sam,
and the corner boy life and its pranks, high crimes and misdemeanors which put
him behind the eight ball with family and the law, nothing big but another good
reason to clear out. Had been an indifferent student (except senior year when
fearing some military draft coming down on him upon graduation and some God
forsaken war flaring up in Southeast Asia and with the prudent guidance of that
English teacher he blossomed well enough to get into a college. Had been cup
runneth over so filled with teenage angst and alienation (you know nervous
about his low-rent appearance, about his lowly social standing in the pecking
order of the school, embarrassed by his wrong side of the track status and girl
trouble, or really trying to get to first base and failing girl trouble) that he
could have driven a truck (he laughed about a big old Mack truck) through it
and escape too that cloying smugness of the red scare Cold War night that was
driving him, and not just him, to distraction.
So he dreamed, dreamed, dreamed small
dreams like having his own place, hell, his own room, his own car and not have
to depend on Frankie Riley’s beat-down beat-around Nash Rambler (heck, they
hadn’t made those since Hector was a pup and Frankie was always having trouble
getting parts)or Sam Lowell’s reliable
and “boss” ‘59 Plymouth) and large wild world global dreams about a little
social justice and a lot of justice, big literary heavy justice for Josh
Breslin, and in between dreams would sneak, yes, literally sneak (and will tell
you why in a minute after he finishes this thought) in the dead of night over
to Harvard Square, sometimes with Sam, who had some of the same dreams although
they both kept them in check around the other corner boys who were “square”
about poetry, literature and the budding folk scene which they mushed together
as “beat,” for lack of a better word although beat was getting lazy and
grandmotherly among the corner boys of the world in place like North
Adamsville, Cambridge, Manhattan, Detroit, Chicago, LA, and Frisco, sometimes
alone, when he was in high school in the early 1960s just to be around what he
thought was a new wave, a new way of thinking, writing, singing, acting,
juggling that he sensed, and not just him either, was coming and would make his
small “beat” corner boy group seem like a tea party.
Here is a good scenario of how he would
get going out that Harvard Square scene. Usually it started with some mother “why
did you do this when you should have done that-why did you do that when you
should have done this,” you know the drill, beef (less frequently brother,
three other brother, beefs about space and quiet) and he needed to get some
fresh air, needed to shake the dust off the old town off his shoes, needed to
be with kindred, even if only to moon over them and their sense of freedom. So
late at night, usually around midnight he would stealthily slip down the back
of the property and start walking a couple of miles in the sweet dark if
foreboding mean streets to catch the all-night Redline subway over to the Square.
Once there he automatically took the steps two at a time to get to, well, to
get to the famous, or maybe infamous, Hayes-Bickford Cafeteria that was just
outside the station. Now normally nobody, nobody in their right minds would
give two cents worth a damn about some dispensary for rancid coffee, soggy
muffins and un-nameable stews, but the Hayes in the Square was a fixture for
every misshapen hobo, every urine-stained drunk, for every girl on the hustle,
for every three for a quarter hustler, every down in the dumps hipster (or
wanna-be), every crying for a fix junkie and, oh yeah, every guy or gal who
sensed the same breeze blowing through the land as Josh who were writing like
crazy, poems, stories, and songs, folk songs then mainly waiting the night away
for the big wave to wash over them, give them their minute. And Josh hoped that
he would be washed clean too. (Oh, that seemed so long ago when the world was
new, before we tried to turn the world upside down, and we did not have to run
away from the things we have built and run too from the things, Shiva-like,
that we have destroyed.)
So that was how he spent his time, how
he got through those last minutes of high school, mainly being seen, maybe
snapping his fingers when some budding Allan Ginsberg began some be-bop
sentences and devoured the night, and taking everything in. Some people there
took a shine to him, one a Harvard assistant dean’s daughter, another a guy who
would go on to a long, if not publicly well-known
career as a folk artist who later used some of Josh’s material in his songs.
Mostly those who took a shine to him did so a couple of years later when he was
actually in college, having been pushed hard to go to school by that sainted angel
English teacher senior year in high school to get off the dime, and they pushed
him, especially Eva that assistant dean’s daughter who wanted to impress her
father with her wise choice of boyfriend but he, the father, in the end, hated
Josh worse that the anti-war protestors who were buggering his door every day,
to write some stuff with the idea of having it published. (Which had been one of the factors that had
animated him to take up the printing profession so that he could publish his
own works if necessary, although all that blew away like dust when his various
addictions took on their own life).
Others in the Hayes-Bickford mist,
mostly guys who would give him the nod, the nod then signally some ultimate
kinship, some oneness with cool and not just thrown for the sake of
recognition, and pass him by silently to go back to their dorms or garrets
write the great American novel that they couldn’t stock enough of, dreams of
book tours and being put up in swanky hotels, or cut the next big folk song that
would have everybody flooding the jukeboxes for a listen and bring in gold
albums, saw him for what he was then just a confused kid wet-behind-the-ears kid.
Ever the con artist whatever else Josh held sacred and dear he would make that
confused stance work to his benefit that he successfully played out with
certain Harvard Square young women, Eva in particular, with what then would have
been called motherly instincts but which he saw as working out them working out
their own lonelinesses in a turn your back to angst world who wanted to help
him end his confusion. Like he said he played that out, always played that out.
But either budding “new find” or confused nerd he hung tenaciously to his
secret high school Hayes-Bickford routine through college waiting many a
weekend night for the big break-out to happen.
Josh wrote about that experience in
high school, wrote about his sense that big new things were coming for him and
his generation, and saw glimmers of that fresh new land in the flesh on any
given Friday or Saturday night in Harvard Square and even in Kenmore Square
where some Boston University students not to be outdone by the Harvards were
creating their own post-beat wave, but no one he knew listened to him (except
Sam, who had all the right instincts then, had a sense that things needed to be
turned upside down , knew in his bones how to navigate “the road,” but who would
only be washed for a while by that breeze until the early 1970s when the tide
ebbed and law school and making peace with bourgeois society beckoned). Nobody
heard Josh’s anguished cry, calling him rogue, devil saint, sad sack idealist
or, and remember the red scare Cold War times, “commie,” Bolshevik, and Joe
Stalin’s illegitimate son. (One teacher, an old battle-scarred football coach who probably was a hundred
years old, or acted it, had kept him after school three days running for not
liking the way he answered some silly history question, Josh playing with the
answer since he knew it although he was not a real history junkie, and called
him Bolshevik just like that. Jesus, and he wasn’t, he was just a kid trying to
work out in his head the new wave he thought was coming and that he might have
a place in the damn thing.) Yeah, so nobody listened then thinking that he was
a wanna-be “beat,” some third-rate retro beat, out of synch with his time by
the early 1960s when television determined “beat” and not circumstances of life
beat but he had been too young to have understood what that “beat” minute was,
although he knew the echos, had had his wearing a slanted back black beret and un-cuffed
black pants period to give the look of
some beat denizen, some beatified brother.
Get this, even corner boy king, his
acknowledged leader, Frankie Riley cut him to the quick more than once making
fun of him and his hanging around with winos and derelicts, faded sisters, and
local hoods, nickel and dime hoods, at the Waldorf Cafeteria up in Adamsville
Square when he couldn’t sneak over to Harvard Square or didn’t have enough
dough to buy coffee and crullers, and so just hung out picking up the folk
wisdom that every hipster had at the tip of their tongue. Sure there was plenty
of cutting each other up verbally even among sworn corner boys, especially by
the king because that ability was how he got to be king. That corner boy thing had
been a necessary protection for Josh in the rough neighborhoods of the “Acre”
section of North Adamsville where anybody, any guy, running solo was subject to
serious problems including beatings for scoffing at the corner boy traditions
but to call a guy out for being slightly off-center meant you would always be
looked at with a very jaded eye. Of course later Frankie got “religion” but
back then he could be merciless on any given weekend night when he felt he had
to act the “king.”
