He Gave It All
Away-With Tom Paxton’s Song “She Is My Reason To Be” In Mind
By Freeman Steel
He had it all. Jeffrey
Davis had it all although until he lost it, until he gave it away, he did not
realize that he had had it all. By the way for the curious who thing that they
recognize the named party to this piece Jeffrey Davis is not the real name of our
protagonist but like the Jeffrey Davis that you do think you know from his
various screen exploits our Jeffrey Davis has his own similar reasons for using
an alias here. Part of the reason is that he although not connected in any way
with the screen, with movies or television is well-known in the literary field
for his work and works of criticism. Part of the reason to be completely candid
is that he was not sure that the statute of limitations might not have run out
of various small crimes and legal evasions in his past so that publishing his
real name might not bring to notice in the circles that he formerly ran in to
haul his ass into court, especially the ex-wives he left high and dry. And part
of the reason was that he just plain asked me as a long-time friend (and one
time victim of his youthful cons) to not use his name as a test of my loyalty
after all these years if I wanted the story. I did and so Jeffrey Davis it is.
But enough of
subterfuges and diversions around identity confidentiality and on to the reason
why our boy, my old corner boy from, well, I had better not say from when, what
times or where since his beginnings are well known to part of the public and
that would defeat his purpose in forcing me at virtual reality gunpoint to
guard like a sacred temple his real name, had lost what he had, had given it
all away. Jeffrey Davis’ wife, Lorraine Daley not her real name either since if
you knew that name you, you the literary sort would figure out who that old
corner boy from wherever he was from back in the day was and I would be out a
“think piece” story about the pitfalls of statutory neglect (not a crime, a
legal crime anyway, and not the reason that Jeffrey was worried about statute
of limitation run outs), had recently left Jeffrey high and dry. Had left him
for her own reasons mostly according to Jeffrey’s frail understandings in the
matter to “find” herself whatever that might have meant to her.
Left in the middle of
the night one night a few months back bag and baggage as they use to say around
the old neighborhood when some married partner high-tailed it out of town with
no explanation (in those unenlightened days either male leaving female or
female leaving male but not one leaving one of the same gender just so you know
we are talking about it has been a while back since that phrase had fresh
currency). NO public explanation but it did not take much to figure out that
some stay married forever woman had had enough of the abuse, physical and
mental, from some bastard of a drunken husband (and father which is how we
began to figure such abnormal leavings, abnormal for the old neighborhood), or
that some husband had done the high-tailing with some barroom floozy. In any
case Lorraine left and left no forwarding address-none. Had discontinued her
previous cellphone and presumably gotten a new one although Jeffrey speculated
that in the process of “finding” herself Lorraine may have decided to forgo the
modern conveniences if she had wound up in some ashram as she had talked about,
had threatened to do in previous versions of the downward slide of their
relationship.
Despite the several
month time lapse Jeff had not really reconciled himself as to what had caused
him to forget that he had had it all with Lorraine, had given it all away. Then
one night he called me on his cellphone, called me Sid Lawrence if I have not
introduced myself before and looking over the previous paragraphs it appears
that I have not although the important information, Jeff and my connection for
the old neighborhood I did give you and wanted me to come over to his house in,
well it is a big city so I can say it and he will proof this piece anyway, Los
Angeles, over in the hills and canyons and sit with him while he tried to tell
me how he had by his own freaking hand, his term, lost it all. I wasn’t sure
that I wanted to hear what he had to say but in the interest of old corner boy
friendship I agreed.
We met at his
well-appointed bungalow a few nights later and after a couple of stiff belts of
well-preserved scotch he sat me down in one of his comfortable (and expensive)
easy chairs and sat himself down on his long couch to speak about what ailed
him about what was on his mind. Jeff whatever his literary skills, whatever
line of pure, unmitigated bullshit he could throw at male or female, but mostly
female and whatever the gods had granted him in the wisdom department was not a
reflective man, did not dwell on the past, conveniently forgot the past (as in
the big time con for several thousand hard-luck earned dollars he ran by me
back in the days when for what he called “literary” purposes he ran tens of thousands
of somebody else’s dollars up his snowman nose) and lived in the moment. I
could tell though by his demeanor (and his willingness to sit me down after
only two stiff scotches) that he had been thinking about some past stuff, about
his character which was so explosive, so unstable at times that giving it all
away in the past was coming back to haunt his dreams-or his desires.
