I was surprised then because he swayed and rocked in disbelief; it was
almost  as  if I had hit him. I say I was surprised because I thought  those
boys had more cool than that. But then, they wipe their asses too.
     "Father, talk to me," an old man said, "you can talk to me."
     The priest went over to the old man and everybody was happy.
      Thirteen  days  from  the night I entered I was driving  a  truck  and
lifting packages weighing up to 50 pounds. A week later I had my first drink
-- the one they said would kill me.
      I  guess someday I'll die in that goddamned charity ward. I just can't
seem to get away.
     5.
      My  luck  was  down  again and I was too nervous  at  this  time  from
excessive  wine-drinking; wild-eyed, weak; too depressed to  find  my  usual
stop-gap, rest-up job as shipping clerk or stock boy, so I went down to  the
meat packing plant and walked into the office.
     "Haven't I seen you before?" the man asked.
     "No," I lied.
      I'd  been there two or three years before, gone through all the  paper
work, the medical and so forth, and they led me down steps four floors  down
and  it had gotten colder and colder and the floors had been covered with  a
sheen of blood, green floors, green walls. He had explained the job to me --
which was to push a button and then from this hole in the wall there came  a
noise like the crushing of fullbacks or elephants falling, and here it  came
--  something dead, a lot of it, bloody, and he showed me, you take  it  and
throw it on the truck and push the button and another one comes along.  Then
he  walked  away.  When he did I took off my smock, my  tin  hat,  my  boots
(issued three sizes too small) and walked up the stairway and out of  there.
Now I was back.
     "You look a little old for the job."
     "I want to toughen up. I need hard work, good hard work," I lied.
     "Can you handle it?"
     "I'm nothing but guts. I used to be in the ring, I've fought the best."
     "Oh, yes?"
     "Yeah."
     "Umm, I can see by your face. You must have been in some fierce ones."
      "Never mind my face. I had fast hands. Still have. I had to take  some
dives, had to make it look good."
     "I follow boxing. I don't recall your name."
     "I fought under another name. Kid Stardust,"
     "Kid Stardust? I don't recall a Kid Stardust."
      "I  fought in South America, Africa, Europe, the islands, I fought  in
the tank towns. That's why there're all these gaps in my employment record -
- I don't like to put down boxer because people think I am kidding or lying.
I just leave the blanks and to hell with it."
      "All right, show up for your med. at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow and we'll  put
you to work. You say you want hard work?"
     "Well, if you have something else . . ."
      "No, not right now. You know, you look close to 50 years old. I wonder
if I'm doing the right thing? We don't like you people to waste our time."
     "I'm not people -- I'm Kid Stardust."
     "O.k., kid," he laughed, "we'll put you to WORK!"
     I didn't like the way he said it.
      Two  days  later I walked through the passgate into the  wooden  shack
where I showed an old man my slip with my name on it:
      Henry  Chinaski and he sent me on to the loading dock -- I was to  see
Thurman. I walked on over. There were a row of men sitting on a wooden bench
and they looked at me as if I were a homosexual or a basket case.
     I looked at them with what I imagined to be easy disdain and drawled in
my best backalley fashion:
     "Where's Thurman. I'm supposed to see th' guy."
     Somebody pointed.
     "Thurman?"
     "Yeah?"
     "I'm workin' for ya."
     "Yeah?"
     "Yeah."
     He looked at me.
     "Where's yor boots?"
     "Boots? Got none," I said.
      He reached under the bench and handed me a pair, an old hardened stiff
pair.  I  put them on. Same old story: three sizes too small. My  toes  were
crushed and bent under.
     Then he gave me a bloody smock and a tin helmet. I put them on. I stood
there  while  he  lit  a cigarette, or as the English might  say:  while  he
lighted  his  cigarette.  He threw away the match  with  a  calm  and  manly
flourish.
     "Come on."
     They were all Negroes and when I walked up they looked at me as if they
were Black Muslims. I was over six feet but they were all taller, and if not
taller then two or three times as wide.
     "Hank!" Thurman hollered.