Some girls that he was interested in,
one Melinda Loring, who had dismissed Josh’s interest in her out of hand in
that haughty way of hers, said he should worry more about the draft (Melinda’s
brother had been then recently drafted and had already been sent to Vietnam) and
getting his ass in college (Josh’s expression) and less about guys like Jack,
Allen, Gregory, Tom, Mario, who already were making the big breezes that were
getting ready to stir the generation and had already made their mark. (Sam
Lowell would fifty years later have a torrid if short and fruitless affair with
which, according to Sam, did not have enough strength to survive a couple of
tough blows, which didn’t make sense after a while, which like some things had
no room to grow. So maybe Josh had been better off having been dismissed out of
queenly hand by her.) Even that English teacher, Miss Soros, who he had
secretly thought must have been some kind of hipster in her time because she
was always talking about the New York literary crowd this and that, looked
askance at him when he told he had been doing that Hayes-Bickford midnight creep for a couple of years.
He said to himself then that he would show
them, showed them big, showed them at great cost to his brain, to his body and
to whatever sweet angels were ordered to cushion his fall that he was on the
edge of something grand, something you would remember fifty years later. That
first written piece from high school, submitted to that English teacher who had
it placed in some small high school literary publication (after she did her
usual no-holds barred editing job) a now sought after relic that he had not
been able to find among his papers, a paper sketch which he treated like some
Catholic shrine thing, some venerated thing, like his mother and grandmother
were always telling him to get wise to before it was too late in order to get
himself some kind of absolution for his sins. Jesus.
So yeah Josh got the urge, when he came
of age (okay, okay when he got out of college), when he first left Harvard
Square back in Cambridge where he was staying with a campus bigwig’s daughter, the
assistant dean’s daughter, Eva, previously mentioned for chrissake, who went
for him and whose father went crazy when he found out that some raggedy-ass boy
had been staying with her, ordered him out of her apartment and gave him some
dough to head west, head somewhere, head anyway and he was just hungry enough
to grab the dough with every fist. Eva had wanted to go with him, had had her
head turned by the idea of the road, of striking out to find adventure, to
check out that fellahin world Josh was always talking about, talking about the
utterly doomed, the shadow forgotten, the whiskey-soaked panhandlers, the
flotsam and jetsam night-hangers that she was totally unaware of except every
once in a while at the Hayes-Bickford when he had no dough and they wound up
there at one in the morning. She knew though Josh meant more than those obvious
down-trodden and that he was speaking of
the sweat-back braceros doing their stoop labor, the small-time hustler
spending more time figuring the con than just straight working, the midnight
cravers, those looking for shadows to shelter their misdeeds.
And Eva was curious also about that
great blue-pink American West night that Josh talked about constantly, about
the road west that generations of his (and hers too although mostly they stayed
put to fill the Brahmin East and Ivy League schools) kept pushing toward until
there was no more land, until the Pacific swales ate up their dreams, about the
Okie/Arkie stuff that Woody Guthire wrote songs about, that John Steinbeck
wrote books about, and Nelson Algren described he old world genesis of, about
setting up a new life, about instead of corner boys there were smiling cowboys,
awkward sheep-herders, bad ass guys too, and more modern, oil-stained hot-
rodders in the valleys, water-soaked
surfer boys waiting for the perfect wave, and their suntanned blonde
girlfriends waiting for them while they waited for the perfect wave (she, Eva,
of brown hair, brown eyes and a brown world and so jealous of sun-flecked yellows
and blue eyes too, Josh’s fierce blue eyes included), and new, a new sound
coming from out in Frisco about breaking out of the confines of what parents,
teachers, authority figures (like Mr. Assistant Dean father) and their hangers-on
and trying to be free. Josh had taken her one night to the retro-1930s and
1940s black and white film Brattle Theater to see High Sierra, to see Humphrey Bogart, Bogie, as the dangerous
stone-cold killer Roy Earle, and his round-heels sweetie Marie, played by Ida
Lupino, (and, dog Pard) who kept talking about “getting free, ” about a great
personal jail break-out ,and that vision stuck with him, and he made it stick
with her when they would get stoned and talk of what the road meant.
Yeah, getting free just like that
tear-stained Marie at the end when Roy takes the big step-off. So yes she was
thrilled by the idea of going on his road with him, had gotten a friend ready to
sublet her apartment, had grabbed some dough from her grandfather for the trip
(he thought it was for airfare, hotels, and such not the hitchhike thumb, sleep
by the roadside, grab peanut butter sandwiches on the fly), and had gathered in
some camping equipment/road supplies like a knapsack. Her father heard about the
whole trip idea and freaked out (which also would have required her to drop out
of school, Radcliffe, for a while which really freaked him out) and her wound
up locking her up in her apartment bedroom, giving Josh money in the living
room (after threatening him with some legal actions about co-habitation laws
then in effect to sweeten the pot) and he, a couple of days later, headed to
the truck terminal near the Coca-Cola sign near the Mass Turnpike in order to
try to pick up a truck out of town. A friend had given him the terminal tip
because a lot of times the truckers were going long distances and wanted
company to talk to at seventy miles an hour, even strange hippie boys. That
began the first trip west, the one before that real one with Sam where they
really had fun when some girls picked them up in Cleveland and it took about
three weeks to get to Frisco and you can figure out why on your own time, a
trip west that would not be the last of its kind.
He had set out with a rucksack on one shoulder
(a few grooming items, a couple of pairs of sock, underwear, a Swiss Army knife
which turned out to be usable in many circumstances not all of them of a benevolent
nature) and a bedroll on the other (a couple of sheets, an old bedspread and,
wisely, a canvas sheet as ground-cover which came in handy on a few rainy
nights sleeping by the side of the road when no cars were coming by), a few bucks
in his pocket (he figured not to take all the dean’s money with him so he got a
money order and mailed it to Eva since he might get jack-rolled). He had called
Eva, had explained what her father had threatened to do to him, and had talked
her into going west on her own by plane and she would bring the money with her
then. She never did, did go west, but when he came back to the East she was
waiting for him with the money and a few sweet tricks to whet his appetite that
she had picked up from a serious read of the Kama Sutra while he was gone. They stayed together for a while but
he had the wanderlust bug then and she had backed off from that western
adventure idea and eventually, a couple of years later, wound up marrying one
of her own kind, a Yankee stockbroker from Yale. Josh wondered what would have
happened if that damn father hadn’t choked her off, if they had gone west
together. He still wondered every once in a while whether wherever she was she
too was in her deep sleep thinking that she should have gone-wondered what she
was doing the nights he wondered about her fate. As for the assistant dean who
later became a notorious dean at another Ivy League school he was too busy by
then fending off irate anti-war, anti-everything students to worry about a
fallen daughter.
Yeah the times were out of joint, no
question, and Josh had a well-worn thumb, a blessed beaten down thumb, a hitchhike
thumb that had done yeoman’s service in the search for the blue-pink great
American West night. He had searched and
searched for the damn thing and now all he had to show for it was a stuffed-up
nose, the miseries, two lost friends, one lost girlfriend and so much angst
that somebody might think that he was still a teenager. (That search for the
American West night was a serious venture in his mind because Josh, although no
serious student of history, bought into this old Harvard professor’s idea, a
guy named Turner, who said some strange stuff was going to happen once
everybody realized the American frontier was gone, that there was no place left
on the continent for the “wild ones” to move on to. That eternal wanderlust of
those whose forbears came to these shores on the transport ships, or worse the
prison ships and picked up stakes when the soil wore out, or the neighbors were
to close by or maybe they just got tired on tilling the soil and moved on.
Moved on and then hit ocean. That hard fact was going to create a mess, a mess
for guys like Josh who were really rolling stones, had no sense of settling
down, had to keep moving just to keep moving, driving that hot-rod on midnight
“chicken runs,” revving up that bike on the Pacific Coast Highway (he swore on
a clear cold night he could hear that thunderous roar from a couple of miles
away), wading out surf board in hand to take on the nearest wave, who didn’t
fit in and who did not want to go to Nepal or some such place but plant
themselves in America out in the moonless night search whether in the desert,
the Rockies, up along the Hood River, or just tramping like some latter-day
John Garfield down the Pacific Coast Highway looking for that thrill that would
either kill him or cure him.
