CANNERY ROW
by John Steinbeck
All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced
in whole or in part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission. For
information address: The Viking Press, Inc., 625 Madison Avenue , New York ,
N.Y. 10022 .
For
ED RICKETTS
who knows why or should
The people, places and events in this book are, of
course, fictitious and fabrications.
Cannery Row
Cannery
Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating
noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream. Cannery Row
is the gathered and scattered, tin and iron and rust and splintered wood,
chipped pavement and weedy lots and junk heaps, sardine canneries of corrugated
iron, honky tonks, restaurants and whore houses, and little crowded groceries,
and laboratories and flophouses. Its inhabitants are, as the man once said,
"whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches," by which he meant
Everybody. Had the man looked through another peephole he might have said,
"Saints and angels and martyrs and holy men," and he would have meant
the same thing.
In
the morning when the sardine fleet has made a catch, the purse-seiners waddle
heavily into the bay blowing their whistles. The deep-laden boats pull in
against the coast where the canneries dip their tails into the bay. The figure
is advisedly chosen, for if the canneries dipped their mouths into the bay the
canned sardines which emerge from the other end would be metaphorically, at
least, even more horrifying. Then cannery whistles scream and all over the town
men and women scramble into their clothes and come running down to the Row to
go to work. Then shining cars bring the upper classes down: superintendents,
accountants, owners who disappear into offices. Then from the town pour Wops and
Chinamen and Polaks, men and women in trousers and rubber coats and oilcloth
aprons. They come running to clean and cut and pack and cook and can the fish.
The whole street rumbles and groans and screams and rattles while the silver
rivers of fish pour in out of the boats and the boats rise higher and higher in
the water until they are empty. The canneries rumble and rattle and squeak
until the last fish is cleaned and cut and cooked and canned and then the
whistles scream again and the dripping, smelly, tired Wops and Chinamen and
Polaks, men and women, straggle out and droop their ways up the hill into the
town and Cannery Row becomes itself again--quiet and magical. Its normal life
returns. The bums who retired in disgust under the black cypress tree come out
to sit on the rusty pipes in the vacant lot. The girls from Dora's emerge for a
bit of sun if there is any. Doc strolls from the Western Biological Laboratory
and crosses the street to Lee Chong's grocery for two quarts of beer. Henri the
painter noses like an Airedale through the junk in the grass-grown lot for some
part or piece of wood or metal he needs for the boat he is building. Then the
darkness edges in and the street light comes on in front of Dora's--the lamp
which makes perpetual moonlight in Cannery Row. Callers arrive at Western
Biological to see Doc, and he crosses the street to Lee Chong's for five quarts
of beer.
How
can the poem and the stink and the grating noise--the quality of light, the
tone, the habit and the dream--be set down alive? When you collect marine
animals there are certain flat worms so delicate that they are almost
impossible to capture whole, for they break and tatter under the touch. You
must let them ooze and crawl of their own will onto a knife blade and then lift
them gently into your bottle of sea water. And perhaps that might be the way to
write this book--to open the page and to let the stories crawl in by
themselves.
CHAPTER I
Lee
Chong's grocery, while not a model of neatness, was a miracle of supply. It was
small and crowded but within its single room a man could find everything he
needed or wanted to live and to be happy--clothes, food, both fresh and canned,
liquor, tobacco, fishing equipment, machinery, boats, cordage, caps, pork
chops. You could buy at Lee Chong's a pair of slippers, a silk kimono, a
quarter pint of whiskey and a cigar. You could work out combinations to fit
almost any mood, The one commodity Lee Chong did not keep could be had across
the lot at Dora's.
The
grocery opened at dawn and did not close until the last wandering vagrant dime
had been spent or retired for the night. Not that Lee Chong was avaricious. He
wasn't, but if one wanted to spend money, he was available. Lee's position in
the community surprised him as much as he could be surprised. Over the course
of the years everyone in Cannery Row owed him money. He never pressed his
clients, but when the bill became too large, Lee cut off credit. Rather than
walk into the town up the hill, the client usually paid or tried to.
Lee
was round-faced and courteous. He spoke a stately English without ever using
the letter R. When the tong wars were going on in California , it happened now and then that
Lee found a price on his head. Then he would go secretly to San Francisco and enter a hospital until the
trouble blew over. What he did with his money, no one ever knew. Perhaps he
didn't get it. Maybe his wealth was entirely in unpaid bills, But he lived well
and he had the respect of all his neighbors. He trusted his clients until further
trust became ridiculous. Sometimes he made business errors, but even these he
turned to advantage in good will if in no other way. It was that way with the
Palace Flophouse and Grill. Anyone but Lee Chong would have considered the
transaction a total loss.
Lee
Chong's station in the grocery was behind the cigar counter. The cash register
was then on his left and the abacus on his right. Inside the glass case were
the brown cigars, the cigarettes, the Bull Durham, the Duke's mixture, the Five
Brothers, while behind him in racks on the wall were the pints, half pints and
quarters of Old Green River, Old Town House, Old Colonel, and the favorite--Old
Tennessee, a blended whiskey guaranteed four months old, very cheap and known
in the neighbothood as Old Tennis Shoes. Lee Chong did not stand between the
whiskey and the customer without reason. Some very practical minds had on
occasion tried to divert his attention to another part of the store. Cousins,
nephews, sons and daughters-in-law waited on the rest of the store, but Lee
never left the cigar counter. The top of the glass was his desk. His fat
delicate hands rested on the glass, the fingers moving like small restless
sausages. A broad golden wedding ring on the middle finger of his left hand was
his only jewelry and with it he silently tapped on the rubber change mat from
which the little rubber tits had long been worn. Lee's mouth was full and
benevolent and the flash of gold when he smiled was rich and warm. He wore
half-glasses and since he looked at everything through them, he had to tilt his
head back to see in the distance. Interest and discounts, addition, subtraction
he worked out on the abacus with his little restless sausage fingers, and his
brown friendly eyes roved over the grocery and his teeth flashed at the
customers.
On an
evening when he stood in his place on a pad of newspaper to keep his feet warm,
he contemplated with humor and sadness a business deal that had been
consummated that afternoon and reconsummated later that same afternoon. When
you leave the grocery, if you walk catty-cornered across the grassgrown lot,
threading your way among the great rusty pipes thrown out of the canneries, you
will see a path worn in the weeds. Follow it past the cypress tree, across the
railroad track, up a chicken walk with cleats, and you will come to a long low
building which for a long time was used as a storage place for fish meal. It
was just a great big roofed room and it belonged to a worried gentleman named
Horace Abbeville. Horace had two wives and six children and over a period of
years he had managed through pleading and persuasion to build a grocery debt
second to none in Monterey .
That afternoon he had come into the grocery and his sensitive tired face had
flinched at the shadow of sternness that crossed Lee's face. Lee's fat finger
tapped the rubber mat. Horace laid his hands palm up on the cigar counter.
"I guess I owe you plenty dough," he said simply.
Lee's
teeth flashed up in appreciation of an approach so different from any he had
ever heard. He nodded gravely, but he waited for the trick to develop.
Horace
wet his lips with his tongue, a good job from corner to corner. "I hate to
have my kids with that hanging over them," he said. "Why, I bet you
wouldn't let them have a pack of spearmint now."
Lee
Chong's face agreed with this conclusion. "Plenty dough," he said.
Horace
continued. "You know that place of mine across the track up there where
the fish meal is."
Lee
Chong nodded. It was his fish meal.
Horace
said earnestly, "If I was to give you that place-- would it clear me up
with you?"
Lee
Chong tilted his head back and stared at Horace through his half-glasses while
his mind flicked among accounts and his right hand moved restlessly to the
abacus. He considered the construction which was flimsy and the lot which might
be valuable if a cannery ever wanted to expand. "Shu," said Lee
Chong.
"Well,
get out the accounts and I'll make you a bill of sale on that place."
Horace seemed in a hurry.
"No
need papers," said Lee. "I make paid-in-full paper."
They
finished the deal with dignity and Lee Chong threw in a quarter pint of Old
Tennis Shoes. And then Horace Abbeville walking very straight went across the
lot and past the cypress tree and across the track and up the chicken walk and
into the building that had been his, and he shot himself on a heap of fish
meal. And although it has nothing to do with this story, no Abbeville child, no
matter who its mother was, knew the lack of a stick of spearmint ever
afterward.
But
to get back to the evening. Horace was on the trestles with the embalming
needles in him, and his two wives were sitting on the steps of his house with
their arms about each other (they were good friends until after the funeral,
and then they divided up the children and never spoke to each other again). Lee
Chong stood in back of the cigar counter and his nice brown eyes were turned
inward on a calm eternal Chinese sorrow. He knew he could not have helped it,
but he wished he might have known and perhaps tried to help. It was deeply a
part of Lee's kindness and understanding that man's right to kill himself is
inviolable, but sometimes a friend can make it unnecessary. Lee had already
underwritten the funeral and sent a wash basket of groceries to the stricken
families.
Now
Lee Chong owned the Abbeville building--a good roof, a good floor, two windows
and a door. True it was piled high with fish meal and the smell of it was
delicate and penetrating. Lee Chong considered it as a storehouse for
groceries, as a kind of warehouse, but he gave that up on second thought. It
was too far away and anyone can go in through a window. He was tapping the
rubber mat with his gold ring and considering the problem when the door opened
and Mack came in. Mack was the elder, leader, mentor, and to a small extent the
exploiter of a little group of men who had in common no families, no money, and
no ambitions beyond food, drink, and contentment. But whereas most men in their
search for contentment destroy themselves and fall wearily short of their
targets, Mack and his friends approached contentment casually, quietly, and
absorbed it gently. Mack and Hazel, a young man of great strength, Eddie who
filled in as a bartender at La Ida, Hughie and Jones who occasionally collected
frogs and cats for Western Biological, were currently living in those large
rusty pipes in the lot next to Lee Chong's. That is, they lived in the pipes
when it was damp but in fine weather they lived in the shadow of the black
cypress tree at the top of the lot. The limbs folded down and made a canopy
under which a man could lie and look at the flow and vitality of Cannery Row.
Lee
Chong stiffened ever so slightly when Mack came in and his eyes glanced quickly
about the store to make sure that Eddie or Hazel or Hughie or Jones had not
come in too and drifted away among the groceries.
Mack
laid out his cards with a winning honesty. "Lee," he said, "I
and Eddie and the rest heard you own the Abbe. vile place."
Lee
Chong nodded and waited.
"I
and my friends thought we'd ast you if we could move in there. We'll keep up
the property," he added quickly. "Wouldn't let anybody break in or
hurt anything. Kids might knock out the windows, you know--" Mack
suggested. "Place might burn down if somebody don't keep an eye on
it."