     Hank, I thought. Hank, just like me. That's nice.
     I was already sweating under the tin helmet.
     "Put 'im to WORK!!"
      Jesus christ o jesus christ. What ever happened to the sweet and  easy
nights?  Why  doesn't  this happen to Walter Winchell who  believes  in  the
American  Way?  Wasn't I one of the most brilliant students in Anthropology?
What happened?
      Hank took me over and stood me in front of an empty truck a half block
long that stood in the dock.
     "Wait here."
      Then  several  of the Black Muslims came running up  with  the  wheel-
barrows  painted  a  scabby and lumpy white like  whitewash  mixed  in  with
henshit. And each wheelbarrow was loaded with mounds of hams that floated in
thin, watery blood. No, they didn't float in the blood, they sat in it, like
lead, like cannonballs, like death.
      One  of  the boys jumped into the truck behind me and the other  began
throwing  the hams at me and I caught them and threw them to the guy  behind
me  who  turned and threw the ham into the back of the truck. The hams  came
fast  FAST and they were heavy and they got heavier. As soon as I threw  one
ham and turned, another was already on the way to me through the air. I knew
that  they  were  trying  to break me. I was soon sweating  sweating  as  if
faucets  had  been turned on, and my back ached, my wrists  ached,  my  arms
hurt,  everything hurt and I was down to the last impossible ounce  of  limp
energy.  I could barely see, barely summon myself to catch one more ham  and
throw  it,  one  more ham and throw it. I was splashed  in  blood  and  kept
getting  the  soft  dead heavy flump in my hands, the  ham  giving  a
little like a woman's butt, and I'm too weak to talk and say, "hey, what the
HELL'S  the  matter with you guys?" The hams are coming and I  am  spinning,
nailed  like a man on a cross under a tin helmet, and they keep  running  up
barrows  full of hams hams hams and at last they are all empty, and I  stand
there swaying and breathing the yellow electric light. It was night in hell.
Well, I always liked night work.
     "Come on!"
      They took me into another room. Up in the air through a large entrance
high  in  the far wall one half a steer, or it might have been a whole  one,
yes, they were whole steers, come to think of it, all four legs, and one  of
them  came  out  of the hole on a hook, having just been murdered,  and  the
steer stopped right over me, it hung right over me there on that hook.
      "They've  just killed it," I thought, "they've killed the damn  thing.
How  can  they tell a man from a steer? How do they know that  I  am  not  a
steer?"
     "ALL RIGHT -- SWING IT!"
     "Swing it?"
     "That's right -- DANCE WITH IT!"
     "What?"
     "O for christ's sake! George come here!"
      George  got under the dead steer. He grabbed it. ONE. He ran  forward.
TWO.  He  ran  backwards. THREE. He ran far forward. The  steer  was  almost
parallel to the ground. Somebody hit a button and he had it. He had  it  for
the  meat  markets  of the world. He had it for the gossiping  cranky  well-
rested stupid housewives of the world at 2 o'clock in the afternoon in their
housecoats, dragging at red-stained cigarettes and feeling almost nothing.
     They put me under the next steer.
     ONE. TWO. THREE.
      I  had  it.  Its  dead bones against my living bones, its  dead  flesh
against my living flesh, and the bone and the weight cut in, I thought of  a
sexy  cunt sitting across from me on a couch with her legs crossed high  and
me with a drink in my hand, slowly and surely talking my way toward and into
the blank mind of her body, and Hank hollered, "HANG HER IN THE TRUCK!"
      I  ran  toward  the truck. The shame of defeat taught me  in  American
schoolyards  as a boy told me that I must not drop the steer to  the  ground
because this would prove that I was a coward and not a man and that I didn't
therefore  deserve much, just sneers and laughs, you had to be a  winner  in
America,  there wasn't any way out, you had to learn to fight  for  nothing,
don't  question, and besides if I dropped the steer I might have to pick  it
up,  and  I  knew I could never pick it up. Besides it would  get  dirty.  I
didn't want it to get dirty, or rather -- they didn't want it to get dirty.