In Garfield’s case kill, they hung him high
if you want the truth, that time he played the alley cat wanderlust hobo Frank
in the 1946 film The Postman Always Rings
Twice when his wanting habits were for another man’s wife who was looking
for a stepping-stone, who had murder in her long-legged curvaceous
blonde-haired heart, and would be eternally grateful in just the right way such
a creature could be grateful if she had an playmate to do the foul deed, but he
did go to the big step off with a smile. Funny Josh had a recurring dream about
Frank, about the film, about her, since it was filmed in the year that he was
born, the dream always having him in his mother’s womb sitting with his father
in the now retro- Strand Theater, or
some such dark place, screaming his lungs out at the screen for Frank to clear
out, clear out fast, the minute he saw her, that blonde dish, coming through
the door from the back of the house to the two-bit diner asking for a fresh-out
girl cigarette and he licking his chops, looked her over like the daily
special. Josh always yelled for all the good it did Frank. All he had at the
end was that smile, maybe a half smile, and that ever present jasmine scent, that
damn scent.
Josh had had less angst back in his
youth, less teenage angst, but he also did not have a problem with stuffed up
noses then either. His immediate problem. Yeah, so Jack K., let’s just say it
was Jack K. who sent him to Todo El Mundo and if it was with Lawrence’s
blessing or not let’s leave it at that. Jack K. told him to make himself at
home once he got there, told him to make sure that he stopped off at Billy Joe’s
in Daly City to get his groceries and a ride out to the place from Bill Joe son
who was heading to San Diego. (Billy Joe by the way one of those Oakies progeny
who by then had populated half of California who still had that wanderlust,
still wanted to pick up and leave, except there was that damn ocean and so
except for a very fast Vincent Black Lightning, a British import he kept his
wanting habits in check.)
While fretting through the first few
hours of his “cold turkey” Josh suddenly thought that he had forgotten to tell anybody
back East, not Miranda who was not speaking to him and who would not accept his
collect calls, but whom he could sent a letter to marked “Emergency,” or
something like that and she would answer, that was the way she was, or at least
she would know where he was, not Biggie his dealer friend of recent vintage and
the only one he did not owe money to and who might give him a line of credit if
he knew where to send the dough and how, not Jimmy Jones who was the
superintendent at his building over in Brighton where all his worldly
possessions were stored in the basement pending some back rent received, nor
anybody else to tell that he was back in California, back in Todo El Mundo where
he haven’t been in years.
The last time had been with Angelica,
Angelica of the old time hitchhike road met in Steubenville, Ohio where she was
slumming one summer as a waitress, had spied him, had been vaguely looking for
a wandering man to break out with, had bought his line of chatter and they were
off to the coast. Miranda knowing that he had taken Angelica to Todo El Mundo
had refused to go there with him and so they usually stayed in Pacifca a few
miles south of Frisco town when they flew out to the coast. Yeah, Miranda was
that kind of woman that way too. He had flown out from Boston on a whim, on a
whim that a change of coasts would do wonders for him and move him away from
the increasingly nasty drug scene and his own jones where he was finishing up a
couple of “mood pieces,” mood pieces being his way of saying that he couldn’t get a big upper
case idea, or rather a big enough idea to sustain a book-length story, hell, or
even a reasonable short story and so he had scraped together some small case
ideas like what it was like growing up around Boston in the early 1960s and
what it was like to escape over to Harvard Square late at night and what it was
like to sit in the all-night
Hayes-Bickford cafeteria (he thought that was what that establishment was
supposed to be, a food and drink place but he knew that he never went near the
food if he could help it although he usually grabbed a cup of joe to prove he
was a paying customer and not some drip-dry wino or down-on his-luck panhandler)
and soak in the sights, soak in the people, soak in the notion that he was
fixated on about the big new breeze that he sensed was blowing over the land,
the big blow that would wash everybody clean,
would give everybody, hell, give him, a new start. Oh what characters you would
see from winos and skid row bums cadging leftovers, bumming change for coffee, really
though for the Thunderbird wine -“what’s the price-forty twice” to be had in
blue law Massachusetts over by Charley’s Kitchen from a guy who bought about
twenty bottles for just such after hours’ business, ah, free enterprise, taking
some used coffee cup sitting on a table before the busboy got to it and going
to refill the thing with the tepid dishwater coffee burned over about seven
times (refills were on the house),but also guys, guys like Eric and Tom, a
couple of off-beat beat poets waiting like him for that new wave everybody knew
was coming (even the winos and bums were going to rise on that great day) and who helped make that folk minute that old Bob
Dylan and a couple of others are still kicking around today .
But thinking about those halcyon days
got Josh all mixed up, feeling like he had missed the best part of it (he had
been in the military for a couple of key years, years when the ebb was starting
to churn things up, the edge was coming off of drug highs, the war was seemingly
endless and ruthlessly pursued no matter who was in charge, guys were ripping
off their friends for spare change to get high, Hunter Thompson who was knee
deep in the thing called it the ebb of the high-water mark, called that the
point where “the chosen” knew they were not winning and not winning meant a
very long wait for the next wave and a huge fight just to keep what little was
achieved against the greed heads of the world), feeling kind of melancholy and
so against all good judgment he told himself he needed to take a little
something for the head if he was going to continue since those tumbling rains were
making his head spin, spin badly out of control if he didn’t settle them down
with some elixir. He did a couple of quick lines with an old dollar bill
(laughed again about that party with the hundred dollar bill blow) figuring
that would hold him for a while, get him well, get him so he could then begin
to taper off.
He then continued- continued on about
the mood pieces that had kept body and soul together, doing those mood pieces
to keep body and soul together no question and to keep Jack K. happy since he was
the only one privy to the hard fact that mood pieces were the only thing that
Josh could produce in those days. Some small idea like the time he was hitchhiking down in Ohio, yeah down in
Steubenville, Ohio on his way west maybe
the first time, no, the second when he learned enough about the road, about the
fine art of hitchhiking, and knew that a long ride a little off course was
better than waiting around for hours (maybe overnight, that had happened more
than once and that is when he got hip to having that canvas ground-cover as a
part of his bed-roll) and that was the way the truck driver who he hitched a
ride from out of Greenwich, Connecticut was going and you always took whatever
ride a trucker gave you because he probably was going a far enough distance to
get you on your way pretty well .
Yeah truckers were the life-blood of
the road, guys who were driving way too many hours, carrying way too much
weight (of whatever they were carrying and sometimes it was best not to know),
smoking way too many cigarettes, gulping way too many bennies, eating way too
many trucker diner meals, carrying way too many family responsibilities for
what they were doing who were glad for the company at seventy miles an hour to
get off stuff off their chests. One guy, Denver Slim (they all had monikers
within the brotherhood and after a while you got to know that many knew each
other, at least diner knew each other and would call ahead to see if anybody
was heading your way after they left you off). This Denver Slim moniker was
hard to figure since he lived in Evanston and by no stretch of the imagination
was his slim but rather a big beefy guy who would be handy to have around if
you got in a hassle picked him up, him then with long beard, long hair,
bell-bottomed jeans, army jacket, some classic hippie he look, just because in
that outfit he looked like his son, Jack, whom he was having trouble
understanding, understanding about why he was drifting away from home, why they
couldn’t talk anymore. A real good guy with a wife in Evanston and a girlfriend
in Steubenville just to give you a
flavor of what was going in the other America of that day which did not hit the
headlines. Yeah truckers, except for the ones who had a habit of leaving you
off somewhere in a two-bit town rather than on the Interstate where you could at
least get a fast ride before the “staties” could grab a chunk of you, were good
guys. Most of the time they would set you up for a meal (a truckers’ diner meal
of which they all knew which ones to stop at and which ones to move on pass and
while a steady diet of such food would probably kill you a
two-days-since-you-last-ate situation made that prospect look very inviting,
even the ubiquitous bread pudding for dessert), and always with a few
cigarettes just for keeping them company out on the white lines in the highway.