Lee tilted
his head back and looked into Mack's eyes through the half-glasses and Lee's
tapping finger slowed its tempo as he thought deeply. In Mack's eyes there was
good will and good fellowship and a desire to make everyone happy. Why then did
Lee Chong feel slightly surrounded? Why did his mind pick its way as delicately
as a cat through cactus? It had been sweetly done, almost in a spirit of
philanthropy. Lee's mind leaped ahead at the possibilities--no, they were
probabilities, and his finger tapping slowed still further. He saw himself
refusing Mack's request and he saw the broken glass from the windows. Then Mack
would offer a second time to watch over and preserve Lee's property--and at the
second refusal, Lee could smell the smoke, could see the little flames creeping
up the walls. Mack and his friends would try to help to put it out. Lee's
finger came to a gentle rest on the change mat. He was beaten. He knew that.
There was left to him only the possibility of saving face and Mack was likely
to be very generous about that. Lee said, "You like pay lent my place? You
like live there same hotel ?"
Mack
smiled broadly and he was generous. "Say--" he cried. "That's an
idear. Sure. How much ?"
Lee
considered. He knew it didn't matter what he charged. He wasn't going to get it
anyway. He might just as well make it a really sturdy face-saving sum. 'Ti'
dolla' week," said Lee.
Mack
played it through to the end. "I'll have to talk to the boys about
it," he said dubiously. "Couldn't you make that four dollars a week?"
"Fi'
dolla'," said Lee firmly.
"Well,
I'll see what the boys say," said Mack.
And
that was the way it was. Everyone was happy about it. And if it be thought that
Lee Chong suffered a total loss, at least his mind did not work that way. The
windows were not broken. Fire did not break out, and while no rent was ever
paid, if the tenants. ever had any money, and quite often they did have, it
never occurred to them to spend it any place except at Lee Chong's grocery.
What he had was a little group of active potential customers under wraps. But
it went further than that. If a drunk caused trouble in the grocery, if the
kids swarmed down from New Monterey intent on plunder, Lee Chong had only to
call and his tenants rushed to his aid. One further bond it established--you
cannot steal from your benefactor. The saving to Lee Chong in cans of beans and
tomatoes and milk and watermelons more than paid the rent. And if there was a
sudden and increased leakage among the groceries in New Monterey that was none of
Lee Chong's affair.
The
boys moved in and the fish meal moved out. No one knows. who named the house
that has been known ever after as the Palace Flophouse and Grill. In the pipes
and under the cypress tree there had been no room for furniture and the little
niceties which are not only the diagnosis but the boundaries of our
civilization. Once in the Palace Flophouse, the boys set about furnishing it, A
chair appeared and a cot and another chair. A hardware store supplied a can of
red paint not reluctantly because it never knew about it, and as a new table or
footstool appeared it was painted, which not only made it very pretty but also
disguised it to a certain extent in case a former owner looked in. And the
Palace Flophouse and Grill began to function. The boys could sit in front of
their door and look down across the track and across the lot and across the
street right into the front windows of Western Biological. They could hear the
music from the laboratory at night. And their eyes followed Doc across the
street when he went to Lee Chong's for beer. And Mack said, "That Doc is a
fine fellow. We ought to do something for him."
CHAPTER II
The
Word is a symbol and a delight which sucks up men and scenes, trees, plants,
factories, and Pekinese. Then the Thing becomes the Word and back to Thing
again, but warped and woven into a fantastic pattern. The Word sucks up Cannery
Row, digests it and spews it out, and the Row has taken the shimmer of the
green world and the sky-reflecting seas. Lee Chong is more than a Chinese
grocer. He must be. Perhaps he is evil balanced and held suspended by good--an
Asiatic planet held to its orbit by the pull of Lao Tze and held away from Lao
Tze by the centrifugality of. abacus and cash register--Lee Chong suspended, spinning,
whirling among groceries and ghosts. A hard man with a can of beans--a soft man
with the bones of his grandfather. For Lee Chong dug into the grave on China
Point and found the yellow bones, the skull with gray ropy hair still sticking
to it. And Lee carefully packed the bones, femurs, and tibias really straight,
skull in the middle, with pelvis and clavicle surrounding it and ribs curving
on either side. Then Lee Chong sent his boxed and brittle grandfather over the
western sea to lie at last in ground made holy by his ancestors.
Mack
and the boys, too, spinning in their orbits. They are the Virtues, the Graces,
the Beauties of the hurried mangled craziness of Monterey
and the cosmic Monterey
where men in fear and hunger destroy their stomachs in the fight to secure
certain food, where men hungering for love destroy everything lovable about
them. Mack and the boys are the Beauties, the Virtues, the Graces. In the world
ruled by tigers wi.th ulcers, tutted by strictured bulls, scavenged by blind jackals,
Mack and the boys dine delicately with the tigers, fondle the frantic heifers,
and wrap up the crumbs to feed the sea gulls of Cannery Row. What can it profit
a man to gain the whole world and to come to his property with a gastric ulcer,
a blown prostate, and bifocals? Mack and the boys avoid the trap, walk around
the poison, step over the noose while a generation of trapped, poisoned, and
trussed-up men scream at them and call them no-goods, come-to-bad-ends,
blots-on-thetown, thieves, rascals, bums. Our Father who art in nature, who has
given the gift of survival to the coyote, the common brown rat, the English
sparrow, the house fly and the moth, must have a great and overwhelming love
for no-goods and blots-on-the-town and bums, and Mack and the boys. Virtues and
graces and laziness and zest. Our Father who art in nature.
CHAPTER III
Lee
Chong's is to the right of the vacant lot (although why it is called vacant
when it is piled high with old boilers, with rusting pipes, with great square
timbers, and stacks of five-gallon cans, no one can say). Up in back of the
vacant lot is the railroad track and the Palace Flophouse. But on the leftband
boundary of the lot is the stern and stately whore house of Dora Flood; a
decent, clean, honest, old-fashioned sporting house where a man can take a
glass of beer among friends. This is no fly-by-night cheap dip-joint but a
sturdy, virtuous dub, built, maintained, and disciplined by Dora who, madam and
girl for fifty years, has through the exercise of special gifts of tact and
honesty, charity and a certain realism, made herself respected by the
intelligent, the learned, and the kind. And by the same token she is hated by
the twisted and lascivious sisterhood of married spinsters whose husbands
respect the home but don't like it very much.
Dora
is a great woman, a great big woman with flaming orange hair and a taste for
Nile green evening dresses, She keeps an honest, one price house, sells no hard
liquor, and permits no loud or vulgar talk in her house. Of her girls some are
fairly inactive due to age and infirmities, but Dora never puts them aside
although, as she says, some of them don't turn three tricks a month but they go
right on eating three meals a day. In a moment of local love Dora named her
place the Bear Flag Restaurant and the stories are many of people who have gone
in for a sandwich. There are normally twelve girls in the house, counting the
old ones, a Greek cook, and a man who is known as a watchman but who undertakes
all manner of delicate and dangerous tasks. He stops fights, ejects drunks,
soothes hysteria, cures headaches, and tends bar. He bandages cuts and bruises,
passes the time of day with cops, and since a good half of the girls are
Christian Scientists, reads aloud his share of _Science and Health_ on a Sunday
morning. His predecessor, being a less well-balanced man, came to an evil end
as shall be reported, but Alfred has triumphed over his environment and has
brought his environment up with him. He knows what men should be there and what
men shouldn't be there. He knows more about the home life of Monterey citizens than anyone in town.
As
for Dora--she leads a ticklish existence. Being against the law, at least
against its letter, she must be twice as law abiding as anyone else. There must
be no drunks, no fighting, no vulgarity, or they close Dora up. Also being
illegal Dora must be especially philanthropic. Everyone puts the bite on her.
If the police give a dance for their pension fund and everyone else gives a
dollar, Dora has to give fifty dollars. When the Chamber of Commerce improved
its gardens, the merchants each gave five dollars but Dora was asked for and
gave a hundred. With everything else it is the same, Red Cross, Community
Chest, Boy Scouts, Dora's unsung, unpublicized, shameless dirty wages of sin
lead the list of donations. But during the depression she was hardest hit, In
addition to the usual charities, Dora saw the hungry children of Cannery Row
and the jobless fathers and the worried women and Dora paid grocery bills right
and left for two years and very nearly went broke in the process. Dora's girls
are well trained and pleasant. They never speak to a man on the street although
he may have been in the night before.
Before
Alfy the present watchman took over, there was a tragedy in the Bear Flag
Restaurant which saddened everyone. The previous watchman was named William and
he was a dark and lonesome-looking man. In the daytime when his duties were few
he would grow tired of female company. Through the windows he could see Mack
and the boys sitting on the pipes in the vacant lot, dangling their feet in the
mallow weeds and taking the sun while they discoursed slowly and
philosophically of matters of interest but of no importance. Now and then as he
watched them he saw them take out a pint of Old Tennis Shoes and wiping the
neck of the bottle on a sleeve, raise the pint one after another. And William
began to wish he could join that good group. He walked out one day and sat on
the pipe. Conversation stopped and an uneasy and hostile silence fell on the
group. After a while William went disconsolately back to the Bear Flag and
through the window he saw the conversation spring up again and it saddened him.
He had a dark and ugly face and a mouth twisted with brooding.
The
next day he went again and this time he took a pint of whiskey. Mack and the
boys drank the whiskey, after all they weren't crazy, but all the talking they
did was "Good luck," and "Lookin' at you."
After
a while William went back to the Bear Flag and he watched them through the
window and he heard Mack raise his voice saying, "But God damn it, I hate
a pimp !" Now this was obviously untrue although William didn't know that.
Mack and the boys just didn't like William.
Now
William's heart broke. The bums would not receive him socially. They felt that
he was too far beneath them. William had always been introspective and
self-accusing. He put on his hat and walked out along the sea, clear out to the
Lighthouse. And he stood in the pretty little cemetery where you can hear the
waves drumming always. William thought dark and broody thoughts. No one loved
him. No one cared about him. They might call him a watchman but he was a
pimp--a dirty pimp, the lowest thing in the world. And then he thought how he
had a right to live and be happy just like anyone else, by God he had. He
walked back angrily but his anger went away when he came to the Bear Flag and
climbed the steps. It was evening and the juke box was playing _Harvest Moon_
and William remembered that the first hooker who ever gaffed for him used to
like that song before she ran away and got married and disappeared. The song
made him awfully sad. Dora was in the back parlor having a cup of tea when
William came in. She said, "What's the matter, you sick?"
"No,"
said William "But what's the percentage? I feel lousy. I think I'll bump
myself off."
Dora
had handled plenty of neurotics in her time. Kid 'em out of it was her motto.