     I ran it into the truck.
     "HANG IT!"
      The hook which hung from the roof was dull as a man's thumb without  a
fingernail. You let the bottom of the steer slide back and went for the top,
you  poked the top part against the hook again and again but the hook  would
not  go  through.  Mother ass!! It was all gristle  and  fat,  tough,
tough.
     "COME ON! COME ON!"
     I gave it my last reserve and the hook came through, it was a beautiful
sight,  a  miracle, that hook coming through, that steer  hanging  there  by
itself   completely  off  my  shoulder,  hanging  for  the  housecoats   and
butchershop gossip.
     "MOVE ON!"
      A  285 pound Negro, insolent, sharp, cool, murderous, walked in,  hung
his meat with a snap, looked down at me.
     "We stays in line here!"
     "O.k., ace."
      I  walked out in front of him. Another steer was waiting for me.  Each
time I loaded one I was sure that was the last one I could handle but I kept
saying
     one more
     just one more
     then I quit. Fuck it.
     They were waiting for me to quit, I could see the eyes, the smiles when
they  thought I wasn't looking. I didn't want to give them victory.  I  went
for  another  steer.  The player. One last lunge of the  big-time  washed-up
player. I went for the meat.
     Two hours I went on then somebody hollered, "BREAK."
     I had made it. A ten minute rest, some coffee, and they'd never make me
quit.  I walked out behind them toward a lunch wagon. I could see the  steam
rising  in  the  night  from  the coffee; I  could  see  the  doughnuts  and
cigarettes and coffeecakes and sandwiches under the electric lights.
     "HEY, YOU!"
     It was Hank. Hank like me.
     "Yeah, Hank?"
     "Before you take your break, get in that truck and move it out and over
to stall 18."
      It  was the truck we had just loaded, the one a half block long. Stall
18 was across the yard.
      I  managed to open the door and get up inside the cab. It had  a  soft
leather  seat and the seat felt so good that I knew if I didn't fight  it  I
would soon be asleep. I wasn't a truck driver. I looked down and saw a half-
dozen gear shifts, breaks, pedals and so forth. I turned the key and managed
to  start  the engine. I played with pedals and gear shifts until the  truck
started  to  roll and then I drove it across the yard to stall 18,  thinking
all  the while -- by the time I get back the lunch wagon will be gone.  This
was  tragedy to me, real tragedy. I parked the truck, cut the engine and sat
there a minute feeling the soft goodness of that leather seat. Then I opened
the door and got out. I missed the step or whatever was supposed to be there
and I fell to the ground in my bloody smock and christ tin helmet like a man
shot.  It  didn't hurt, I didn't feel it. I got up just in time to  see  the
lunch  wagon driving off through the gate and down the street.  I  saw  them
walking back in toward the dock laughing and lighting cigarettes.
      I took off my boots, I took off my smock, I took off my tin helmet and
walked  to  the  shack at the yard entrance. I threw the smock,  helmet  and
boots across the counter. The old man looked at me:
     "What? You quittin' this GOOD job?"
      "Tell 'em to mail me my check for two hours or tell 'em to stick it up
their ass, I don't give a damn!"
      I walked out. I walked across the street to a Mexican bar and drank  a
beer  and then got a bus to my place. The American school-yard had  beat  me
again.
     6.
     The next night I was sitting in a bar between a woman with a rag on her
head  and a woman without a rag on her head, and it was just another bar  --
dull,  imperfect, desperate, cruel, shitty, poor, and the small  men's  room
reeked  to make you heave, and you couldn't crap there, only piss, vomiting,
turning  your head away, looking for light, praying for the stomach to  hold
just one more night.
      I  had been in there about three hours drinking and buying drinks  for
the  one without the rag on her head. She didn't look bad: expensive  shoes,
good  legs and tail; just on the edge of falling apart, but then that's when
they look the sexiest -- to me.
     I bought another drink, two more drinks.
     "That's it," I told her, "I'm broke."
     "You're kidding."
     "No."
     "You got a place to stay?"
     "Two more days on the rent."