Anyway this Denver Slim trucker gave Josh
a ride to Steubenville, where his girlfriend lived (by the way more than one
guy had that concubine set-up although unlike sailors he had never heard of trucker
guys with a girl in every port) and left him off at Katy’s Diner. Katy’s, at
the truck stop just out there on the outside of town, one of the best trucker
diners between the East Coast and the Mississippi always with a bevy of trucks
idling away while their drivers feasted of Katy’s pot roast, and, of course,
that bread pudding, heated, with whipped cream to cut the taste. Gave Josh a
dinner too before he left (probably the meat loaf which was both hearty and filling
in addition to the bread pudding). That was where he met Angelica, a waitress
at Katy’s slumming for the summer while school was out, who had wanderlust in
her eyes and who had an eye for him the minute he came through the door, an eye
when he came through the door not because he was great looking but because he
looked like a hippie and just then, she a small town girl who had not much
experience in the world, the hippie world starting to form a cohort in the
American night, was looking for such an adventure. The times were such that
that scenario was being repeated in many out of the way spots among those who
were yearning for, well, for something different, although not always
waitresses slumming in Steubenville. Had heard some things that she was curious
about and once he gave a sly smile her way she was intrigued and so they hitchhiked
for a while across the country (there is more introduction to their story than
that, the part about her taking him to her cabin which was provided by the
diner for employees as part of the job and where they “made the roof tremble”
one night before they got on the road but the main thing is they hit the road
together, an unlikely combination if the times had not been out of joint).
He often wondered what had happened to
her, what had happened to darling Angelica, after she had left him on the road
that first time in Moline. Damn Moline of the cheapjack paper walls motel, one
of the many, of the too many “hotel, motel, no tell” places he had found
himself shacked up in which at that time was the wrong place with the wrong
young woman, wrong because he had no dough to get a better place for them to
stay, it had rained for about five days straight forcing them off the mud-caked
roads filled with indifferent drivers and their Midwestern suspicions and wrong
because while she might have been slumming for the summer in Podunk
Steubensville holed up in some transient lowdown employer-provided cabin,
serving them off the arm, and getting propositioned by every trucker under
about seventy, hell, maybe every trucker
that still drew breathe but she was made for satin sheets and white picket
fences and he, well…everybody knows what happened to him.
They had met again after the Moline meltdown
(she had returned to Muncie, Indiana, famed as Middletown in a long ago
sociological study by the Lynds and he by a very circuitous route to southern
California down by La Jolla) out here in California, out in an ocean campground
up near Point Magoo a few months later when she flew out to see him. They had frolicked
on her first time ocean see her almost getting caught in a riptide she was so
excited to see that deep blue sea (that had been her first time on the coast,
the coast which had been their original goal before, what did he call it, oh
yeah, the Moline meltdown). She had wanted,
had desperately wanted, him to settle down with her almost anywhere but he was
still in his rolling stone phase and so they had parted never to meet again
after a few weeks. Except more than a decade later he still wondered about her
fate, wondered whether she got whatever dream she dreamed and hopefully had not
settled for some parent-inspired routine like a lot of other people, guys like
Brad Badger who smoked more dope, drank more wine, fucked more woman and got
into more fixes than anybody else he knew from back then who was now thumping
bibles for dough on the cable television networks telling people swill and calling
for eternal repentance for his youthful sins. Jesus, he had known a ton of guys
like that back then who slipped back into society once the price of staying
outside got too high or the call to home warmths was too great to pass up.
Yeah, they had had a few great weeks
that almost had him going for the white picket fences, almost had him fixed into
making some little white house roof tremble but no. Funny thing was that three
marriages, a few affairs, a few flings later he had finally realized him could
have saved himself heartaches, hassles, and money if he had had the sense that
God gave geese back then and grabbed Angelica with both arms and held on tight.
As Josh thought back to that time
he knew then that she was fine, fine
company, especially after her ding-dong-daddy, him, turned her on to some weed,
you know hemp, you know grass, you know marijuana out here in California. On
the road they had played it cool with dope. She had never tried the stuff since
she was square enough to just like a wine buzz, especially while making love,
and Josh never pressed the issue. With only a few days left before Angelica was
heading back home to Muncie she, get this, she said she wanted to try some marijuana
not having any other name for it, not having been emerged in the lingo-driven
drug culture shorthand. Just wanted to make love after smoking some weed.
Since Josh had been on the California roads
before they met up again he wasn’t holding. But the seaside campgrounds where
they were staying at Magoo, you know right off of the Pacific Coast Highway about
twenty miles above Malibu, in those days was loaded down with car-loads and
van-loads of young stoned highway warriors with plenty of dope and Josh was
able to cadge a couple of joints, big ones, from a long-haired hippie
troubadour guy in a psychedelically-day-glo-painted van who had just brought it
back from Mexico, Acapulco Gold no less (those were the days when you could
bring freaking bricks of the stuff across with just a little caution).
So one night just before the sun went
down they smoked a joint. Angelica, of course like almost every other grass
novice including Josh (Sam who had done grass earlier than he had laughed the
knowing laugh Josh’s first time too) coughed the first few puffs but then
settled into a great night of enjoying her first high. Somehow they connected
on a very high level that night, saw something in the sky that would have been
called “written in the stars” in the old days but the die was cast elsewhere
for them. (He had vaguely heard somewhere that she eventually headed back to
Southern California a couple of years later, done some modelling and some
B-movie extra acting and had married some second-level new wave director but he
never had a chance to follow up since he was East Coast bound then, and had
been East for a long time. And besides by then that die was cast, cast around
his neck in the matter of that first wife who took him for plenty before she
was done.)
But enough of Angelica youth
diversions, longings, maybe better said half-longing for the road, and for a
road not taken because that would not put dent number one in the long overdue
novel everybody expected from him.
Yeah, so he had been writing stuff like
those fluff pieces but million word Jack K. and he really had written or seen a
million words maybe more in his time, yes, maybe more if you counted the
errors, the typos, the false starts, the doodles of any writer or editor,
editors like him who usually re-wrote stuff so that it only had about fifty
percent of what a guy or gal wrote originally but Josh was not going to get
into that, not going to rake Jack K. of all people over the coals when Jack K. had
given him about seventeen chances to come out with a breakthrough novel like
the world had never seen was the way Jack K. put it and that idea secretly
pleased Josh when he was sullen, sullen with some candy up his nose or blocked,
writing blocked not nasal passage blacked if anyone was asking. No question
Jack K., old million word Jack K., hated the idea that Josh would scramble up a
half-baked idea for a five- thousand word mood piece and not give him more. [Hell
Josh told me he tried, almost broke his will and health tried as told me over
many a cold summer beer or a winter whiskey over at Jimmy’s Grille near the
Boston waters when he was in town recently when I asked about it but Josh said
he got the blues or something, couldn’t finish a longer story that he was doing
on a ghost dance vision that he and a couple of other hitchhikers had one time
out in Red Rock out in the New Mexicos, where they almost became warrior-kings
after a heavy bout with queen peyote-Sam].
Josh when he told me the particulars of
that Red Rock story laughed. In truth he had told different guys he knew, Jack
K., Markin, Jimmy Jenkins, old Frankie Riley and Sam, that story about six
different times with six different combinations of thoughts about the meaning
of that experience. Frankly as he found out later everybody had been non-plussed
by that one, wrote it off as just another Josh busted ass run off about some
high-dope ancient ghost warrior vision, wrote it off and one more stick in the
infamous legend of Josh when he was a “bad boy” like about eight million other
guys and gushing on about the subject told more about what it said about Josh
that anything else. The story about smoking dope with Angelica out on the great
pacific ocean, and making the tent tremble with their love offerings, they said
told them more about the real Josh that some “cowboy and injun” fantasy out in
the desert where those guys were probably just as spooked, desert-addled and
thirsty as being on some higher warrior-avenger plane. Still he had to give one
and all, especially Frankie Riley who still was a practicing Catholic or at
least he went to church, if only to placate his wife who wanted him to set a
good example for their three children, chapter and verse about how he was not a
spiritual man. Except for that little problem of being the most spiritual man around,
according to Sam who thought back then he took his dope rations as some communion
wafer surrogate, as some holy grail experience, going back to his old time
Roman Catholic roots which while not formally driving his life for a long time
has given him the mark of Cain no question.