"Well, do it on your own time and don't mess up the rugs," she said.
A
gray damp doud folded over William's heart and he walked slowly out and down
the ball and knocked on Eva Flanegan's door. She had red hair and went to
confession every week. Eva was quite a spiritual girl with a big family of
brothers and sisters but she was an unpredictable drunk. She was painting her
nails and messing them pretty badly when William went in and he knew she was
bagged and Dora wouldn't let a bagged girl work. Her fingers were nail polish
to the first joint and she was angry. "What's eating you?" she said.
William grew angry too. "I'm going to bump myself off," he said
fiercely.
Eva
screeched at him. "That's a dirty, lousy, stinking sin," she cried,
and then, "Wouldn't it be like you to get the joint pinched just when I
got almost enough kick to take a trip to East
St Louis . You're a no-good bastard." She was
still screaming at him when William shut her door after him and went to the
kitchen. He was very tired of women. The Greek would be restful after women.
The
Greek, big apron, sleeves rolled up, was frying pork chops in two big skillets,
turning them over with an ice pick. "Hello, Kits. How is going
things?" The pork chops hissed and swished in the pan.
"I
don't know, Lou," said William. "Sometimes I think the best thing to
do would be--kluck!" He drew his finger across his throat.
The
Greek laid the ice pick on the stove and rolled his sleeves higher. "I
tell you what I hear, Kits," he said. "I hear like the fella talks
about it don't never do it." William's hand went out for the ice pick and he
held it easily in his hand. His eyes looked deeply into the Greek's dark eyes
and he saw disbelief and amusement and then as he stared the Greek's eyes grew
troubled and then worried. And William saw the change, saw first how the Greek
knew he could do it and then the Greek knew he would do it As soon as he saw
that in the Greek's eyes William knew he had to do it He was sad because now it
seemed silly. His hand rose and the ice pick snapped into his heart. It was
amazing how easily it went in. William was the watchman before Alfred came.
Everyone liked Alfred. He could sit on the pipes with Mack and the boys any
time. He could even visit up at the Palace Flophouse.
CHAPTER IV
In
the evening just at dusk, a curious thing happened on Cannery Row. It happened
in the time between sunset and the lighting of the street light There is a
small quiet gray period then. Down the hill, past the Palace Flophouse, down
the chicken walk and through the vacant lot came an old Chinaman. He wore an
ancient flat straw hat, blue jeans, both coat and trousers, and heavy shoes of
which one sole was loose so that it slapped the ground when he walked. In his
hand he carried a covered wicker basket. His face was lean and brown and corded
as jerky and his old eyes were brown, even the whites were brown and deep set
so that they looked out of holes. He came by just at dusk and crossed the
street and went through the opening between Western Biological and the Hediondo
Cannery. Then he crossed the little beach and disappeared among the piles and
steel posts which support the piers. No one saw him again until dawn.
But
in the dawn, during that time when the street light has been turned off and the
daylight has not come, the old Chinaman crept out from among the piles, crossed
the beach and the street. His wicker basket was heavy and wet and dripping now,
His loose sole flap-flapped on the street. He went up the hill to the second
street, went through a gate in a high board fence and was not seen again until
evening. People, sleeping, heard his flapping shoe go by and they awakened for
a moment. It had been happening for years but no one ever got used to him. Some
people thought he was God and very old people thought he was Death and children
thought he was a very funny old Chinaman, as children always think anything old
and strange is funny. But the children did not taunt him or shout at him as
they should for he carried a little cloud of fear about with him.
Only
one brave and beautiful boy of ten named Andy from Salinas ever crossed the old Chinaman. Andy
was visiting in Monterey
and he saw the old man and knew he must shout at him if only to keep his
self-respect, but even Andy, brave as he was, felt the little doud of fear.
Andy watched him go by evening after evening while his duty and his terror
wrestled. And then one evening Andy braced himself and marched behind the old
man singing in a shrill falsetto, "Ching-Chong Chinaman sitting on a
rail--'Long came a white man an' chopped off his tail."
The
old man stopped and turned. Andy stopped. The deep-brown eyes looked at Andy
and the thin corded lips moved. What happened then Andy was never able either
to explain or to forget. For the eyes spread out until there was no Chinaman.
And then it was one eye--one huge brown eye as big as a church door. Andy
looked through the shiny transparent brown door and through it he saw a lonely
countryside, flat for miles but ending against a row of fantastic mountains
shaped like cows' and dogs' heads and tents and mushrooms. There was low coarse
grass on the plain and here and there a little mound. And a small animal like a
woodchuck sat on each mound. And the loneliness--the desolate cold aloneness of
the landscape made Andy whimper because there wasn't anybody at all in the
world and he was left. Andy shut his eyes so he wouldn't have to see it any
more and when he opened them, he was in Cannery Row and the old Chinaman was
just flapflapping between Western Biological and the Hediondo Cannery. Andy was
the only boy who ever did that and he never did it again.
CHAPTER V
Western
Biological was right across the street and facing the vacant lot. Lee Chong's
grocery was on its catty-corner right and Dora's Bear Flag Restaurant was on
its cattycorner left. Western Biological deals in strange and beautiful wares.
It sells the lovely animals of the sea, the sponges, tunicates, anemones, the
stars and buttlestars, and sun stars, the bivalves, barnacles, the worms and
shells, the fabulous and multiform little brothers, the living moving flowers
of the sea, nudibranchs and tectibranchs, the spiked and nobbed and needly
urchins, the crabs and demi-crabs, the little dragons, the snapping shrimps,
and ghost shrimps so transparent that they hardly throw a shadow. And Western
Biological sells bugs and snails and spiders, and rattlesnakes, and rats, and
honey bees and gila monsters. These are all for sale. Then there are little
unborn humans, some whole and others sliced thin and mounted on slides. And for
students there are sharks with the blood drained out and yellow and blue color
substituted in veins and arteries, so that you may follow the systems with a
scalpel. And there are cats with colored veins and arteries, and frogs the
same. You can order anything living from Western Biological and sooner or later
you will get it.
It is
a low building facing the street. The basement is the storeroom with shelves,
shelves clear to the ceiling loaded with jars of preserved animals. And in the
basement is a sink and instruments for embalming and for injecting. Then you go
through the backyard to a covered shed on piles over the ocean and here are the
tanks for the larger animals, the sharks and rays and octopi, each in their
concrete tanks. There is a stairway up the front of the building and a door
that opens into an office where there is a desk piled high with unopened mail,
filing cabinets, and a safe with the door propped open. Once the safe got
locked by mistake and no one knew the combination. And in the safe was an open
can of sardines and a piece of Roquefort cheese. Before the combination could
be sent by the maker of the lock, there was trouble in the safe. It was then
that Doc devised a method for getting revenge on a bank if anyone should ever
want to. "Rent a safety deposit box," he said, "then deposit in
it one whole fresh salmon and go away for six months." After the trouble
with the safe, it was not permitted to keep food there any more. It is kept in
the filing cabinets. Behind the office is a room where in aquaria are many
living animals; there also are the microscopes and the slides and the drug
cabinets, the cases of laboratory glass, the work benches and little motors,
the chemicals. From this room come smells--formaline, and dry starfish, and sea
water and menthol, carbolic acid and acetic acid, smell of brown wrapping paper
and straw and rope, smell of chloroform and ether, smell of ozone from the
motors, smell of fine steel and thin lubricant from the microscopes, smell of
banana oil and rubber tubing, smell of drying wool socks and boots, sharp pungent
smell of rattlesnakes, and musty frightening smell of rats. And through the
back door comes the smell of kelp and barnacles when the tide is out and the
smell of salt and spray when the tide is in.
To
the left the office opens into a library. The walls are bookcases to the
ceiling, boxes of pamphlets and separates, books of all kinds, dictionaries,
encyclopedias, poetry, plays. A great phonograph stands against the wall with
hundreds of records lined up beside it. Under the window is a redwood bed and
on the walls and to the bookcases are pinned reproductions of Daumiers, and
Graham, Titian, and Leonardo and Picasso, Dali and George Grosz, pinned here
and there at eye level so that you can look at them if you want to. There are
chairs and benches in this little room and of course the bed. As many as forty
people have been here at one time.
Behind
this library or music room, or whatever you want to call it, is the kitchen, a
narrow chamber with a gas stove, a water heater, and a sink. But whereas some
food is kept in the filing cabinets in the office, dishes and cooking fat and
vegetables are kept in glass-fronted sectional bookcases in the kitchen. No
whimsy dictated this. It just happened. From the ceiling of the kitchen hang
pieces of bacon, and salami, and black bêche-demer. Behind the kitchen is a
toilet and a shower. The toilet leaked for five years until a clever and
handsome guest fixed it with a piece of chewing gum.
Doc
is the owner and operator of the Western Biological Laboratory. Doc is rather
small, deceptively small, for he is wiry and very strong and when passionate
anger comes on him he can be very fierce. He wears a beard and his face is half
Christ and half satyr and his face tells the truth. It is said that he has
helped many a girl out of one trouble and into another, Doc has the hands of a
brain surgeon, and a cool warm mind. Doc tips his hat to dogs as he drives by
and the dogs look up and smile at him. He can kill anything for need but he
could not even hurt a feeling for pleasure. He has one great fear--that of
getting his head wet, so that summer or winter he ordinarily wears a rain hat,
He will wade in a tide pool up to the chest without feeling damp, but a drop of
rain water on his head makes him panicky.
Over
a period of years Doc dug himself into Cannery Row to an extent not even he
suspected. He became the fountain of philosophy and science and art In the
laboratory the girls from Dora's heard the Plain Songs and Gregorian music for
the first time. Lee Chong listened while Li Po was read to him in English.
Henri the painter heard for the first time the Book of the Dead and was so
moved that he changed his medium. Henri had been painting with glue, iron rust,
and colored thicken feathers but he changed and his next four paintings were
done entirely with different kinds of nutshells. Doc would listen to any kind
of nonsense and change it for you to a kind of wisdom. His mind had no
horizon--and his sympathy had no warp. He could talk to children, telling them
very pro. found things so that they understood. He lived in a world of wonders,
of excitement. He was concupiscent as a rabbit and gentle as hell. Everyone who
knew him was indebted to him. And everyone who thought of him thought next,
"I really must do something nice for Doc."
