He and I and Ed Dunkel ran across the tracks and hopped a freight at three individual points; Marylou and Galatea were waiting in the car.
We rode the train a half-mile into the piers, waving at switchmen and flagmen.
They showed me the proper way to get off a moving car; the back foot first and let the train go away from you and come around and place the other foot down.
They showed me the refrigerator cars, the ice compartments, good for a ride on any winter night in a string of empties.
"Remember what I told you about New Mexico to LA?" cried Dean.
"This was the way I hung on… "
We got back to the girls an hour late and of course they were mad.
Ed and Galatea had decided to get a room in New Orleans and stay there and work.
This was okay with Bull, who was getting sick and tired of the whole mob.
The invitation, originally, was for me to come alone.
In the front room, where Dean and Marylou slept, there were jam and coffee stains and empty benny tubes all over the floor; what's more it was Bull's workroom and he couldn't get on with his shelves.
Poor Jane was driven to distraction by the continual jumping and running around on the part of Dean.
We were waiting for my next GI check to come through; my aunt was forwarding it.
Then we were off, the three of us – Dean, Marylou, me.
When the check came I realized I hated to leave Bull's wonderful house so suddenly, but Dean was all energies and ready to do.
In a sad red dusk we were finally seated in the car and Jane, Dodie, little boy Ray, Bull, Ed, and Galatea stood around in the high grass, smiling.
It was good-by.
At the last moment Dean and Bull had a misunderstanding over money; Dean had wanted to borrow; Bull said it was out of the question.
The feeling reached back to Texas days.
Con-man Dean was antagonizing people away from him by degrees.
He giggled maniacally and didn't care; he rubbed his fly, stuck his finger in Marylou's dress, slurped up her knee, frothed at the mouth, and said,
"Darling, you know and I know that everything is straight between us at last beyond the furthest abstract definition in metaphysical terms or any terms you want to specify or sweetly impose or harken back… " and so on, and zoom went the car and we were off again for California.
8
What is that feeling when you're driving away from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing? – it's the too-huge world vaulting us, and it's good-by.
But we lean forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies.
We wheeled through the sultry old light of Algiers, back on the ferry, back toward the mud-splashed, crabbed old ships across the river, back on Canal, and out; on a two-lane highway to Baton Rouge in purple darkness; swung west there, crossed the Mississippi at a place called Port Alien. Port Alien – where the river's all rain and roses in a misty pinpoint darkness and where we swung around a circular drive in yellow foglight and suddenly saw the great black body below a, bridge and crossed eternity again.
What is the Mississippi River? – a washed clod in the rainy night, a soft plopping (from drooping Missouri banks, a dissolving, a riding of the tide down the eternal waterbed, a contribution to brown foams, a voyaging past endless vales and trees and levees, down along, down along, by Memphis, Greenville, Eudora, Vicksburg, Natchez, Port Alien, and Port Orleans and Port of the Deltas, by Potash, Venice, and the Night's Great Gulf, and out.
With the radio on to a mystery program, and as I looked out the window and saw a sign that said USE COOPER'S PAINT and I said,
"Okay, I will." we rolled across the hoodwink night of the Louisiana plains – Lawtell, Eunice, Kinder, and De Ouincy, western rickety towns becoming more bayou-like as \\e reached the Sabine.
In Old Opelousas I went into a grocery store to buy bread and cheese while Dean saw to gas and oil.
It was just a shack; I could hear the family eating supper in the back.
I waited a minute; they went on talking.
I took bread and cheese and slipped out the door.
We had barely enough money to make Frisco.
Meanwhile Dean took a carton of cigarettes from the gas station and we were stocked for the voyage – gas, oil, cigarettes, and food.
Crooks don't know.
He pointed the car straight down the road.
Somewhere near Starks we saw a great red glow in the sky ahead; we wondered what it was; in a moment we were passing it.
It was a fire beyond the trees; there were many cars parked on the highway.
It must have been some kind of fish-fry, and on the other hand it might have been anything.
The country turned strange and dark near Deweyville.
Suddenly \\e were in the swamps.
"Man, do you imagine what it would be like if we found a jazzjoint in these swamps, with great big black fellas moanin guitar blues and drinkin snakejuice and makin signs at us?"
"Yes!"
There were mysteries around here.
The car was going over a dirt road elevated off the swamps that dropped on both sides and drooped with vines.
We passed an apparition; it was a Negro man in a white shirt walking along with his arms up-spread to the inky firmament.
He must have been praying or calling down a curse.
We zoomed right by; I looked out the back window to see his white eyes.
"Whoo!" said Dean.