When he began talking
about Annie Dubois, his first real love, his, well, I had better not mentioned
marriages and leave everything as affairs so the smart reader will not figure
out who Jeff really is and we would have wasted good time and cyberspace
creating a ruse, I knew he been in a sullen introspective mood. That sullen
part no literary device on my part Jeff really did get sullen which showed up
remarkably clearly on his face when he had to think through some ramification
of some off-the-wall thing he had done. He just hid that trait these days
better in public than when I first noticed his reaction back in sophomore year in
high school.
What I know is that he had not mentioned her name in front of me
for years, hell, decades so I knew that sullen look was real. I should
mentioned here before I tell you how Jeff related his feelings about how he had
loved and lost that young woman, had given it all away, that I was half, maybe
more, in love with her myself, had seen her first at a college mixer but she
after looking me over on a few dates had decided that my roommate Jeff was more
to her liking (they called them the now rightly taboo “smokers” in those days
for some unknown to me reason but probably because since everybody was hopped
up to find some companion the air was filled with anxious smoke, anxious
Marlboro, Salem, Newport, Winston smoke). So I was not disappointed those many
years when he did not mention her name. That night my heart raced at the
mention of her name just like it had when I was some smitten schoolboy. Damn,
Jeff.
I never, because I did
not want to know and you can understand why now, knew the details of the
break-up between Jeff and Annie. Painfully I listened as Jeff went through the
litany. He and Annie stuck like glue together all through college. They
essentially lived together for much of that time after freshman year in an apartment
in Cambridge (not the real location but close-what I do for Jeff in the
interest of a story) during the school year and at various seaside resorts in
the summer. A classic 1960s romance with the sword of Damocles hanging over it.
That sword –the raging crazy and unjust Vietnam War that we were all very aware
of, we males anyway, since its’ seemingly endless travails put despite huge and
growing protests and calls from even many governmental quarters to stop the
damn thing placed us all at risk of being drafted. Eventually as the reader can
probably figure out by now Jeff’s number came up with no further student
exemption and no serious reason not to accept induction he allowed himself to
be drafted. That “allowed” his term later for what had happened to him.
(Although he and Annie were prominent anti-war rally attendees he did not
consider himself under the rules for such status and under his Catholic
upbringing a conscientious objector and under no circumstances was he going to
jail or to Canada the other options that faced almost every young male then. I
was 4-F, unfit for military duty, because of a crippling knee accident as a kid
and the Army may overlook lots of disabilities but they want their charges to
be able to march- and march great distances- as necessary)
Once he got his draft
notice Jeff began to panic. Started worrying about things like never having
been married if he was killed in Vietnam. Not having any family to mourn him
(he had been estranged from his parents for many years, had lived with his
grandmother who just before senior year had passed away). Stuff like that that
if the times were different he would have not given a fuck about, my term. So
he and Annie tied the knot, got married. A bad move, a “war-time marriage” bad
move that they could have seen coming if they had watched just a few old time
movies like I did although even that might not have helped.
He eventually like some
horrible nightmare coming to pass as things developed against him was trained
as an infantryman, the only thing in the late 1960s the Army cared about
training since the attrition rate with one year deployments in Vietnam was
eating up personnel at a fast clip. And
at just that time the only place in the great wide world that a U.S. infantryman
was heading for was that hell hole Vietnam. So after his training and month’s
leave Jeff had orders issued to him report to Fort Lewis in the state of Washington
for transfer to Vietnam. He panicked, or maybe if not panicked then reverted
back to his corner boy ways-or part of the corner boy ethos-lie like a bastard
and hope things worked out
After his leave was up
he suddenly told Annie that he had through political connections had had his
orders changed and he was to report to Fort Dix in New Jersey where he was to
be discharged under some administrative regulation so that he could go work on
the staff of a Congressman in Washington, D.C. Annie was elated (and relieved)
by the news and ready to run to D.C. with him for their new future. The whole
scenario seemed very reasonable since Jeff had worked like seven dervishes for
the late Robert Kennedy’s presidential campaign and even as he was telling me
this over forty years later I could see where if he had told me the same story
then I would have bought it hook, line and sinker.