CHAPTER VI
Doc
was collecting marine animals in the Great Tide Pool on the tip of the Peninsula . It is a fabulous place: when the tide is in, a
wave-churned basin, creamy with foam, whipped by the combers that roll in from
the whistling buoy on the reef. But when the tide goes out the little water
world becomes quiet and lovely. The sea is very clear and the bottom becomes
fantastic with hurrying, fighting, feeding, breeding animals. Crabs rush from
frond to frond of the waving algae. Starfish squat over mussels and limpets,
attach their million little suckers and then slowly lift with incredible power
until the prey is broken from the rock. And then the starfish stomach comes out
and envelops its food. Orange and speckled and fluted nudibranchs slide
gracefully over the rocks, their skirts waving like the dresses of Spanish
dancers. And black eels poke their heads out of crevices and wait for prey, The
snapping shrimps with their trigger daws pop loudly. The lovely, colored world
is glassed over. Hermit crabs like frantic children scamper on the bottom sand.
And now one, finding an empty snail shell he likes better than his own, creeps
out, exposing his soft body to the enemy for a moment, and then pops into the
new shell. A wave breaks over the barrier, and churns the glassy water for a
moment and mixes bubbles into the pool, and then it clears and is tranquil and
lovely and murderous again. Here a crab tears a leg from his brother. The
anemones expand like soft and brilliant flowers, inviting any tired and
perplexed animal to lie for a moment in their arms, and when some small crab or
little tide-pool Johnnie accepts the green and purple invitation, the petals
whip in, the stinging cells shoot tiny narcotic needles into the prey and it
grows weak and perhaps sleepy while the searing caustic digestive acids melt
its body down.
Then
the creeping murderer, the octopus, steals out, slowly, softly, moving like a
gray mist, pretending now to be a bit of weed, now a rock, now a lump of
decaying meat while its evil goat eyes watch coldly. It oozes and flows toward
a feed. lag crab, and as it comes close its yellow eyes burn and its body turns
rosy with the pulsing color of anticipation and rage. Then suddenly it runs
lightly on the tips of its arms, as ferociously as a charging cat. It leaps
savagely on the crab, there is a puff of black fluid, and the struggling mass
is obscured in the sepia cloud while the octopus murders the crab. On the
exposed rocks out of water, the barnacles bubble behind their closed doors and
the limpets dry out. And down to the rocks come the black flies to eat anything
they can find. The sharp smell of iodine from the algae, and the lime smell of
calcareous bodies and the smell of powerful protean, smell of sperm and ova
fill the air. On the exposed rocks the starfish emit semen and eggs from
between their rays. The smells of life and richness, of death and digestion, of
decay and birth, burden the air. And salt spray blows in from the barrier where
the ocean waits for its rising-tide strength to permit it back into the Great
Tide Pool again. And on the reef the whistling buoy bellows like a sad and
patient bull.
In
the pool Doc and Hazel worked together. Hazel lived in the Palace Flophouse
with Mack and the boys. Hazel got his name in as haphazard a way as his life
was ever afterward. His worried mother had had seven children in eight years.
Hazel was the eighth, and his mother became confused about his sex when he was
born. She was tired and run down anyway from trying to feed and dothe seven
children and their father. She had tried every possible way of making
money--paper flowers, mushrooms at home, rabbits for meat and fur--while her
husband from a canvas chair gave her every help his advice and reasoning and
criticism could offer. She had a great aunt named Hazel who was reputed to
carry life insurance. The eighth child was named Hazel before the mother got it
through her head that Hazel was a boy and by that time she was used to the name
and never bothered to change it. Hazel grew up--did four years in grammer
school, four years in reform school, and didn't learn anything in either place.
Reform schools are supposed to teach viciousness and criminality but Hazel
didn't pay enough attention. He came out of reform school as innocent of
viciousness as he was of fractions and long division. Hazel loved to hear
conversation but he didn't listen to words--just to the tone of conversation.
He asked questions, not to hear the answers but simply to continue the flow. He
was twenty-six--- dark-haired and pleasant, strong, willing, and loyal. Quite
often he went collecting with Doc and he was very good at it once he knew what
was wanted. His fingers could creep like an octopus, could grab and hold like
an anemone. He was sure-footed on the slippery rocks and he loved the hunt Doc
wore his rain hat and high rubber boots as he worked but Hazel sloshed about in
tennis shoes and blue jeans. They were collecting starfish. Doc had an order
for three hundred.
Hazel
picked a nobby purplish starfish from the bottom of the pool and popped it into
his nearly full gunny sack. "I wonder what they do with them," he
said.
"Do
with what?" Doc asked.
"The
starfish," said Hazel. "You sell 'em. You'll send out a barrel of
'em. What do the guys do with 'em? You can't eat 'em."
"They
study them," said Doc patiently and he remembered that he had answered
this question for Hazel dozens of times before. But Doc had one mental habit he
could not get over. When anyone asked a question, Doc thought he wanted to know
the answer. That was the way with Doc. _He_ never asked unless he wanted to
know and he could not conceive of the brain that would ask without wanting to
know. But Hazel, who simply wanted to hear talk, had developed a system of
making the answer to one question the basis of another. It kept conversation
going.
"What
do they find to study?" Hazel continued. "They're just starfish.
There's millions of 'em around. I could get you a million of 'em."
"They're
complicated and interesting animals," Doc said a little defensively.
"Besides, these are going to the Middle West to Northwestern University ."
Hazel
used his trick. "They got no starfish there?"
"They
got no ocean there," said Doc.
"Oh!"
said Hazel and he cast frantically about for a peg to hang a new question on.
He hated to have a conversation die out like this. He wasn't quick enough.
While he was looking for a question Doc asked one. Hazel hated that, it meant
casting about in his mind for an answer and casting about in Hazel's mind was
like wandering alone in a deserted museum. Hazel's mind was choked with
uncatalogued exhibits. He never forgot anything but he never bothered to
arrange his memories. Everything was thrown together like fishing tacide in the
bottom of a rowboat, hooks and sinkers and line and lures and galis all snarled
up.
Doc
asked, "How are things going up at the Palace?"
Hazel
ran his fingers through his dark hair and he peered into the dutter of his
mind. "Pretty good," he said. "That fellow Gay is moving in with
us I guess. His wife hits him pretty bad. He don't mind that when he's awake
but she waits 'til he gets to sleep and then hits him. He hates that. He has to
wake up and beat her up and then when he goes back to sleep she hits him again.
He don't get any rest so he's moving in with us."
"That's
a new one," said Doc. "She used to swear out a warrant and put him in
jail."
"Yeah!"
said Hazel. "But that was before they built the new jail in Salinas . Used to be
thirty days and Gay was pretty hot to get out, but this new jail--radio in the
tank and good bunks and the sheriff's a nice fellow. Gay gets in there and he
don't want to come out. He likes it so much his wife won't get him arrested any
more. So she figured out this hitting him while he's asleep. It's nerve
racking, he says. And you know as good as me--Gay never did take any pleasure
beating her up. He only done it to keep his self-respect. But he gets tired of
it. I guess he'll be with us now."
Doc
straightened up. The waves were beginning to break over the barrier of the
Great Tide Pool. The tide was coming in and little rivers from the sea had
begun to flow over the rocks. The wind blew freshly in from the whistling buoy
and the barking of sea lions came from around the point. Doc pushed his rain
hat on the back of his head. "We've got enough starash," he said and
then went on, "Look, Hazel, I know you've got six or seven undersized
abalones in the bottom of your sack. If we get stopped by a game warden, you're
going to say they're mine, on my permit--aren't you?"
"Well--hell,"
said Hazel.
"Look,"
Doc said kindly. "Suppose I get an order for abalones and maybe the game
warden thinks I'm using my collecting permit too often. Suppose he thinks I'm
eating them."
"Well--hell,"
said Hazel.
"It's
like the industrial alcohol board. They've got suspicious minds. They always
think I'm drinking the alcohol. They think that about everyone."
"Well,
ain't you?"
"Not
much of it," said Doc. "That stuff they put in it tastes terrible and
it's a big job to redistill it."
"That
stuff ain't so bad," said Hazel. "Me and Mack had a snort of it the
other day. What is it they put in ?"
Doc
was about to answer when he saw it was Hazel's trick again. "Let's get
moving," he said. He hoisted his sack of starfish on his shoulder. And he
had forgotten the illegal abalones in the bottom of Hazel's sack.
Hazel
followed him up out of the tide pool and up the slippery trail to solid ground.
The little crabs scampered and skittered out of their way. Hazel felt that he
had better cement the grave over the topic of the abalones,
"That
painter guy came back to the Palace," he offered.
"Yes?"
said Doc.
"Yeah!
You see, he done all our pictures in chicken feathers and now he says he got to
do them all over again with nutshells. He says he changed his--his
med--medium,"
Doc
chuckled. "He still building his boat?"
"Sure,"
said Hazel. "He's got it all changed around. New kind of a boat. I guess
he'll take it apart and change it. Doc-- is he nuts?"
Doc
swung his heavy sack of starfish to the ground and stood panting a little.
"Nuts?" he asked. "Oh, yes, I guess so. Nuts about the same
amount we are, only in a different way."
Such
a thing had never occurred to Hazel. He looked upon himself as a crystal pool
of darity and on his life as a troubled glass of misunderstood virtue. Doc's
last statement had outraged him a little. "But that boat--" he cried.
"He's been building that boat for seven years that I know of. The blocks
rotted out and he made concrete blocks. Every time he gets it nearly finished
he changes it and starts over again. I think he's nuts. Seven years on a
boat."
Doc
was sitting on the ground pulling off his rubber boots. "You don't
understand," he said gently. "Henri loves boats but he's afraid of
the ocean."
"What's
he want a boat for then?" Hazel demanded.
"He
likes boats," said Doc. "But suppose he finishes his boat Once it's
finished people will say, 'Why don't you put it in the water?' Then if he puts
it in the water, he'll have to go out in it, and he hates the water. So you
see, he never finishes the boat--so he doesn't ever have to launch it."
Hazel
had followed this reasoning to a certain point but he abandoned it before it
was resolved, not only abandoned it but searched for some way to change the
subject. "I think he's nuts," he said lamely.
On
the black earth on which the ice plants bloomed, hundreds of black stink bugs
crawled. And many of them stuck their tails up in the air. "Look at all
them stink bugs," Hazel remarked, grateful to the bugs for being there.
"They're
interesting," said Doc.
"Well,
what they got their asses up in the air for?"
Doc
rolled up his wool socks and put them in the rubber boots and from his pocket
he brought out dry socks and a pair of thin moccasins. "I don't know
why," he said. "I looked them up recently--they're very common
animals and one of the commonest things they do is put their tails up in the
air. And in all the books there isn't one mention of the fact that they put
their tails up in the air or why."
Hazel
turned one of the stink bugs over with the toe of his wet tennis shoe and the
shining black beetle strove madly with floundering legs to get upright again.
"Well, why do you think they do it?"
"I
think they're praying," said Doc.
"What!"
Hazel was shocked.
"The
remarkable thing," said Doc, "isn't that they put their tails up in
the air--the really incredibly remarkable thing is that we find it remarkable.