Josh said, emphatically said, he was not
a guy who went for the mumbo-jumbo ( despite the hard fact that for a while he had
actually dated some gypsy fortune-teller, at least that was what she said she
was whom he had met at the state fair in Ventura one late summer coming up to
Frisco from Long Beach, a woman calling herself Madame LaRue like in the old
pinball days and doing a thriving business for a while until her father sent
some low-rent gumshoe to bring her back home to her Wall Street stockbroker
husband who had a different fortune to give her). But that Red Rock ghost dance
night he says he started to think about believing, started to think that the
world had some design, maybe somebody did put it altogether, maybe got some
parts wrong so some people could disapprove, got some parts right so there
might be some design, had some thought to it. Yeah, so Josh flew out to the
coast from Boston having long ago given up the hitchhike road that formed the
basis for a whole bunch of stories that he have written over the years but
which now seemed overblown (although well-paid for and in the running for
various short story awards including a finalist one year to be placed in a best
of the year American anthology of short stories production). Worse, worse by
far, that compilation seemed like a pale imitation of Jack Kerouac who did it
first and did it best because he made a buddy story out of it, made it kind of
sexy too, not in an overt way, like sex sex but more like the romance of the
road intersecting some then current angst than the generation after his, the
guys who came of age in the 1940s and whose who lives were shaped by the Great
Depression and the traumas of World War II and were looking for their own
personal new breeze coming through grabbed onto for dear life.
The worst thing you could tell Josh was
that something, good, bad, or indifferent, was like Kerouac’s. He would go
crazy, saying to all who would listen (or be forced to listen once he got on
his hobby horse) that he was a third-rate hack next to Jack Kerouac. That all
that was fresh, new and better thought out in post-World War II literature up
to the 1960s was branded under the imprimatur of the working-class kid from Lowell
who made big literature out of his crazed boozed up, drugged up, sexed up,
fucked up life (those feeling of insecurity, that inability to commit to much
of anything except cats and memiere). Jack K. almost got his headed handed to
him on a platter one night (Josh is six-two, Jack K. about five six or seven))
when he said his short story about his first hitchhike road ride and meeting of
a couple of guys who he would travel south with was Keroauc-esque. Jesus when Sam
Lowell heard about that happening later he thought the walls of Jericho were
going to come tumbling down, and was surprised they did not.
So yeah Josh who at least had been able
to write some fluff after months of nothing was feeling like the king of the
hill, feeling like he had conquered the block, had turned a corner, with little
pieces about Angelica loves, fierce warrior ghost dances, and the like but
mainly he knew he had to get away from this love business that had had him all
blocked up. Most of his previous blockages had revolved around love interests,
getting into, getting out of, or not having anything to get into or out of one
way or another so his feeling that he had to get away from love was both old
hat and the beginning of wisdom. Although that wisdom never kicked in until
like now he had made a few wrong decisions, decisions like going back to cousin
girl (and seriously thinking about boy, about smack after reading some Nelson
Algren short stories and thinking he would not mind being a ding-dong daddy for
all to see but that moment passed). See how that love thing had twisted old
Josh around, had done so ever since he learned about women, okay, girls and
their charms, this latest chapter of the love business, the Laura business, the
love that drove him back to cousin (and me up a wall what with him calling me
about six times a day at one point) to stop disturbing his sleep, stop kicking his
head with what went wrong.
Christ, the truth is the whole thing
was wrong ( that was my opinion from day one since I was apprised of everything
via e-mail, cellphone, or in person at Jimmy’s Grille more than I wanted),
wrong from day one, maybe hour one and I don’t mean that in a mean-spirited way because Josh in the end, in
the end after he had made a fool of
himself, had almost lost several friends, had been humiliated by her and would
not take that as a sign to let the whole damn thing go, agreed with me, agreed at least that he had handled the whole thing
about as wrong as a love-sick man could do a thing wrong. That was just how it
was, wrong, that was how it had to be given his situation and hers, and he should
have done his usual step away which he had learned to do a little as he got
older. Younger he had played things for keeps, played them hard whether he was
married, or had five girlfriends, asked for no quarter and gave none, had no
back off in him when he got his wanting habits on, but he had been intrigued
(that was always the way it started, always some little quirk that a woman had
that got his head spinning). Intrigued
by the fact that she had come from our hometown (I did not know her back then although I may have run into her the
summer after high school down in Hullsville where a local dance hall ran
weekend rock and roll concerts for teenagers which when we compared notes after
I met her at Jimmy’s Grille with Josh one night she said she also had gone to),
old fogy North Adamsville, right close to Lowell, to the Merrimac river of
life, the father of rivers to get us roving. See Josh was for all his six
million words, all his now well- known bravado, all the flimflam around him
was, with me I admit, the co-winner of the strike out king of the Class of
1964. So the intrigued hook on this one was the mere fact they had been in the
same graduating class together (and given that weak reason why I thought the
whole thing was wrong from the beginning since I still had painful memories of
the “stuck-up” girls who like her who would not give us raggedy ass boys from the
wrong side of the tracks the time of day then, or now either, at least that was
my feeling.)
So Josh had been intrigued by the idea
that that he would finally have a North Adamsville woman and that conquest would
challenge, would put paid, would exorcize, the bad tides of his youth. And it
was nice for a while, clandestine meetings, out of the way places dinners
arguing over what and what not to eat, yeah, it was nice, nice too to hit the
sheets when the time came for that. Josh told me a funny story about the first
time they thought about hitting the sack, or at least her feelings that it was
their time. Josh invited her over to his hotel room one night after he had been
at some all-day conference up in Portland, Maine and made some kind of remark
about sex or something, something kind of off the cuff. She took this to mean
that she was to stay the night. Josh still a bit unsure about where he wanted
to go with the relationship after he had actually wrote to, talked to, had
dates with a North Adamsville classmate was confused about the future. So she
arrived at his room bearing wine and food, she got frisky but Josh was
flabbergasted. He figured the night for a dinner, some drinks and then sent her
off home. That is what happened but she was not happy about the situation
because she had packed an overnight bag and had fed the cats. That’s not the
funny part though. The next week Josh had another conference up in Portland and
he had originally decided to go up and back without staying at a hotel. At some
point during that day he had decided that they should hit the sheets. He called
her up, asked her if she was busy, and when she said “no” he told her to pack
an overnight bag and to make sure to feed those cats. Josh said they had a
great evening.
But then it began to unravel, got to be
a squeeze on Josh’s goodwill, got to be her (understand “they” when you say she
on this one) dwelling on the need for them to make plans , have a future, have
that future blueprinted and spec’d out. He flipped out one night when she began
talking about a retirement place out in Bordega Bay in California even though
he had no current resources to do so and she had three years before she could
retire and he could not figure out why under those circumstances that they had
to have a plan. So sure he got mad, sure he, as he told me at Jimmy’s one night,
he raged against the night (I think Josh was trying to channel some Dylan Thomas
poem about going gentle into that goodnight although Thomas was talking about
raging against the inevitable lost battle against death but maybe he was onto
something but don’t make too much of that since Josh was in his cups when he
was throwing down that gauntlet, sure she had her own set of rages, raging against
that same night, raged herself into breaking things up and that’s when the Josh hurt came in, that when
as the song goes, “that’s when the heartache begins.” See Josh finally figured
out well after it was too late that she had been good for him, he knew she was
good for him, she knew she was good for him but he had that rage, had that
wanderlust thing about keeping distances, about appearances and so at the end, his
end when she closed the door on the affair it ended with a bang not a whimper. He
said he wished that he had said that little nugget in reverse but some high
Anglican poet-king, Eliot I think he said, beat him to it, beat him to writing
the phrase although that didn’t change the hard fact that the thing ended with
a bang, a banging of shut-out doors.