     "You working?"
     "No."
     "What do you do?"
     "Nothing."
     "I mean, how have you made it?"
     "I was a jockey's agent for a while. Had a good boy but they caught him
carrying  a  battery into the starting gate twice. They barred  him.  Did  a
little  boxing, gambling, even tried chicken farming -- used to sit  up  all
night guarding them from the wild dogs in the hills, it was tough, and  then
one  day I left a cigar burning in the pen and I burned up half of them plus
all  my good roosters. I tried panning gold in Northern California, I was  a
barker  at  the beach, I tried the market, I tried selling short --  nothing
worked, I'm a failure."
     "Drink up, she said, and come with me."
      That "come with me" sounded good. I drank up and followed her out.  We
walked up the street and stopped in front of a liquor store.
     "Now you keep quiet," she said, "let me do the talking."
     We went in. She got some salami, eggs, bread, bacon, beer, hot mustard,
pickles,  two  fifths  of  good whiskey, some Alka  Seltzer  and  some  mix.
Cigarettes and cigars.
     "Charge it to Willie Hansen," she told the clerk.
      We walked outside with the stuff and she called a cab from the box  at
the corner. The cab showed and we climbed in back.
     "Who's Willie Hansen?" I asked.
     "Never mind," she said.
      Up  at my place she helped me put the perishables in the refrigerator.
Then  she  sat down on the couch and crossed those good legs and  sat  there
kicking  and  twisting an ankle, looking down at her shoe, that  spiked  and
beautiful  shoe.  I peeled the top off a fifth and stood  there  mixing  two
strong drinks. I was king again.
     That night in bed I stopped in the middle of it and looked down at her.
     "What's your name?" I asked.
     "What the hell difference does it make?"
     I laughed and went on ahead.
     The rent ran out and I put everything, which wasn't much, into my paper
suitcase,  and 30 minutes later we walked back around a wholesale fur  shop,
down a broken walk, and there was an old two story house.
      Pepper (that was her name, she finally gave me her name) rang the bell
and told me --
      "You stand back, just let him see me, and when the buzzer sounds  I'll
push the door open and you follow me in."
      Willie  Hansen  always peeked down the stairway to the  halfway  point
where  he had a mirror that showed him who was at the door and then he  made
up his mind whether to be home or not.
      He  decided to be home. The buzzer rang and I followed Pepper  on  in,
leaving my suitcase at the bottom of the steps.
      "Baby!"  he  met her at the top of the steps, "so good  to  see
you!"
      He  was pretty old and only had one arm. He put the arm around her and
kissed her.
     Then he saw me.
     "Who's this guy?"
     "O, Willie, I want you to meet a friend of mine. This is The Kid."
     "Hi!" I said.
     He didn't answer me.
     "The Kid? He don't look like a kid."
     "Kid Lanny, he used to fight under the name Kid Lanny."
     "Kid Lancelot," I said.
      We went on up into the kitchen and Willie took out a bottle and poured
some drinks. We sat at the table.
      "How  do  you like the curtains?" he asked me. "The girls  made  these
curtains for me. The girls have a lot of talent."
     "I like the curtains," I told him.
      "My  arm's  getting stiff, I can hardly move my fingers, I  think  I'm
going  to  die, the doctors can't figure what's wrong. The girls  think  I'm
kidding, the girls laugh at me."
     "I believe you," I told him.
     We had a couple of more drinks.
      "I  like  you," said Willie, "you look like you been around, you  look
like you've got class. Most people don't have class. You've got class."
     "I don't know anything about class," I said, "but I've been around."
      We had some more drinks and went into the front room. Willie put on  a
sailing cap and sat down at an organ and he began playing the organ with his
one arm. It was a very loud organ.
      There  were quarters and dimes and halves and nickles and pennies  all
over  the floor. I didn't ask questions. We sat there drinking and listening
to the organ. I applauded lightly when he finished.
      "All  the  girls were up here the other night," he told me, "and  then
somebody hollered, RAID! and you should have seen them running, some of them
naked and some of them in panties and bras, they all ran out and hid in  the
garage. It was funny as hell! I sat up here and they came drifting back  one
by one from the garage. It was sure funny!"