We can only use ourselves as yardsticks. If we did something as inexplicable
and strange we'd probably be praying--so maybe they're praying."
"Let's
get the hell out of here," said Hazel.
CHAPTER VII
The
Palace Flophouse was no sudden development. Indeed when Mack and Hazel and Eddie and Hughie and
Jones moved into it, they looked upon it as little more than shelter from the
wind and the rain, as a place to go when everything else had closed or when
their welcome was thin and sere with overuse. Then the Palace was only a long
bare room, lit dimly by two small windows, walled with unpainted wood smelling
strongly of fish meal. They had not loved it then. But Mack knew that some kind
of organization was necessaxz particularly among such a group of ravening
individualists,
A
training army which has not been equipped with guns and artillery and tanks
uses artificial guns and masquerading trucks to simulate its destructive
panoply--and its toughening soldiers get used to field guns by handling logs on
wheels.
Mack,
with a piece of chalk, drew five oblongs on the floor, each seven feet long and
four feet wide, and in each square he wrote a name. These were the simulated
beds. Each man had property rights inviolable in his space. He could legally
fight a man who encroached on his square. The rest of the room was property
common to all. That was in the first days when Mack and the boys sat on the
floor, played cards hunkered down, and slept on the hard boards. Perhaps, save
for an accident of weather, they might always have lived that way. However, an
unprecedented rainfall which went on for over a month changed all that.
House-ridden, the boys grew tired of squatting on the floor. Their eyes became
outraged by the bare board walls. Because it sheltered them the house grew dear
to them. And it had the charm of never knowing the entrance of an outraged
landlord. For Lee Chong never came near it. Then one afternoon Hughie came in
with an army cot which bad a torn canvas. He spent two hours sewing up the rip
with fishing line. And that night the others lying on the floor in their
squares watched Hughie ooze gracefully into his cot--they heard him sigh with
abysmal comfort and he was asleep and snoring before anyone else.
The
next day Mack puffed up the hill carrying a rusty set of springs he had found
on a scrap-Iron dump. The apathy was broken then, The boys outdid one another
in beautifying the Palace Flophouse until after a few months it was, if
anything, overfurnished. There were old carpets on the floor, chairs with and
without seats. Mack had a wicker chaise longue painted bright red. There were
tables, a grandfather dock without dial face or works. The walls were
whitewashed which made it almost light and airy. Pictures began to appear--
mostly calendars showing improbable luscious blondes holding bottles of
Coca-Cola. Henri had contributed two pieces from his chicken-feather period. A
bundle of gilded cattails stood in one corner and a sheaf of peacock feathers
was nailed to the wall beside the grandfather dock.
They
were some time acquiring a stove and when they did find what they wanted, a
silver-scrolled monster with floriated warming ovens and a front like a
nickel-plated tulip garden, they had trouble getting it. It was too big to
steal and its owner refused to part with it to the sick widow with eight
children whom Mack Invented and patronized in the same moment. The owner wanted
a dollar and a half and didn't come down to eighty cents for three days. The
boys closed at eighty cents and gave him an I.O.U. which he probably still has.
This transaction took place in Seaside
and the stove weighed three hundred pounds. Mack and Hughie exhausted every
possibility of haulage for ten days and only when they realized that no one was
going to take this stove home for them did they begin to carry it. It took them
three days to carry it to Cannery Row, a distance of five miles, and they camped
beside it at night. But once installed in the Palace Flophouse it was the glory
and the hearth and the center. Its nickel flowers and foliage shone with a
cheery light It was the gold tooth of the Palace. Fired up, it warmed the big
room. Its oven was wonderful and you could fry an egg on its shiny black lids.
With
the great stove came pride, and with pride, the Palace became home. Eddie
planted morning glories to run over the door and Hazel acquired some rather
rare fuchsia bushes planted in five-gallon cans which made the entrance formal
and a little cluttered. Mack and the boys loved the Palace and they even
cleaned it a little sometimes. In their minds they sneered at unsettled people
who had no house to go to and occasionally in their pride they brought a guest
home for a day or two.
Eddie
was understudy bartender at La Ida. He filled in when Whitey the regular
bartender was sick, which was as often as Whitey could get away with it. Every
time Eddie filled in, a few bottles disappeared, so he couldn't fill in too
often. But Whitey liked to have Eddie take his place because he was convinced,
and correctly, that Eddie was one man who wouldn't try to keep his job
permanently. Almost anyone could have trusted Eddie to this extent. Eddie
didn't have to remove much liquor. He kept a gallon jug under the bar and in
the mouth of the jug there was a funnel. Anything left in the glasses Eddie
poured into the funnel before he washed the glasses. If an argument or a song
were going on at La Ida, or late at night when good fellowship had reached its
logical condusion, Eddie poured glasses half or two-thirds full into the
funnel. The resulting punch which he took back to the Palace was always
interesting and sometimes surprising. The mixture of rye, beer, bourbon, scotch,
wine, rum and gin was fairly constant, but now and then some effete customer
would order a stinger or an anisette or a curaçao and these little touches gave
a distinct character to the punch. It was Eddie's habit always to shake a
little angostura into the jug just before he left. On a good night Eddie got
three-quarters of a gallon. It was a source of satisfaction to him that nobody
was out anything. He had observed that a man got just as drunk on half a glass
as on a whole one, that is, if he was in the mood to get drunk stall.
Eddie
was a very desirable inhabitant of the Palace Flophouse. The others never asked
him to help with the housecleaning and once Hazel washed four pairs of Eddie's
socks.
Now
on the afternoon when Hazel was out collecting with Doc in the Great Tide Pool,
the boys were sitting around in the Palace sipping the result of Eddie's latest
contribution. Gay was there too, the latest member of the group. Eddie sipped
speculatively from his glass and smacked his lips. "It's funny how you get
a run," he said. "Take last night. There was at least ten guys
ordered Manhattans. Sometimes maybe you don't get two calls for a Manhattan in a month.
It's the grenadine gives the stuff that taste."
Mack
tasted his--a big taste--and refilled his glass. "Yes," he said
somberly, "it's little things make the difference." He looked about
to see how this gem had set with the others.
Only
Gay got the full impact. "Sure is," he said. "Does--"
"Where's
Hazel today?" Mack asked.
Jones
said, "Hazel went out with Doc to get some starfish."
Mack
nodded his head soberly. "That Doc is a hell of a nice fella," he
said. "He'll give you a quarter any time. When I cut myself he put on a
new bandage every day. A hell of a nice fella."
The
others nodded in profound agreement.
"I
been wondering for a long time," Mack continued, "what we could do
for him--something nice. Something he'd like."
"He'd
like a dame," said Hughie.
"He's
got three four dames," said Jones. "You can always tell--when he
pulls them front curtains closed and when he plays that kind of church music on
the phonograph."
Mack
said reprovingly to Hughie, "Just because he doesn't run no dame naked
through the streets in the daytime, you think Doc's celebrate."
"What's
celebrate?" Eddie asked.
"That's
when you can't get no dame," said Mack.
"I
thought it was a kind of a party," said Jones.
A
silence fell on the room. Mack shifted in his chaise longue. Hughie let the
front legs of his chair down on the floor. They looked into space and then they
all looked at Mack. Mack said, "Hum!"
Eddie
said, "What kind of a party you think Doc'd like?"
"What
other kind is there?" said Jones.
Mack
mused, "Doc wouldn't like this stuff from the winin' jug."
"How
do you know?" Hughie demanded. "You never offered him none."
"Oh,
I know," said Mack. "He's been to college. Once I seen a dame in a
fur coat go in there. Never did see her come out. It was two o'clock the last I
looked--and that church music goin'. No--you couldn't offer him none of
this." He filled his glass again,
"This
tastes pretty nice after the third glass," Hughie said loyally.
"No,"
said Mack. "Not for Doc. Have to be whiskey--the real thing."
"He
likes beer," said Jones. "He's all the time going over to Zee's for
beer--sometimes in the middle of the night"
Mack
said, "I figure when you buy beer, you're buying too much tare. Take 8 per
cent beer--why you're spending your dough for 92 percent water and color and
hops and stuff like that. Eddie," he added, "you think you could get
four five bottles of whiskey at La Ida next time Whitey's sick?"
"Sure,"
said Eddie. "Sure I could get it but that'd be the end--no more golden
eggs. I think Johnnie's suspicious anyways. Other day he says, 'I smell a mouse
named Eddie.' I Was gonna lay low and only bring the jug for a while."
"Yeah
!" said Jones. "Don't you lose that job. If something happened to
Whitey, you could fall right in there for a week or so 'til they got somebody
else. I guess if we're goin' to give a party for Doc, we got to buy the whiskey.
How much is whiskey a gallon?"
"I
don't know," said Hughie. "I never get more than a half pint at a
time myself--at one time that is. I figure you get a quart and right away you
got friends. But you get a half pint and you can drink it in the lot before-well
before you got a lot of folks around."
"It's
going to take dough to give Doc a party," said Mack. "If we're going
to give him a party at all it ought to be a good one. Should have a big cake. I
wonder when is his birthday?"
"Don't
need a birthday for a party," said Jones.
"No--but
it's nice," said Mack. "I figure it would take ten or twelve bucks to
give Doc a party you wouldn't be ashamed of."
They
looked at one another speculatively. Hughie suggested, "The Hediondo
Cannery is hiring guys."
"No,"
said Mack quickly. "We got good reputations and we don't want to spoil
them. Every one of us keeps a job for a month or more when we take one. That's
why we can always get a job when we need one. S'pose we take a job for a day or
so--why we'll lose our reputation for sticking. Then if we needed a job there
wouldn't nobody have us." The rest nodded quick agreement.
"I
figure I'm gonna work a couple of months--November and part of December,"
said Jones. "Makes it nice to have money around Christmas. We could cook a
turkey this year."
"By
God, we could," said Mack. "I know a place up Carmel Valley
where there's fifteen hundred in one flock."
"Valley,"
said Hughie. "You know I used to collect stuff up the Valley for Doc,
turtles and crayfish and frogs. Got a nickel apiece for frogs."
"Me,
too," said Gay. "I got five hundred frogs one time."
"If
Doc needs frogs it's a setup," said Mack. "We could go up the Carmel River
and have a little outing and we wouldn't tell Doc what it was for and then we'd
give him one hell of a party."
A
quiet excitement grew in the Palace Flophouse. "Gay," said Mack,
"take a look out the door and see if Doc's car is in front of his
place."
Gay
set down his glass and looked out. "Not yet," he said.
"Well,
he ought to be back any minute," said Mack. "Now here's how we'll go
about it. . . ."