And so to aggravate matters in the
aftermath he connected with his old time “cousin” connections. Guys like Marin
City Mitch. Connections that had started
in the early 1970s when he spend some time running dope from Mexico to
California to raise money for various
political defense funds that were starving for cash when the hammer when down
on the 1960s but guys were still in jail for being on the right side of the
angels when it counted. It had been easier coming across in those days if you
were not stupid or greedy trying to get over the border with an over-sided load.
Later he would make the connections to keep body and soul together, him and his
old friend Peter Markin who had been stupid and greedy and had wound up face
down in some dusty dirt back alley in Sonora when a drug deal went bust, his
righteous brothers Josh called them and after that, after he could hardly keep
his nasal passages clear he was eating so much coke, that is when Jack K. told him
that maybe the shack in Todo El Mundo would stir the cure, would get him out of
his funk, and get him well enough to write more than some simple-simon idea
that he was recycling from old time North Adamsville stories. Hell the last
mood piece he submitted to Jack K. (Jack K. by the way along with Lawrence ran
a small but prestigious press that had started Josh and many others on the road
to literary promise and Josh always gave Jack K. and Larry first nibble at
anything he wrote as pay back for the breaks they had given him (and had
continued to give him during his lean times whether he would acknowledge it or
not) was about visions of high school, old North Adamsville High days back in
the 1960s which he had been thinking about because of her, had been thinking about whether those youthful dreams
that we all had, those humongous appetite dreams, those fistful of cloud dust
dreams ever came true like he was some fairy godfather granting wishes in
absentia.
And people were supposed to buy in that,
buy into Josh’s fantasy that he could change the past just by writing a new
script about what went on back then ( I already mentioned about our hard times
with the girls and that is enough on that issue.) Hold on a minute, okay. So there
he was, here he was going to use some ancient King Neptune sea breeze to talk his
way through. Josh said this to me one night at Jimmy’s Grille to give you an
idea of how empty his tank was and I quote “Jesus why doesn’t Jack K. just
leave it go for a while and let me go belly to belly with some girl with
faraway eyes. I wrote about her once, who am I kidding I have spent my whole
life writing about the various far away eyes, hers, as they have come up. First
maybe that Rosalind all fair- skinned and blue-eyed and unapproachable down in
North Adamsville childhood projects days and on and on until the one I should
have been kinder too, took for granted could not love could not protect against
the outside storms or the inside Japan seas swirling around her heart. Could
not as they say, as the sociologists of the modern angst say, as the
psychiatrists say, “commit,” could not provide her the emotional comfort,
sureness that would have let her grow, would have let us grow but no I had to
test the waters, had to snub for that short tryst that wound up, or could have
wound up busting us, or maybe still will and so I sit here with my mirror, my
razor blade and my handkerchief waiting for the swirling winds inside my heart
to settle and then tell dear Jack K. I am well. Not well enough to fight my
inner demons for new words, for some big humankind idea, for some godhead love,
some maidenhead love, for some marked truth the world has not known at least
not known like that other Jack, Lowell Merrimac Jack wrote to ease his own
pains, wrote about his Maggie, his alter ego Jack, his pussy cat sadness Jack
in some hunkered down cabin just like the fugitive one that I am in now.” I
could not have paraphrased or written it any better so you know my brother can
work his magic if he gets a handle on something.
And thus to Todo El Mundo and that
rainy night cabin to go cold turkey on some dope flame out. It got so bad at that cabin that Josh somehow
drifted up the road to a cabin where the elderly couple had a telephone and he
called me (collect of course although that is not as mean as it sounds since
plenty of times I had to reverse the changes myself when I was down in the
ditch) in order to tell me the following. I need to quote again not to avoid
litigation Josh is not built that way but to avoid never hearing the end of it
if I paraphrased because I did not get the essence of what he meant, Christ.
“Jesus if I don’t get out of here now I
will scream, will set this valley aflame with huge noises that will have the
timid tenants who live their silly lives out here among the canyons and the
pure water creeks, fearing mountain lions, fearing moaning beached whales,
fearing some rain-soaked wash fearing some mad monk daddy has come to do them to
do them in. And, laugh, the salesman, the real estate agent from civilized
Carmel had said, had almost guaranteed that Todo El Mundo would be a quiet way
to end their days, with swishing tides and gentle wind canyons keeping
civilization out, or at least at arm’s length. Well they bought into the
proposition and as another stone-cold junkie one said “in for a dime, in for a
dollar,” no, my brain is creaking, that was some Russian guy who wanted to
build the new world on the ashes of World War I (to give each worldwide war
its’ now proper name), some guy who wound up in the Vorkuta when the head man [Stalin]
pulled the hammer down, no, that stone-cold junkie said “buy the ticket, take
the ride.” And that is what they got but Jesus I swear I have to get out of
here, get to hear some human voices overriding the ripped rain, sharing and
breaking bread, maybe some soft-felt wine and sugared loaves of bread, a warm
woman to replace the empty spaces now even though I will only be looking at
place-holders, maybe not even that. The rain looks like it is letting up maybe
some sun will come through. I will read a little from this book of life left
here by somebody who was San Francisco City Lights bookstore- crazed, beat
writer-crazed, stone-drunk crazed because it is that small drunk book Big Sur that Lowell Jack K. wrote when
he was coming off, or going into another bender, poor big-heated Jack, Jack of
the two-million words even when the bastard was stone-ass drunk and me here
with just a couple of short ideas, a few mood pieces of third-rate quality to
quench the days. Damn.”
The rain eventually stopped after Josh
called this in. The snow in his brain continued to fall. Jimmy from Frisco
showed up along with his girlfriend, Sarah, Sarah of the long legs, lithe body
and who had those faraway eyes that have nurtured his whole life, nurtured his
whole “woman who I can’t figure out” life. They have stopped by because Jack K.
has asked them look in on Josh on their way to Santa Barbara where Sarah’s
parents live and where some second cousin was to be married. Sarah looks at Josh
in mock disapproval, or he assumed mock disapproval, since she hated Josh stories,
thought they were male ego, male one-ups-man ship, male envy, male well just
about everything that is wrong in the male condition in the 20th century.
See the way Josh put the matter later Sarah was too young to have known what
male buddy-bonding was when men actually ruled the roost, for good or evil, too
young to have known that certain guys held out to certain women (a woman like
Sarah went though Josh’s mind but Jimmy was not the kind of guy who liked to,
unlike say Lowell Jack K., share his women friends if that is where the action
seems to be heading). His mind travelled back to Joyell, Joyell of the many
sleepless night dreams who was the first woman to tell him that certain women,
and she fancied herself as such a woman, were attracted to
break-your-heart-dangerous men, that the potential for adventure turned them on
no matter what the outcome might eventually be. Yeah, Joyell rode that
dangerous wave for a while, tried to tame Josh (and later me but that is
another story for another time), tried to get him off liquor (high-end whisky just
like now when he was in the dough with a chaser, low-end stuff when he was
broke, no chaser except maybe water) then when that was what he had a habit for.
Then she got “religion,” found out that
Josh could be, was by the way he treated her just like the other four women he
was involved at the time, just another bum-of-the-month but found out more
about herself, found that she was built for sunny days, for white picket
fences, and for calm nerves. And so she followed that cluttered trail of those
women with faraway eyes who found that there were other prospects more to their
liking. One woman, a woman whom he had a brief fling with, although it did not
start out that way, started out like maybe what they had, or were going to have, was written in the
wind, called Josh an “acquired taste,” no kidding he said when he told me the
remark, and later one sad ass drug-filled night he thought about that idea and
figured she was probably right, still it hurt, hurt knowing that everything
written in the wind or not was going to blow away like so much dust and that he
would have to find solace in borrowed cabins, flop house floors, vacant studio
apartments (hell, not even a refrigerator) and the handouts of strangers.