     "Who was the one who hollered RAID?" I asked.
     "I was," he said.
      Then he walked into his bedroom and took off his clothes and got  into
his  bed.  Pepper  walked in and kissed him and talked to him  as  I  walked
around picking the coins up off the floor.
      When  she came out she motioned to the bottom of the stairway. I  went
down for the suitcase and brought it up.
     7.
      Everytime  he  put on that sailor's cap, that captain's  cap,  in  the
morning we knew we were going out on the yacht. He'd stand in front  of  the
mirror adjusting it for proper angle and one of the girls would come running
in to tell us:
     "We're going out on the yacht -- Willie's putting on his cap!"
      Like  the first time. He came out with the cap on and we followed  him
down to the garage, not a word spoken.
     He had an old car, so old it had a rumble seat.
      The  two  or  three girls got in front with Willie, sitting  on  laps,
however they made it, they made it, and Pepper and I got in the nimble seat,
and  she said -- "He only goes out when he doesn't have a hangover, and when
he's not drinking. The bastard doesn't want anybody else to drink either, so
watch it!"
     "Hell, I need a drink."
      "We  all  need a drink," she said. She took a pint from her purse  and
unscrewed the cap. She handed the bottle to me.
      "Now  wait until he checks us in the rearview mirror. Then the  minute
his eyes go back on the road take a slug."
      I  tried  it.  It worked. Then it was Pepper's turn. By  the  time  we
reached San Pedro the bottle was empty. Pepper took out some gum and I lit a
cigar and we climbed out.
      It was a fine looking yacht. It had two engines and Willie stood there
showing  me how to start the auxiliary motor in case anything went wrong.  I
stood  there not listening, nodding. Some kind of crap about pulling a  rope
in order to start the thing.
      He  showed  me how to pull anchor, unmoor from dock, but  I  was  only
thinking about another drink, and then we pulled out, and he stood there  in
the  cabin  with his captain's cap on steering the thing, and all the  girls
got around him.
     "O, Willie, let me steer!"
     "Willie, let me steer!"
      I  didn't want to steer. He named the boat after himself: THE WILLHAN.
Terrible name. He should have called it THE FLOATING PUSSY.
      I followed Pepper down to the cabin and we found more to drink, plenty
to  drink. We stayed down there drinking. I heard him cut the engine and  he
came down the steps.
     "We're going back in," he said.
     "What for?"
     "Connie's gone into one of her moods. I'm afraid she'll jump overboard.
She  won't  speak  to me. She just sits there staring. She can't  swim.  I'm
afraid she'll jump over."
     (Connie was the one with the rag around her head.)
      "Let her jump. I'll go get her out. I'll knock her out, I've still got
my punch and then I'll pull her in. Don't worry about her."
     "No, we're going in. Besides, you people have been drinking!"
     He went upstairs. I poured some more drinks and lit a cigar.
     8.
      When  we  hit  dock Willie came down and said he'd be right  back.  He
wasn't  right back. He wasn't back for three days and three nights. He  left
all the girls there. He just drove off in his car.
     "He's mad," said one of the girls.
     "Yeah," said another.
      There  was  plenty of food and liquor there though, so we  stayed  and
waited for Willie. There were four girls there including Pepper. It was cold
down there no matter how much you drank, no matter how many blankets you got
under. There was only one way to get warm. The girls made a joke of it --
     "I'm NEXT!" one of them would holler.
     "I think I'm outa come," another would say.
     "You think YOU'RE outa come," I said, "how about ME?"
     They laughed. Finally I just couldn't make it anymore.
      I  found  I had my green dice on me and we got down on the  floor  and
started a crap game. Everybody was drunk and the girls had all the money,  I
didn't  have  any  money, but soon I had quite a bit of money.  They  didn't
quite understand the game and I explained it to them as we went along and  I
changed the game as we went along to suit the circumstances.