The problem though, and
I would have been harassed like crazy for believing one word of the story back
in corner boy days when he (and we) thought nothing of lying about everything
from having sex with hot girls to how much we paid for a shirt (usually nothing
since we stole stuff like that), it was all bullshit. He had just unilaterally
taken himself AWOL for that whole time, the whole few months. The way the whole
thing exploded was that the FBI had come to Annie’s parents’ house (he had used
their address with their permission on his Army information file) looking for
him, AWOL him. He did turn himself in and faced the music. That however was the
last straw for Annie and her parents. Especially Annie since as it turned out
he had done a number of unsavory or illegal things unknown then to me during
their courtship. She left him to go back to her parents’ home. Eventually Annie
got a civil divorce and as a Catholic member of a church who at the time, maybe
now too, had very strict rules about remarriage after a divorce finally got a
church annulment from Jeff. As for Jeff he on his return to the Army did the
honorable thing and refused to go to Vietnam and wound up in the stockade for
his efforts. But the details of that story are for his next serious giving it
all away and besides this is about his first serious love life, his giving it
all away when the deal went down. Typical Jeff though a heel one day a hero the
next.
As Jeff started to explain why he had never
forgotten about Annie I urged him to change the subject and something in my
tone told him that I meant it, meant that I too had not forgotten Annie and
what she had meant to me back then. So he went on about his thunder-struck
whirlwind relationship with Josie, Josie Stein, a woman who I had never met
because I had stayed on the West Coast while Jeff after a wild man run with me
and a few others from the old neighborhood at various times there returned to
the East. Josie would be the first, and most serious, of a string of young
Jewish women that would checkerboard through his later relationships. Fine
women who he never fully understood either. This meeting up with Josie had come
about because like half of the things that Jeff did in his life he was on a
vengeance roll to obliterate all the stupid things he had done by letting
himself be inducted in the Army.
As I mentioned before
after blowing up the world, the Annie world, with his fears Jeff when he went
back into the Army made up his mind not to go to Vietnam, not to be complicit.
He paid the price with two special court-martials for disobeying orders and did
altogether something over a year in an Army stockade (partly broken up by what
amounted to house arrest in between times). He wound up though getting out of
the Army with an honorable discharge to boot as a conscientious objector
through a writ of habeas corpus which his civilian lawyer had managed to
convince a federal court judge was due him. As part of his struggle, his
righteous struggle okay, a number of anti-war activists and Quaker-types came
to his defense, publicized what he was doing and held vigils and other events
in and around the Army base where he was being held. This was a time when some
elements of the anti-war movement began, after the war was dragging out to what
seemed like eternity, to pay attention to the soldiers, the “grunts” who were
carrying out the war on the ground. So Jeff became for a while before he and I
left for California and some mad but harmless dope-enhanced adventures up and
down the Pacific Coast Highway something of a poster child for the local
anti-war G.I. resistance. Some of that reputation would stick for a while as
the war finally wound down.
Josie had been born in
Manhattan but had gone in order to get away from the city, her parents, her
Jewish roots you name the reason to the University of Wisconsin which the way
Jeff told it was a magnet for New York City and Long Island Jewish kids looking
to break out back then, maybe now too. While there she had become radicalized,
had become somewhat prominent in the campus anti-war, anti-imperialist and the
beginnings of the women’s liberation movement. After graduating from Wisconsin
she had decided to go to graduate school in Boston (at BU for the School of
Social Work). While in Boston she again took up her political causes in the
red-hot milieu there. Jeff had met her a couple of months after he had returned
East at an anti-war conference, no, I have that wrong, at a meeting to discuss
having another in the long line of anti-war conferences. This one to take place
in a rural conference center which had been converted from being a farmhouse
about fifty miles from Boston and had donated by some movement “angels” for
such purposes. Such things happened with some frequency then.