That Sarah though no question disturbed
his dreams so let’s let him tell what he was thinking (aside for how he was
going to get Jimmy out of the picture without being bald-faced about it and
without letting it get back to Jack K. who would go crazy thinking he was
tramping out another woman adventure just when he was on the cusp of some
decent work). Here is what he wrote:
“But as I sit here thinking, talking a
blue streak after being left out here in the damn wilderness to dry out I sense
that Sarah might have a touch of that dangerous man syndrome if she put her
mind to it. She was one of those foxy Brahmin intellectuals, or was at Vassar
or Barnard in the old days, before she heard about the post-beat thing that was
getting a hearing in some quarters after about a thirty year cultural drought
and so although I know she was far too young for me, would probably do
intellectual somersaults over my head when I was in some drug-induced funk the
idea had some objective merits. She reminds me of a WASP version of this poet
girl that I knew, a Chicago Jewish girl who wanted to break out of the
brown-eyed, brown-haired, brown-skinned (she meaning swarthy, not black or
anything like that, like many of the guys she grew up with and knew from her
whole damn life) world and into the pale blued-eyed world that she thought Josh
represented. Like he was some flamed-out hobo king that she had to try, has to
taste (whether to see if that became an “acquired taste” I do not know. So while
Josh was daydream talking and Sarah was fixing things up a little (whether out
of some ancient genetic code mantra or because Jack K. told her that he was on
a toot and therefore the place would be a mess and Jack K. did not like messes
she would not say when he asked her why she was doing the housewifely thing).
The things fixed up, everything that could be placed in its rightful place, or
at least in some hidden stack or cubbyhole Jimmy maybe sensing some connection
between them, sensing that Sarah might want to try a dangerous man before she
settled down to some holy dream of domestic stability called her outside, out
into the enclosed front porch where he, loud enough for Josh to hear but not
loud enough to bring the fear to the neighbors that any sound from him evoked
decided that they should move on, should make sure they have plenty of time to
mossy down the coast at their leisure. And although he could not hear what was
said between them he sensed when they came back to say their good-byes that she
wanted to stay a bit longer. Josh gave her one long look as they departed and
she looked back when the car that Jimmy was driving pulled out of the muddy
driveway. He made a mental note though and maybe a real note to be sure to
check her out in the city and maybe flame her up by giving her a presentation
copy of one of his stories. That might have been the drugs talking or thinking
though.”
So Josh was left alone again, left
alone to dip into the white flash on the mirror in front of him, left alone to
face the coming next storm which he could see forming a couple of miles out in
the Pacific. He yelled some cry of the banshee that he needed to get out of the
rain, needed to get back to rain on the roof cities, get back to Frisco town
and his friends, or those friends who still abided by that honorific. He could
see the lights going on in the far hill
cabins that get the darkest part of the loss of light first and whose residents
were probably right that minute latching doors, making sure the locks were
locked and hoping, fear-driven hoping that the cry of the banshee stayed down
in the lower valley. Hell Josh hoped so too. He tried to get on an even keel
with a few lines of cousin up his nose, to get back to a book left by some mad
monk that Jack K. lent the place out to in some previous life and while the
thing is a little testy, a little tipsy for a serious read Josh sense that that
Jack author if he had been there with him would have imbibed some serious
cousin or else would have murdered him in his sleep as a goodwill gesture.
The way that book went, the story-line
when Josh told me about it later in Harvard Square where he was looking in the
Harvard Book Store for other works by
that same author later, sounded very like what was happening to Josh. See the
guy there, a guy named Dubois or some French name not French French but from
Quebec like a lot of others who came
down to work the mills around Lowell, Lawrence, Nashua, Manchester and those
others along the river banks of New England,
was strung out from success (he
had written the big generational book and the young would not leave him alone
to sulk in his middle age-hood driving him crazy with their asking for advice
like he was some advice columnist for
the lost cats of the post- World War II generation, something Josh said tongue
in cheek I assume since he had his own minor successes to live down, had to
worry about. Success coming from a craze that he started, about the lonely ass
road in America (that part Josh got as I
have explained previously having done his own share of the road travel which
formed the basis for many of his early short stories although never cogent
enough to work into a novel, certainly not a generational novel).
But between the liquor and the sudden
fame he got lost, the guy lost in what he was trying to write about and so
tried to drink himself silly, tried to write stuff, tried to be at one with sea
(had actually written a fair sound sonnet based on just sitting on some Big Sur
beach sand just up the road from where Josh was in Todo El Mundo and grooving
unto infinity on the sound of waves, on
the sounds of the sands, of the sounds in his head from that experience. Yeah,
that made sense to Josh since he remembered once again that one time, one time
with dream Angelica after he met her, after they had travelled the middle
American road together for a while, after they had a meltdown in Moline (Jesus,
Moline of all places), after she left the road in forsaken cornfield Iowa and
after going home to rest had afterward come out to see him in California, down at Point
Magoo about a couple of hundred miles from where he was right then and after a
couple of days of dope and love-making they sat one stoned day on the beach
there (they were actually camped out in a tent like they had done in their tramping days several months before) and they sat
most of the afternoon and late into the evening silent, not highway traffic,
planes overhead, fellow beach-dwellers dwelling silent but silent between themselves
as they made their own sonnet to the sea (as she parted for the last time to go
home to normalcy she said she would never forget that they had made the sea “rumble”
that night). He had written that sound poem out one time but threw it somewhere
because it sounded when spoken like just another Village/North Beach café
throwaway gag.
The moon was down as Josh stood there inside the front door of this freaking
cabin for the fifth day Jimmy and his lovely Sarah (a whiff of some au natural
fragrance she wore or emitted, something out of fresh mowed and trimmed Elysian
field of lilac bluster, some picturesque Walt Whitman idyllic scene, some mix
of bee-stung grasses and flowers still hovered around the rooms, the thought of
that scent, those thoughts of those long-legged thighs dabbed with that
fragrance maddened his sleep the previous night). Hence his extreme desire to vacant
those digs and head back in Frisco, back to bright lights, back to faraway
ocean sounds and ships ahoy blaring horns warning of fogbound dangers, back to
Golden Gate views from some North Beach digs, wine, women, dope, poetry flowing
freely and him the center of oohs and ahhs as it was now his forlorn station
and maybe to write a few lines about that stinking sty of a place, the lush
green abyss, this canyon echo depth, this bridge too far and neighbor too close
place where crazy in his head Jack K. sent crazy in Josh’s head in order to
chill out, black out, freeze out, wash out, dry out or whatever was in his
head. So Josh was leaving, leaving not the three or four week leaving that Jack
K. expected, hell that he expected when Jack K. presented the idea and he just
had to get away. Yeah, that was a story of Josh’s life into itself, the
leavings of the last urban man as he shirked all duties, abandoned all hope,
dwelled in the human sink and then he remembered the first time, the first shirk, the first
childhood shirk that started the train rolling. Let’s let Josh tell this one,
okay:
“Funny it was meant as punishment, no,
that is not right, that was the result that led to the newly formed
characteristic, this shirking everything that it was possible to shirk (later
homes left with no explanation, apartments vacated in the dead of night for
lack of funds or some reason not remembered, wives abandoned for no reason, or
for the next best thing that came along and intrigued him like she, the last
one whom he was recovering from had intrigued him, and friends left in the
lurch for any of about seven reasons but mainly some honest treachery). It is
hard to believe even now how that one event could have twisted the great
mandela around like that and it had taken me many years and quite a few shrink
sessions to work that out, or at least get a small handle on the situation
(that shrink idea brought forth as a last gasp bid by wife number two to
understand what made him tick. That effort was in vain to save the marriage for
there were other problems that could not be surmounted but I stuck with the
therapy for a while to get a grip on that shirking thing of mine).