      That's  how  Willie  found us when he got back -- shooting  craps  and
drunk,  "I DON'T ALLOW GAMBLING ON THIS SHIP!" he screamed from the  top  of
the steps.
     Connie climbed up the steps, put her arms around him and stuck her long
tongue  into  his  mouth, then grabbed his parts. He  came  down  the  steps
smiling,  poured a drink, poured drinks for us all and we sat there  talking
and  laughing,  and he talked about an opera he was writing for  the  organ.
The  Emperor of San Francisco. I promised him I'd write the words  to
the  music  and  that night we drove back into town everybody  drinking  and
feeling  good. That first trip was almost a carbon of every trip. One  night
he  died and we were all out in the street again, the girls and myself. Some
sister back east got every dime and I went to work in a dog biscuit factory.
     9.
      I'm  living in someplace on Kingsley Street and working as a  shipping
clerk for a place that sold overhead light fixtures.
      It  was  a  fairly calm time. I drank a lot of beer each night,  often
forgetting to eat. I bought a typewriter, an old second-hand Underwood  with
keys  that  stuck. I hadn't written anything for ten years. I got  drunk  on
beer  and began writing poetry. Pretty soon I had quite a backlog and didn't
know  what to do with it. I put the whole works into one envelope and mailed
it  to  some  new magazine in a small town in Texas. I figured  that  nobody
would take the stuff but at least somebody might get mad, so it wouldn't  be
wasted entirely.
      I got a letter back, I got two letters back, long letters. They said I
was  a  genius, they said I was startling, they said I was God. I  read  the
letters  over  and over and got drunk and wrote a long letter back.  I  sent
more poems. I wrote poems and letters every night, I was full of bullshit.
      The  editoress,  who was also a writer of sorts,  began  sending  back
photos of herself and she didn't look bad, not bad at all. The letters began
getting  personal. She said nobody would marry her. Her assistant editor,  a
young  male, said he would marry her for half her inheritance but  she  said
she  didn't have any money, people only thought she had money. The assistant
editor  later  did a stretch in a mental ward. "Nobody will marry  me,"  she
kept  writing,  "your poems will be featured in our next  edition,  an  all-
Chinaski  edition, and nobody will ever marry me, nobody, you see I  have  a
deform- ity, it's my neck, I was born this way. I'll never be married."
      I  was very drunk one night. "Forget it," I wrote, "I will marry  you.
Forget  about the neck. I am not so hot either. You with your  neck  and  me
with my lion-clawed face -- I can see us walking down the street together!"
      I  mailed the thing and forgot all about it, drank another can of beer
and went to sleep.
     The return mail brought a letter: "Oh, I'm so happy! Everybody looks at
me  and  they  say, 'Niki, what happened to you? You're RADIANT, bursting!!!
What is it?' I won't tell them! Oh, Henry, I'M SO HAPPY!"
      She  enclosed some photos, particularly ugly photos. I got  scared.  I
went  out  and got a fifth of whiskey. I looked at the photos, I  drank  the
whiskey. I got down on the rug:
      "O  Lord or Jesus what have I done? What have I done? Well, I'll  tell
you  what, Boys, I'm going to devote the rest of my life to making this poor
woman  happy! It will be hell but I am tough, and what's a better way to  go
than making somebody else happy?"
     I got up from the rug, not too sure about the last part. . . .
      A week later I was waiting in the bus station, I was drunk and waiting
for the arrival of a bus from Texas.
      They  called the bus over the loudspeaker and I got ready  to  die.  I
watched  them coming through the doorway trying to match them  up  with  the
photographs. And then I saw a young blonde, 23, good legs, live walk, and an
innocent  and rather snobbish face, pert I'd guess you'd call her,  and  the
neck was not bad at all. I was 35 then.
     I walked up to her.
     "Are you Niki?"
     "Yes."
     "I'm Chinaski. Let me have your suitcase."
     We walked out to the parking lot.
      "I've been waiting for three hours, nervous, jumpy, going through hell
waiting. All I could do was to have some drinks in the bar."
     She put her hand on the hood of the car.