When Jeff was
introduced to speak about his G.I resistance experiences he spied Josie in the
audience. During a break he, she, maybe both at the same time Jeff had
forgotten that detail took dead aim at each other (that part he remembered)
although nothing occurred that night. Their big moment came when both had
showed up at the rural site for the conference and they were almost inseparable
for the rest of the weekend. So started the torrid off and on again five year love
affair between Jeff and Josie. According to Jeff they had their ups and downs,
mostly toward the end downs over Josie’s increasingly incessant desire to
settle down, to have a family, to be “at peace” with herself as the turbulent
‘60s shuttered down around them. Jeff in an uncharacteristic denial of some
kind of realty thought that the whole experiment would go on forever and he
could ride that wave into old age.
Funny about that, funny
that he would still remember that he had felt that way those many years ago
since I remember that we had both distinctly understood that after May Day,
1971 when we foolhardily thought we could close down the U.S. government if
they would not close down the war and had been militarily defeated, had taken
tens of thousands of arrests, we had reached an ebb tide of the movement, had
passed the high water mark.
That however was not
what laid the relationship between Jeff and Josie low but yet another of the
contradictions of the angel-devil Jeffrey Davis. Jeff, and I could see where
this came from since I had thoughts along those lines a little myself, had a
hard-edged chip on his shoulder, thought that because he (and I) had come up
“from hunger,” from utter poverty, from
the old projects ethos that the world owed him a living, or something like
that. I got over it by high school, maybe a little later but Jeff took much
longer, maybe still hasn’t gotten over it even now but if you want to
understand why he periodically would give it all away you have to know that
hard sad fact. The particulars this time were that he had gotten seriously into
dope, first speed and mescaline and later as it became more popular and more
available cocaine. Now we all did our fair share of dope during the 1960s,
usually marijuana and other light-headed drugs like hashish and peyote buttons.
This cocaine thing though was something else, had Jeff by the balls. Had laid
him low. This is where all his past kind of came up and bit him. He couldn’t or
wouldn’t stop. Kept it from Josie mostly although at the end she asked him
point blank if he was on heroin or something. Of course a young guy with no
dough, or not much, not working much with a habit that called out to him needed
dough. So he ran though everybody, everybody including leaving me high and dry
out on the Coast broke as well, who he knew for dough using every lame excuse
in the book to get the dough-and of course would pay it back just as soon as he
could.
He didn’t hit Josie
until the end, or near the end. That was when he was seeing some hopped-up Judy
on the side who kept him company in his wanting habits. Once he started asking
Josie for money for this and that after a while she started getting wise, found
out about the Judy from some friend and that was that. She broke off with him
in a minute once she knew the score (prodded he said by her parents who were
not happy that she was serious about a non-Jewish guy). She got an unlisted
number, moved from their sometimes shared apartment which she paid for, or
rather her parents paid for. The end. Gave it all away for a razor, mirror and
a rolled up dollar line.
Which brings us back to
Lorraine and Jeff’s newly discovered troubled mind and why he gave it all away
once again when she left to find herself.
Or whatever had driven her away from him. After a number of years out in
the West Coast trying to “find” myself I finally headed back to the East, back
to Boston via Riverdale after my last stormy marriage that ended not well. Not
well enough that despite being broken as a smashed soda bottle, splintered if
you like that better, I desperately hitchhiked across the country to get away
from that last horrible scene (which was partly, a big partly, due to my own
“from hunger” thinking that the world owed me a living from getting deeply in
debt to the gambling gods). But enough of that this is Jeff’s story and my
travails can wait another day. I just wanted to point that out since this
return to the East meant that I was back in touch after several year’s absence
with Jeff which was deep in the throes of his stormy relationship with
Lorraine. So unlike Josie whom I had to take Jeff’s word on I knew Lorraine
although unlike Annie of blessed memory I had no half in love thoughts about
her.
Jeff quickly went
through how he had met Lorraine since I knew most of the details of the story.