What had happened back then, back in
sixth grade elementary school, back when I had the first understanding that
girls were not just bothersome but interesting, yes, it was about the time in
our working- class neighborhood when boys began to distinguish between “sticks
(those girls who had not gotten their womanly shape)” and shapes (those who
had) was that I had to show myself off
in a dance, a square dance of all things and the partner in that dance was a
damsel, a twelve-year old damsel, a girl
that I had my first serious crush on and so to impress her like young guys will
do who have not been around the block with women yet I did something to my
clothes, altered them, cut them in such a way that I would carry out the motif
of the dance better. Make me look like a Farmer Brown (she, Rosalie of my
enflamed heart and disturbed sleep had commented that I looked like a real
farmer and said it with a smile as a compliment). The dance routine as all such things then was done in order to show
our parents (mainly mothers since fathers were busy working hard to provide for
their kids in those one parent working days) that we were not just wasting our
days away at school and that we were trainable. Now in those days, all through
school we, our family, was dirt poor barely above what today would be welfare
people (my parents would have been far too proud to accept such “charity” although we were threatened with the county
farm more than once). My mother flipped out right there in the auditorium as
she should have seeing that I only had two or three pairs of pants and we had
no resources to replace a silly boyish mistake that need not have happened (I
understood that part even then and did not need therapy to figure that out),
and hence the punishment (a week grounded and my father brought in to berate me
for one of the few times that he was called in to do such duty). Then though
all I could think of was not being able to pursue that fair maid twelve- year
old damsel even though I had done nothing wrong toward her. I was the laughing
stock of the class and she avoided me like the plague the rest of the school
year, and that followed me into junior high as well for a while. So shirk and
skulk became a way of life to avoid life’s embarrassments and hard edges. Funny
how some thirty years later that kind of stuff comes up when you are desperate
to leave some stinking hellhole behind.”
So Josh needed a plan, a plan how to get out of there, get
out of damn Todo El Mundo, but also a plan on what to do when he got back to Frisco besides replenish his cousin
supply then dwindling and he said if Jack K. knew that he had taken a small
stash with him, about an eight-ball he would freak, would go crazy calling Josh
every name in the book but in his condition when leaving Frisco he figured that
he had to taper off not go cold turkey, not out there in the damn wilderness,
not out in the tree-lined canyons that he had not explored since about boy scout time and he had, had tapered off
having husbanded his supply and only taken hits when he really needed them or
when Jimmy and Sarah were there and he figured that he could “make” Sarah if
she was a little high and grateful. Yeah, he still thought she could have been
had by a dangerous man, a dangerous man like him before she tumbled to some
sharp tech guy or some silly stockbroker. He knew that was her fate, it was in
her old time WASP blood, in her DNA-etched code, that they go back to the tribe
once they have tried the edge, lived dangerous for a minute, and needed to have
a safe place to land.
The Frisco plan was kind of forming in his
head, see Jack K., see if he will buy into Josh’s idea that he write say some one
hundred pages maybe less but he didn’t think more because he did not think that
the subject of his drying out in the squalid oceans before some zen magic
transformed him into a sainted mystic or Saint Francis do-gooder would take the
ink and so maybe a long short story or slight novella to be placed in some
magazine under Jack K.’s imprimatur and then hit the road for another look at
the road from the advantage of years, and wisdom or whatever you get when you
realize (and have for about twenty years) that the road is no longer a
sanctified place but filled with obviously dangers and pitfalls which only have
gotten worse since the world is no longer hung up with guys pulling thumbs out
on vacant stretches of Pacific Coast highways, trucks or cars, usually some old
refurbished painted yellow brick road
school bus or some VW bus stopping and then some honey of the moment stepping
out along with you and she looks so fresh and like dewy flower that the trucker
is licking his chops and the van driver is starting to roll a joint-for her.
Yeah so that was the plan and that plan
included stopping off at Miranda’s and grab the stuff he had stored there. (In
the interest of the truth when Josh told me he had planned to stop at Joyell’s
I saw red. I have been interested, disturbed my sleep interested in her since
Josh first introduced us some thirty years ago and have always wished that if
she fell off of Josh’s train she would give me a tumble but, damn, she never
fell off, never despite all the break-ups. Josh knows my feelings for Joyell
but unlike other women we have shared one way or another, starting way
back when we met and fought over
Butterfly Swirl out in the California merry pranksters highway yellow brick
road bus, but Joyell was always “private.” Damn again.) He was going to
Joyell’s , maybe staying at her place for a couple of nights and although they had
not been together for a long time in the biblical sense, or the boy-girl sense
either he had been thinking about her down there in hell’s backdoor and
remembered back to when they met way back when he was just a struggling,
struggling something in Harvard Square in some semi-exotic (for the Square) gin
joint and she all dressed in white, all black hair and brown eyes, with dancing
slippers on and those fatal far away eyes and he could not take his eyes off of
her and they met and drank a couple of drinks and he shook her hand softly at
the end and that won her heart. Later that night when he thought about her as
he went home alone (it was not clear whether Josh although never adverse to a
sexual first date when he felt that the thing was a fling thought twice about
the question and decided to play it cool or she gave off scent that you had not
better trifle with me or more probable he made a couple of moves and she said
wait and thus the home alone and the disturbed sleep) he thought “written in
the stars” kind of thoughts and those were the thoughts he thought down there in
Todo El Mundo as he prepared his escape (mingled in with Sarah lust thoughts
after doing a couple of lines).
Yeah Josh thought maybe a few days with
sweet baby Joyell the only woman who took enough time to try to understand him,
tried to shake him out of his sulky moods, tried to curb his depressed
thoughts, tried to be his “sweet baby” if that was what he wanted and when she
did give it up after a while (and he with her but they had about thirty
re-couplings along the way, damn) and that was just the way it was-and is, he
thought. Hey, maybe a week this time, maybe more.
But getting out of there, getting out
of hell hole Todo El Mundo with no easy way to get out first was the ticket he needed.
Hey Josh admitted to himself that once he got into a place, Joyell’s, some
flash and crash minute flame’s, some forsaken hotel, some arroyo down south complete with cardboard box
home, he had a hard time leaving. He knew he had to get out of there, get out
of there quick but he still had some lassitude about moving, start thinking
that that old shack maybe could stand him for another week or so since Jack K. went
to the trouble of fixing him up there and said stay put for as long as it took,
the bastard but even if he did stay he was going to pack his bags (light work, not
much different from the old hitchhike days despite the passage of time), put that
unfinished Big Sur book in his
rucksack to finish and maybe steal a few ideas from a guy before his time but
who spoke of his (our) time, of his hour of need, spoke of spiritual dryness,
spoke of endless running creeks and thrashing waters against hard found rocks
crumbling as we speak. (Josh once explained to me, trimming a little closely on
the copyright laws, that every author, great or small, “borrowed” ideas from
other authors and prettied them up for the next set to borrow, or so that was
his theory). So, yeah, pack up his spoons, his forks, his knives that he took
everywhere not knowing whether he would be in some arroyo some tonight or
sitting in some leafy suburban villa feted and lionized by some well- heeled
matron. Packed up his floss (mother said
never leave home without the floss because otherwise mucho dental bills and unlike
some other advice that one worked out), packed his extra pairs of socks,
shirts, underwear, flippers, a rucksack full of stuff to journey at a moment’s
notice. Been doing that basic routine so long that drinks, drugs, dilemmas,
darlings, damn anything can’t change the format-ready at the minute, ready to head
west on the old hitchhike trail, ready
today, maybe to head north to Frisco, head north to figure out what was eating
at him, to figure what words would not come today that needed to come, to figure
out why that deathless canyon walled pyre was driving him crazy, to figure out
why about fifty-seven varieties of good-hearted, good-healing women could not
go the distance with him, to figure out too why he could not go the distance
with them, and to figure out why Todo El Mundo suck waters and craven creeks held no mystery for him. Just
then he saw a light, headlights, hey, a light, a car’s headlights coming up the
road from some lonesome cabin below, maybe he could grab a ride.