CHAPTER VIII
In
April 1932 the boiler at the Hediondo Cannery blew a tube for the third time in
two weeks and the board of directors consisting of Mr. Randolph and a
stenographer decided that it would be cheaper to buy a new boiler than to have
to shut down so often. In time the new boiler arrived and the old one was moved
into the vacant lot between Lee Chong's and the Bear Flag Restaurant where it
was set on blocks to await an inspiration on Mr. Randolph's part on how to make
some money out of it. Gradually the plant engineer removed the tubing to use to
patch other outworn equipment at the Hediondo. The boiler looked like an
old-fashioned locomotive without wheels. It had a big door in the center of its
nose and a low fire door. Gradually it became red and soft with rust and
gradually the mallow weeds grew up around it and the flaking rust fed the
weeds. Flowering myrtle crept up its sides and the wild anise perfumed the air
about it Then someone threw out a datura root and the thick fleshy tree grew up
and the great white bells hung down over the boiler door and at night the
flowers smelled of love and excitement, an incredibly sweet and moving odor.
In
1935 Mr. and Mrs. Sam Malloy moved into the boiler. The tubing was all gone now
and it was a roomy, dry, and safe apartment. True, if you came in through the
fire door you bad to get down on your hands and knees, but once in there was
head room in the middle and you couldn't want a dryer, warmer place to stay.
They shagged a mattress through the fire door and settled down. Mr. Malloy was
happy and contented there and for quite a long time so was Mrs. Malloy.
Below
the boiler on the hill there were numbers of large pipes also abandoned by the
Hediondo. Toward the end of 1937 there was a great catch of fish and the
canneries were working full time and a housing shortage occurred. Then it was
that Mr. Malloy took to renting the larger pipes as sleeping quarters for
single men at a very nominal fee. With a piece of tar paper over one end and a
square of carpet over the other, they made comfortable bedrooms, although men
used to sleeping curled up had to change their habits or move out. There were
those too who claimed that their snores echoing back from the pipes woke them
up. But on the whole Mr. Malloy did a steady small business and was happy.
Mrs.
Malloy bad been contented until her husband became a landlord and then she
began to change. First it was a rug, then a washtub, then a lamp with a colored
silk shade. Finally she came into the boiler on her hands and knees one day and
she stood up and said a little breathlessly, "Holman's are having a sale
of curtains. Real lace curtains and edges of blue and pink--$1.98 a set with
curtain rods thrown in."
Mr.
Malloy sat up on the mattress. "Curtains ?" he demanded. "What
in God's name do you want curtains for?"
"I
like things nice," said Mrs. Malloy. "I always did like to have
things nice for you," and her lower lip began to tremble.
"But,
darling," Sam Malloy cried, "I got nothing against curtains. I like
curtains."
"Only
$1.98," Mrs. Malloy quavered, "and you begrutch me $1.98," and
she sniffled and her chest heaved.
"I
don't begrutch you," said Mr. Malloy. "But, darling-- for Christ's
sake what are we going to do with curtains? We got no windows."
Mrs.
Malloy cried and cried and Sam held her in his arms and comforted her,
"Men
just don't understand how a woman feels," she sobbed. "Men just never
try to put themselves in a woman's place."
And
Sam lay beside her and rubbed her back for a long time before she went to
sleep.
CHAPTER IX
When
Doc's car came back to the laboratory, Mack and the boys secretly watched Hazel
help to carry in the sacks of starfish. In a few minutes Hazel came damply up
the thicken walk to the Palace. His jeans were wet with sea water to the thighs
and where it was drying the white salt rings were forming. He sat heavily in
the patent rocker that was his and shucked off his wet tennis shoes.
Mack
asked, "How is Doc feeling?"
"Fine,"
said Hazel. "You can't understand a word he says. Know what he said about
stink bugs? No--I better not tell you."
"He
seem in a nice friendly mood ?" Mack asked.
"Sure,"
said Hazel, "We got two three hundred starfish. He's all right."
"I
wonder if we better all go over?" Mack asked himself and he answered
himself, "No I guess it would be better if one went alone. It might get
him mixed up if we all went."
"What
is this?" Hazel asked.
"We
got plans," said Mack. "I'll go myself so as not to startle him. You
guys stay here and wait I'll come back in a few minutes."
Mack
went out and he teetered down the chicken walk and across the track. Mr. Malloy
was sitting on a brick in front of his boiler.
"How
are you, Sam?" Mack asked.
"Pretty
good."
"How's
the missus ?"
"Pretty
good," said Mr. Malloy. "You know any kind of glue you can stick doth
to iron?"
Ordinarily
Mack would have thrown himself headlong into this problem but now he was not to
be deflected. "No," he said.
He
went across the vacant lot, crossed the street and entered the basement of the
laboratory.
Doc
had his hat off now since there was practically no chance of getting his head
wet unless a pipe broke. He was busy removing the starfish from the wet sacks
and arranging them on the cool concrete floor. The starfish were twisted and
knotted up for a starfish loves to hang onto something and for an hour these
had found only each other. Doc arranged them in long lines and very slowly they
straightened out until they lay in symmetrical stars on the concrete floor.
Doc's pointed brown beard was damp with perspiration as he worked. He looked up
a little nervously as Mack entered. It was not that trouble always came in with
Mack but something always entered with him.
"Hiya,
Doc?" said Mack.
"All
right," said Doc uneasily.
"Hear
about Phyllis Mae over at the Bear Flag? She hit a drunk and got his tooth in
her fist and it's infected clear to the elbow. She showed me the tooth. It was
out of a plate. Is a false tooth poison, Doc?"
"I
guess everything that comes out of the human mouth is poison," said Doc
warningfully. "Has she got a doctor?"
"The
bouncer fixed her up," said Mack.
"I'll
take her some sulfa," said Doc, and he waited for the storm to break, He
knew Mack had come for something and Mack knew he knew it.
Mack
said, "Doc, you got any need for any kind of animals now?"
Doc
sighed with relief, "Why?" he asked guardedly.
Mack
became open and confidential. "I'll tell you, Doc. I and the boys got to
get some dough--we simply got to. It's for a good purpose, you might say a
worthy cause."
"Phyllis
Mae's arm?"
Mack
saw the chance, weighed it and gave it up. "Well-- no," he said.
"It's more important than that. You can't kill a whore. No--this is
different I and the boys thought if you needed something why we'd get it for
you and that way we could make a little piece of change."
It
seemed simple and innocent. Doc laid down four more starfish in lines, "I
could use three or four hundred frogs," he said. "I'd get them myself
but I've got to go down to La Jolla tonight
There's a good tide tomorrow and I have to get some octopi."
"Same
price for frogs?" Mack asked. "Five cents apiece ?"
"Same
price," said Doc.
Mack
was jovial. "Don't you worry about frogs, Doc," he said. "We'll
get you all the frogs you want. You just rest easy about frogs. Why we can get
them right up Carmel
River . I know a
place."
"Good,"
said Doc. "I'll take all you get but I need about three hundred."
"Just
you rest easy, Doc. Don't you lose no sleep about it You'll get your frogs,
maybe seven eight hundred." He put the Doc at his ease about frogs and
then a little doud crossed Mack's face. "Doc." he said, "any
chance of using your car to go up the Valley?"
"No,"
said Doc, "I told you. I have to drive to La Jolla
tonight to make tomorrow's tide."
"Oh,"
said Mack dispiritedly. "Oh. Well, don't you worry about it, Doc. Maybe we
can get Lee Chong's old truck." And then his face fell a little further.
"Doc," he said, "on a business deal like this, would you advance
two or three bucks for gasoline? I know Lee Chong won't give us gas."
"No,"
said Doc. He had fallen into this before. Once he had financed Gay to go for
turtles. He financed him for two weeks and at the end of that time Gay was in
jail on his wife's charge and he never did go for turtles.
"Well,
maybe we can't go then," said Mack sadly.
Now
Doc really needed the frogs. He tried to work out some method which was
business and not philanthropy. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he said.
"I'll give you a note to my gas station so you can get ten gallons of gas.
How will that be?"
Mack
smiled. "Fine," he said. "That will work out just fine. I and
the boys will get an early start tomorrow. Time you get back from the south,
we'll have more damn frogs than you ever seen in your life."
Doc
went to the labeling desk and wrote a note to Red Williams at the gas station,
authorizing the issue of ten gallons of gasoline to Mack. "Here you
are," he said.
Mack
was smiling broadly. "Doc," he said, "you can get to sleep
tonight and not even give frogs a thought We'll have piss pots full of them by
the time you get back,"
Doc
watched him go a little uneasily. Doc's dealings with Mack and the boys had
always been interesting but rarely had they been profitable to Doc, He
remembered ruefully the time Mack sold him fifteen torn cats and by night the
owners came and got every one. "Mack," he had asked, "why all
torn cats?"
Mack
said, "Doc, it's my own invention but I'll tell you bernuse you're a good
friend. You make a big wire trap and then you don't use bait. You
see--well--you use a lady cat. Catch every God damn torn cat in the country
that way."
From
the laboratory Mack crossed the street and went through the swinging screen
doors into Lee Chong's grocery. Mrs. Lee was cutting bacon on the big butcher's
block. A Lee cousin primped up slightly wilted heads of lettuce the way a girl
primps a loose finger wave. A cat lay asleep on a big pile of oranges. Lee
Chong stood in his usual place back of the cigar counter and in front of the
liquor shelves. His tapping finger on the change mat speeded up a little when
Mack came in.
Mack
wasted no time in sparring. "Lee," he said, "Doc over there's
got a problem. He's got a big order for frogs from the New York Museum ,
Means a lot to Doc. Besides the dough there's a lot of credit getting an order
like that. Doc's got to go south and I and the boys said we'd help him out. I
think a guy's friends ought to help him out of a hole when they can, espedaily
a nice guy like Doc, Why I bet he spends sixty seventy dollars a month with
you."
Lee
Chong remained silent and watchful. His fat finger barely moved on the change
mat but it flicked slightly like a tense cat's tail.
Mack
plunged into his thesis. "Will you let us take your old truck to go up Carmel Valley
for frogs for Doc--for good old Doc?"
Lee
Chong smiled in triumph. "Tluck no good," he said. "Bloke
down."
This
staggered Mack for a moment but he recovered. He spread the order for gasoline
on the cigar counter. "Look!" he said. "Doc needs them frogs. He
give me this order for gas to get them. I can't let Doc down. Now Gay is a good
mechanic. If he fixes your truck and puts it in good shape, will you let us
take it?"
Lee
put back his head so that he could see Mack through his half-glasses. There
didn't seem to be anything wrong with the proposition. The truck really
wouldn't run. Gay really was a good mechanic and the order for gasoline was
definite evidence of good faith.
"How
long you be gone?" Lee asked.
"Maybe
half a day, maybe a whole day. Just 'til we get the frogs."