     "This engine's still hot. You bastard you just got here!"
     I laughed.
     "You're right."
      We  got into the old car and made it on in. Soon we were mar- ried  in
Vegas, and it took what money I had for that and the bus fare back to Texas.
      I  got  on  the bus with her and I had thirty-five cents  left  in  my
pocket.
     "I don't know if Poppa's gonna like what I did," she said.
     "0 Jesus o God," I prayed, "help me be strong, help me be brave!"
      She  necked  and squirmed and twisted all the way to that small  Texas
town.  We arrived at 2:30 a.m. and as we got off the bus I thought  I  heard
the bus driver say -- "Who's that bum you got there with you, Niki?"
     We stood in the street and I said, "What did that busdriver say? What'd
he say to you?" I asked, rattling my thirty-five cents in my pocket.
     "He didn't say anything. Come on with me."
     She walked up the steps of a downtown building.
     "Hey, where the hell you going?"
      She put a key in the door and the door opened. I looked above the door
and carved in the stone were the words: CITY HALL.
     We went on in.
     "I want to see if I received any mail."
     She went into her office and looked through a desk.
     "Damn it, no mail!! I'll bet that bitch stole my mail!"
     "What bitch? What bitch, baby?"
     "I have an enemy. Look, follow me."
      We  went down the hall and she stopped in front of a doorway. She gave
me a hairpin.
     "Here, see if you can pick this lock."
     I stood there trying. I saw the headlines:
      FAMED  WRITER  AND  REFORMED PROSTITUTE FOUND  BREAKING  INTO  MAYOR'S
OFFICE!
     I couldn't pick the lock.
     We walked on down to her place, leaped into bed and went at what we had
been working toward on the bus.
     I'd been there a couple of days when the doorbell rang about 9 a.m. one
morning. We were in bed.
     "What the hell?" I asked.
     "Go get the bell," she said.
     I climbed into some clothes and went to the door. A midget was standing
there,  and  every once in a while he shook all over, he had  some  type  of
malady. He had on a little chauffeur's cap.
     "Mr. Chinaski?"
     "Yeah?"
     "Mr. Dyer asked me to show you the lands."
     "Wait a minute."
      I went back on in. "Baby, there's a midget out there and he says a Mr.
Dyer wants to show me the lands. He's a midget and he shakes all over.
     "Well, go with him. That's my father."
     "Who, the midget?"
     "No, Mr. Dyer."
     I put on my shoes and stockings and went out on the porch.
     "O.k., buddy," I said, "let's go."
     We drove all over town and out of town.
      "Mr.  Dyer owns that," the midget would point, and I'd look, "and  Mr.
Dyer owns that," and I'd look.
     I didn't say anything.
      "All those farms," he said, "Mr. Dyer owns all those farms and he lets
them work the land and they split it down the middle."
     The midget drove to a green forest. He pointed.
     "See the lake?"
     "Yeah."
      "There's  seven  lakes in there full of fish. See the  turkey  walking
around?"
     "Yeah."
      "That's  wild turkey. Mr. Dyer rents all that out to a fish  and  game
club  which  runs  it. Of course, Mr. Dyer and any of  his  friends  can  go
anytime they want. Do you fish or shoot?"
     "I've done a lot of shooting in my time," I told him.
     We drove on.
     "Mr. Dyer went to school there."
     "Oh, yeah?"
      "Yup, right in that brick building. Now he's bought it and restored it
as a kind of monument."
     "Amazing."
     We drove back in.
     "Thanks," I told him.
     "Do you want me to come back tomorrow morning? There's more to see."
     "No, thanks, it's all right." I walked back in. I was king again. . .
      And  it's good to end it right there instead of telling you how I lost
it,  although it's something about a Turk who wore a purple stickpin in  his
tie  and had fine manners and culture. I didn't have a chance. But the  Turk
wore  off  too and the last I heard she was in Alaska married to an  Eskimo.
She  sent  me a picture of her baby, and she said she was still writing  and
truly happy. I told her, "Hang tight, baby, it's a crazy world."
     And that, as they say, was that.