He had been half in and half out of a bunch of relationships which had not
worked out for several Jeff reasons when one night he happened to be in a bar
in Harvard Square, a country bar if you can believe that, when there had been
outlaw country music minute around the East after people tired once again of
the way rock was heading. That “if you can believe that” reflecting the hard
fact that Jeff, whose father hailed from the South, having been inundated with
that stuff around the house hated that music with a passion growing up. One
night by accident he had heard the late Townes Van Zandt at a local club and
something in his mournful lyrics and presence “spoke” to Jeff. So for a while
he was hopped up on the outlaws, took in the scene. You know it had to be some
kind of fad if in high Brahmin Harvard Square a couple of country music bars
had sprung up and so he headed to one of them, Jackie Speed’s, it is no longer
there, to hear some local country band which was making some noise about
breaking out and heading to the bright lights of Nashville and stardom. He sat at the bar as was his habit when he
was “single” in order to survey the scene and maybe an hour in and a couple of
Anchor Steam beers put away, a beer we had both developed a habit for in Frisco
town, he spied Lorraine all in white sitting at a far corner table with a
couple of girlfriends. When one of those girls came pass the bar he mentioned
to her that he thought her friend in white was cute, pretty, something like
that and to tell her his message. And she was. A delicate flower, thin, longest
black hair and a nice smile that he could see even across the room. His type no
question. That girlfriend not knowing what else to say told him to go over and
tell her himself. For some reason Jeff usually only a little shy about meeting
a young women for the first time definitely did not like to approach a table
full of women to make his play. His play was one on one, in a barroom scene
maybe sitting on a stool at the bar. While they took peep-a-boo meaningful
glances at each other nothing happened that night.
A few weeks later Jeff
was sitting at that same bar one night getting ready to listen to what somebody
had told him previously was the “next best thing” band coming along the
pipeline to break-out Nashville this young woman who he had not recognized came
and sat down at the stool next to his and ordered a drink, an exotic one if he
remembered correctly. She was thin, pretty, had longish black hair and a nice
smile. When it came time for her to order another one Jeff offered to buy her a
drink. She accepted and that kind of broke the ice as they found that they had
several interests in common around art, literature and folk music which was in
a serious hiatus then and the reason that she, Lorraine, was taking in the
insurgent country scene that was beginning to take root around town. She had
been brought up in the country, on a farm in upstate New York so she had heard
country music, a different old-timey Grand Old Opry kind of music, and also
hated it growing up. Toward the end of evening as they were chatting like two
jaybirds Lorraine asked Jeff if had ever seen her before. He said no he did not
think so. Lorraine then reminded him of the night several weeks before when
they had done their peek-a-boos. She also told him that she had looked for him
a couple of times later when she had been at the bar. Funny Jeff said he had
done the same. Fate and an exchange of telephones numbers got them on the start
of their torrid romance.
For a while, a fairly
long while by Jeff’s standards things went along pretty well. They had plenty
in common not only in the like to do things department but a commonality in the
ways they grew up, the hard family lives they had faced as kids. Especially
around holidays when under normal circumstances there was to be a shared joy
they shared a “get through the day” kinship. Like a lot of Jeff things though
known to me or not something in his inner life, something in his vacant soul,
his term, would not leave him alone. Would not let him break from his youthful
defensiveness inherited from years of mother harassment and ill-will when
dealing with Lorraine. In the end, or rather toward the end, the last few years
anyway for a whole assortment of reasons from health to intimations of
immortality to use the phrase from the poet’s brain he shut down, became
unresponsive to Lorraine’s needs. They lived together but were in his words two
ships passing in the night (and hers as well as they tried to figure out what
had gone wrong before she had had to flee for her own sanity). Both tried to do
the right thing, sought various forms of help but in the end she had to flee,
had to find herself and what she wanted to be in this wicked old world. Jeff
didn’t like the idea, actually hated it but he grudgingly respected her for her
bravery in striking out on her own. Had to admit that rather than his lying,
cheating, stealing destruction of his companionships he could be accused of
statutory neglect-a more serious social crime, much more serious.
One night many weeks
later after I had written up this piece from the notes I had taken over the
course of time we were sitting in Jimmy’s Grille, symbolically enough only a
couple of blocks from where Jeff and Lorraine had met at the now defunct Jackie
Speed’s, when he was feeling kind of melancholy since her birthday was
approaching, something they both made a big deal over he mentioned a song he
had heard recently. A song by the old-time folksinger Tom Paxton whom he had
liked to hear in the old folk minute days and whom the local college folk
station was playing to honor his birthday (forget his age), She Is My Reason To
Be. Yeah, too late Jeff figured that hard truth out. But maybe he should have also
checked out Bob Dylan’s I Threw It All Away because once again he had thrown it
all away.
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