Lee
was worried but he couldn't see any way out. The dangers were all there and Lee
knew all of them. "Okay," said Lee.
"Good,"
said Mack. "I knew Doc could depend on you. I'll get Gay right to work on
that truck." He turned about to leave. "By the way," he said.
"Doc's paying us five cents apiece for those frogs. We're going to get
seven or eight hundred. How about taking a pint of Old Tennis Shoes just 'til
we can get back with the frogs?"
"No!"
said Lee Chong.
CHAPTER X
Frankie
began coming to Western Biological when he was eleven years old. For a week or
so he just stood outside the basement door and looked in. Then one day he stood
inside the door. Ten days later he was in the basement. He had very large eyes
and his hair was a dark wiry dirty shock. His hands were filthy. He picked up a
piece of excelsior and put it in a garbage can and then he looked at Doc where
he worked labeling specimen bottles containing purple Velella. Finally Frankie
got to the work bench and he put his dirty fingers on the bench. It took
Frankie three weeks to get that far and he was ready to bolt every instant of
the time.
Finally
one day Doc spoke to him. "What's your name, son?"
"Frankie."
"Where
do you live ?"
"Up
there," a gesture up the hill.
"Why
aren't you in school?"
"I
don't go to school."
"Why
not?"
"They
don't want me there."
"Your
hands are dirty. Don't you ever wash?"
Frankie
looked stricken and then he went to the sink and scrubbed his hands and always
afterwards he scrubbed his hands almost raw every day.
And
he came to the laboratory every day. It was an association without much talk.
Doc by a telephone call established that what Frankie said was true. They
didn't want him in school. He couldn't learn and there was something a little
wrong with his co-ordination. There was no place for him. He wasn't an idiot,
he wasn't dangerous, his parents, or parent, would not pay for his keep in an
institution. Frankie didn't often sleep at the laboratory but he spent his days
there. And sometimes he crawled in the excelsior crate and slept. That was
probably when there was a crisis at home,
Doc
asked, "Why do you come here?"
"You
don't hit me or give me a nickel," said Frankie.
"Do
they hit you at home?"
"There's
uncles around all the time at home. Some of them hit me and tell me to get out
and some of them give me a nickel and tell me to get out."
"Where's
your father?"
"Dead,"
said Frankie vaguely.
"Where's
your mother?"
"With
the uncles."
Doc
clipped Frankie's hair and got rid of the lice. At Lee Chong's he got him a new
pair of overalls and a striped sweater and Frankie became his slave.
"I
love you," he said one afternoon. "Oh, I love you."
He
wanted to work in the laboratory. He swept out every day, but there was
something a little wrong. He couldn't get a floor quite clean. He tried to help
with grading crayfish for size. There they were in a bucket, all sizes. They
were to be grouped in the big pans--laid out--all the three-inch ones together
and all the four-inch ones and so forth. Frankie tried and the perspiration
stood on his forehead but he couldn't do it. Size relationships just didn't get
through to him.
"No,"
Doc would say. "Look, Frankie. Put them beside your finger like this so
you'll know which ones are this long. See? This one goes from the tip of your
finger to the base of your thumb. Now you just pick out another one that goes
from the tip of your finger down to the same place and it will be right."
Frankie tried and he couldn't do it. When Doc went upstairs Frankie crawled in
the excelsior box and didn't come out all afternoon.
But
Frankie was a nice, good, kind boy. He learned to light Doc's cigars and he
wanted Doc to smoke all the time so he could light the cigars.
Better
than anything else Frankie loved it when there were parties upstairs in the
laboratory. When girls and men gathered to sit and talk, when the great
phonograph played music that throbbed in his stomach and made beautiful and
huge pictures from vaguely in his head, Frankie loved it. Then he crouched down
in a corner behind a chair where he was hidden and could watch and listen. When
there was laughter at a joke he didn't understand Frankie laughed delightedly
behind his chair and when the conversation dealt with abstractions his brows
furrowed and he became intent and serious.
One
afternoon he did a desperate thing. There was a small party in the laboratory.
Doc was in the kitchen pouring beer when Frankie appeared beside him. Frankie
grabbed a glass of beer and rushed it through the door and gave it to a girl
sitting in a big chair.
She
took the glass and said, "Why, thank you," and she smiled at him.
And
Doc coming through the door said, "Yes, Frankie is a great help to
me."
Frankie
couldn't forget that. He did the thing in his mind over and over, just how he
had taken the glass and just how the girl sat and then her voice--"Why,
thank you," and Doc-- "a great help to me--Frankie is a great help to
me--sure Frankie is a great help--Frankie," and Oh my God!
He
knew a big party was coming because Doc bought steaks and a great deal of beer
and Doc let him help clean out all the upstairs. But that was nothing, for a
great plan had formed in Frankie's mind and he could see just how it would be.
He went over it again and again. It was beautiful. It was perfect.
Then
the party started and people come and sat in the front room, girls and young
women and men.
Frankie
had to wait until he had the kitchen to himself and the door closed. And it was
some time before he had it so. But at last he was alone and the door was shut.
He could hear the chatter of conversation and the music from the great
phonograph. Be worked very quietly--first the tray--then get out the glasses
without breaking any. Now fill them with beer and let the foam settle a little
and then fill again.
Now
he was ready. He took a great breath and opened the door. The music and the
talk roared around him. Frankie picked up the tray of beer and walked through
the door. He knew how. He went straight toward the same young woman who had
thanked him before. And then right in front of her, the thing happened, the
co-ordination failed, the hands fumbled, the panicked musdes, the nerves
telegraphed to a dead operator, the responses did not come back. Tray and beer collapsed
forward into the young woman's lap. For a moment Frankie stood still. And then
he turned and ran.
The
room was quiet. They could hear him run downstairs, and go into the cellar.
They heard a hollow scrabbling sound-- and then silence.
Doc
walked quietly down the stairs and into the cellar. Frankie was in the
excelsior box burrowed down clear to the bottom, with the pile of excelsior on
top of him. Doc could hear him whimpering there. Doc waited for a moment and
then he went quietly back upstairs.
There
wasn't a thing in the world he could do.
CHAPTER XI
The
Model T Ford truck of Lee Chong had a dignified history. In 1923 it had been a
passenger car belonging to Dr. W. T. Waters. He used it for five years and sold
it to an insurance man named Rattle. Mr. Rattle was not a careful man. The car
he got in clean nice condition he drove like fury. Mr. Rattle drank on Saturday
nights and the car suffered. The fenders were broken and bent. He was a pedal
rider too and the bands had to be changed often. When Mr. Rattle embezzled a
client's money and ran away to San
José , he was caught with a high-hair blonde and sent
up within ten days.
The
body of the car was so battered that its next owner cut it in two and added a
little truck bed.
The
next owner took off the front of the cab and the windshield. He used it to haul
squids and he liked a fresh breeze to blow in his face. His name was Francis
Almones and he had a sad life, for he always made just a fraction less than he
needed to live. His father had left him a little money but year by year and
month by month, no matter how hard Francis worked or how careful he was, his
money grew less until he just dried up and blew away.
Lee
Chong got the truck in payment of a grocery bill.
By
this time the truck was little more than four wheels and an engine and the
engine was so crotchety and sullen and senile that it required expert care and
consideration. Lee Chong did not give it these things, with the result that the
truck stood in the tallgrass back of the grocery most of the time with the
mallows growing between its spokes. It had solid tires on its back wheels and
blocks held its front wheels off the ground.
Probably
any one of the boys from the Palace Flophouse could have made the truck run,
for they were all competent practical mechanics, but Gay was an inspired
mechanic. There is no term comparable to green thumbs to apply to such a
mechanic, but there should be. For there are men who can look, listen, tap,
make an adjustment, and a machine works. Indeed there are men near whom a car
runs better. And such a one was Gay. His fingers on a timer or a carburetor
adjustment screw were gentle and wise and sure. He could fix the delicate
electric motors in the laboratory. He could have worked in the canneries all
the time had he wished, for in that industry, which complains bitterly when it
does not make back its total in. vestment every year in profits, the machinery
is much less important than the fiscal statement. Indeed, if you could can
sardines with ledgers, the owners would have been very happy, As it was they
used decrepit, struggling old horrors of machines that needed the constant
attention of a man like Gay.
Mack
got the boys up early. They had their coffee and immediately moved over to the
truck where it lay among the weeds, Gay was in charge. He kicked the blocked-up
front wheels. "Go borrow a pump and get those pumped up," he said.
Then he put a stick in the gasoline tank under the board which served as a
seat. By some miracle there was a half inch of gasoline in the tank. Now Gay
went over the most probable difficulties. He took out the coil boxes, scraped
the points, adjusted the gap, and put them back. He opened the carburetor to
see that gas came through. He pushed on the crank to see that the whole shaft
wasn't frozen and the pistons rusted in their cylinders.
Meanwhile
the pump arrived and Eddie and Jones spelled each other on the tires.
Gay
hummed, "Dum tiddy--dum tiddy," as he worked. He removed the spark
plugs and scraped the points and bored the carbon out. Then Gay drained a
little gasoline into a can and poured some into each cylinder before he put the
spark plugs back. He straightened up. "We're going to need a couple of dry
cells," he said. "See if Lee Chong will let us have a couple."
Math
departed and returned almost immediately with a universal No which was designed
by Lee Chong to cover all future requests.
Gay
thought deeply. "I know where's a couple--pretty good ones too, but I
won't go get them."
"Where?"
asked Mack.
"Down
cellar at my house," said Gay. "They run the front doorbell. If one
of you fellas wants to kind of edge into my cellar without my wife seeing you,
they're on top of the side stringer on the left hand side as you go in. But for
God's sake, don't let my wife catch you."
A
conference elected Eddie to go and he departed.
"If
you get caught don't mention me," Gay called out after him. Meanwhile Gay
tested the bands. The low-high pedal didn't quite touch the floor so he knew
there was a little band left. The brake pedal did touch the floor so there was
no brake, but the reverse pedal had lots of band left. On a Model T Ford the
reverse is your margin of safety. When your brake is gone, you can use reverse
as a brake. And when the low gear band is worn too thin to pull up a steep
hill, why you can turn around and back up it. Gay found there was plently of
reverse and he knew everything was all right
It
was a good omen that Eddie came back with the dry cells without trouble. Mrs.
Gay had been in the kitchen. Eddie could hear her walking about but she didn't
hear Eddie. He was very good at such things.
Gay
connected the dry cells and he advanced the gas and retarded the spark lever.
"Twist her tail," he said.
He
was such a wonder, Gay was--the little mechanic of God, the St. Francis of all
things that turn and twist and explode, the St. Francis of coils and armatures
and gears. And if at some time all the heaps of jalopies, cut-down Dusenbergs,
Buicks, De Sotos and Plymouths, American Austins and Isotta Fraschinis praise
God in a great chorus--it will be largely due to Gay and his brotherhood.
One
twist--one little twist and the engine caught and labored and faltered and
caught again. Gay advanced the spark and reduced the gas. He switched over to
the magneto and the Ford of Lee Chong chuckled and jiggled and clattered
happily as though it knew it was working for a man who loved and understood it.
There
were two small technical legal difficulties with the truck--it had no recent
license plates and it had no lights. But the boys hung a rag permanently and
accidentally on the rear plate to conceal its vintage and they dabbed the front
plate with good thick mud. The equipment of the expedition was slight: some
long-handled frog nets and some gunny sacks. City hunters going out for sport
load themselves with food and liquor, but not Mack. He presumed rightly that
the country was where food came from. Two loaves of bread and what was left of
Eddie's wining jug was all the supply. The party clambered on the truck--Gay
drove and Mack sat beside him; they bumped around the corner of Lee Chong's and
down through the lot, threading among the pipes. Mr. Malloy waved at them from
his seat by the boiler. Gay eased across the sidewalk and down off the curb
gently because the front tires showed fabric all the way around. With all their
alacrity, it was afternoon when they got started.
The
truck eased into Red Williams' service station. Mack got out and gave his paper
to Red. He said, "Doc was a little short of change. So if you put five
gallons in and just give us a buck instead of the other five gallons, why
that's what Doc wants. He had to go south, you know. Had a big deal down
there."
Red
smiled good-naturedly. "You know, Mack," he said, "Doc got to
figuring if there was some kind of loophole, and he put his finger on the same
one you did. Doc's a pretty bright fellow. So he phoned me last night."
"Put
in the whole ten gallons," said Mack. "No--wait. It'll slop around
and spill. Put in five and give us five in a can--one of them sealed
cans."
Red
smiled happily. "Doc kind of figured that one too," he said.
"Put
in ten gallons," said Mack. "And don't go leaving none in the
hose."
The
little expedition did not go through the center of Monterey . A delicacy about the license plates
and the lights made Gay choose back streets. There would be the time when they
would go up Carmel Hill and down into the Valley, a good four miles on a main
highway, exposed to any passing cop until they turned up the fairly
unfrequented Carmel
Valley road. Gay chose a
back street that brought them out on the main highway at Peter's Gate just
before the steep Carmel Hill starts. Gay took a good noisy clattering run at
the hill and in fifty yards he put the pedal down to low. He knew it wouldn't
work, the band was worn too thin. On the level it was all right but not on a
hill. He stopped, let the truck back around .and aimed it down the hill. Then
he gave it the gas and the reverse pedal. And the reverse was not worn. The
truck crawled steadily and slowly but backward up Carmel Hill.
And
they very nearly made it. The radiator boiled, of course, but most Model T
experts believed that it wasn't working well if it wasn't boiling.
Someone
should write an erudite essay on the moral, physical, and esthetic effect of
the Model T Ford on the American nation. Two generations of Americans knew more
about the Ford coil than the clitoris, about the planetary system of gears than
the solar system of stars. With the Model T, part of the concept of private
property disappeared. Pliers ceased to be privately owned and a tire pump
belonged to the last man who had picked it up. Most of the babies of the period
were conceived in Model T Fords and not a few were born in them. The theory of
the Anglo Saxon home become so warped that it never quite recovered.
The
truck backed sturdily up Carmel Hill and it got past the Jack's Peak road and
was just going into the last and steepest pull when the motor's breathing
thickened, gulped, and strangled. It seemed very quiet when the motor was
still. Gay, who was heading downhill anyway, ran down the fifty feet and turned
into the Jack's Peak road entrance.
"What
is it?" Mack asked.
"Carburetor,
I think," said Gay. The engine sizzled and creaked with heat and the jet
of steam that blew down the overflow pipe sounded like the hiss of an
alligator.
The
carburetor of a Model T is not complicated but it needs all of its parts to
function. There is a needle valve, and the point must be on the needle and must
sit in its hole or the carburetor does not work.
Gay
held the needle in his hand and the point was broken off. "How in hell you
s'pose that happened ?" he asked.
"Magic,"
said Mack, "just pure magic. Can you fix it?"
"Hell,
no," said Gay. "Got to get another one."
"How
much they cost?"
"About
a buck if you buy one new--quarter at a wrecker's."
"You
got a buck?" Mack asked.
"Yeah,
but I won't need it."
"Well,
get back as soon as you can, will you? We'll just stay right here."
"Anyways
you won't go running off without a needle valve," said Gay. He stepped out
to the road. He thumbed three cars before one stopped for him. The boys watched
him climb in and start down the hill. They didn't see him again for one hundred
and eighty days.
Oh,
the infinity of possibility! How could it happen that the car that picked up
Gay broke down before it got into Monterey ?
If Gay had not been a mechanic, he would not have fixed the car. If he had not
fixed it the owner wouldn't have taken him to Jimmy Brucia's for a drink. And
why was it Jimmy's birthday? Out of all the possibilities in the world--the
millions of them--only events occurred that lead to the Salinas jail. Sparky Enea and Tiny Colletti
had made up a quarrel and were helping Jimmy celebrate his birthday. The blonde
came in. The musical argument in front of the juke box. Gay's new friend who
knew a judo hold and tried to show it to Sparky and got his wrist broken when
the hold went wrong. The policeman with a bad stomach--all unrelated,
irrelevant details and yet all running in one direction. Fate just didn't
intend Gay to go on that frog hunt and Fate took a hell of a lot of trouble and
people and accidents to keep him from it. When the final dimax came with the
front of Holman's bootery broken out and the party trying on the shoes in the
display window only Gay didn't hear the fire whistle. Only Gay didn't go to the
fire and when the police came they found him sitting all alone in Holman's
window wearing one brown oxford and one patent leather dress shoe with a gray
cloth top.
Back
at the truck the boys built a little fire when it got dark and the chill crept
up from the ocean. The pines above them soughed in the fresh sea wind. The boys
lay in the pine needles and looked at the lonely sky through the pine branches.
For a while they spoke of the difficulties Gay must be having getting a needle
valve and then gradually as the time passed they didn't mention him any more.
"Somebody
should of gone with him," said Mack.
About
ten o'clock Eddie got up. "There's a construction camp a piece up the hill,"
he said, "I think I'll go up and see if they got any Model T's."
CHAPTER XII
Where
the new postoffice is, there used to be a deep gulch with water flowing in it
and a little foot bridge over it. On one side of the gulch was a fine old adobe
and on the other the house of the doctor who handled all the sickness, birth,
and death in the town. He worked with animals too and, having studied in France , he even
dabbled in the new practice of embalming bodies before they were buried. Some
of the oldtimers considered this sentimental and some thought it wasteful and
to some it was sacrilegious since there was no provision for it in any sacred
volume. But the better and richer families were coming to it and it looked to
become a fad.
One
morning elderly Mr. Carriaga was walking from his house on the hill down toward
Alvarado Street .
He was just crossing the foot bridge when his attention was drawn to a small
boy and a dog struggling up out of the gulch. The boy carried a liver while the
dog dragged yards of intestine at the end of which a stomach dangled. Mr.
Carriaga paused and addressed the little boy politely: "Good
morning."
In
those days little boys were courteous. "Good morning, sir."
"Where
are you going with the liver?"
"I'm
going to make some chum and catch some mackerel."
Mr.
Carriaga smiled. "And the dog, will he catch mackerel too ?"
"The
dog found that, It's his, sir. We found them in the gulch."
Mr.
Carriaga smiled and strolled on and then his mind began to work. That isn't a
beef liver, it's too small. And it isn't a calf s liver, it's too red. It isn't
a sheep's liver--Now his mind was alert. At the corner he met Mr. Ryan.
"Anyone
die in Monterey
last night?" he asked.
"Not
that I know of," said Mr. Ryan.
"Anyone
killed ?"
"No."
They
walked on together and Mr. Carriaga told about the little boy and the dog.
At
the Adobe Bar a number of citizens were gathered for their morning
conversation. There Mr. Carriaga told his story again and he had just finished when
the constable came into the Adobe. He should know if anyone had died. "No
one died in Monterey ,"
he said. "But Josh Billings died out at the Hotel del Monte."
The
men in the bar were silent. And the same thought went through all their minds.
Josh Billings was a great man, a great writer. He had honored Monterey by dying there and he had been
degraded. Without much discussion a committee formed made up of everyone there.
The stern men walked quickly to the gulch and across the foot bridge and they
hammered on the door of the doctor who had studied in France .
He
had worked late. The knocking got him out of bed and brought him tousled of
hair and beard to the door in his nightgown. Mr. Carriaga addressed him
sternly: "Did you embalm Josh Billings ?"
"Why--yes."
"What
did you do with his tripas?"
"Why--I
threw them in the gulch where I always do."
They
made him dress quickly then and they hurried down to the beach, If the little
boy had gone quickly about his business, it would have been too late. He was
just getting into a boat when the committee arrived. The intestine was in the
sand where the dog had abandoned it.
Then
the French doctor was made to collect the parts. He was forced to wash them
reverently and pick out as much sand as possible. The doctor himself had to
stand the expense of the leaden box which went into the coffin of Josh
Billings. For Monterey
was not a town to let dishonor come to a literary man.
CHAPTER XIII
Mack
and the boys slept peacefully on the pine needles. Some time before dawn Eddie
came back. He had gone a long way before he found a Model T. And then when he
did, he wondered whether or not it would be a good idea to take the needle out
of its seat. It might not fit. So he took the whole carburetor. The boys didn't
wake up when he got back. He lay down beside them and slept under the pine
trees. There was one nice thing about Model T's. The parts were not only
interchangeable, they were unidentifiable.
There
is a beautiful view from the Carmel grade, the
curving bay with the waves creaming on the sand, the dune country around Seaside and right at the
bottom of the hill, the warm intimacy of the town.
Mack
got up in the dawn and hustled his pants where they bound him and he stood
looking down on the bay. He could see some of the purse-seiners coming in. A
tanker stood over against Seaside ,
taking on oil. Behind him the rabbits stirred in the bush. Then the sun came up
and shook the night chill out of the air the way you'd shake a rug. When he
felt the first sun warmth, Mack shivered.
The
boys ate a little bread while Eddie installed the new carburetor. And when it
was ready, they didn't bother to crank it. They pushed it out to the highway
and coasted in gear until it started. And then Eddie driving, they backed up
over the rise, over the top and turned and headed forward and down past Hatton
Fields. In Carmel
Valley the artichoke
plants stood gray green, and the willows were lush along the river. They turned
left up the valley. Luck blossomed from the first. A dusty Rhode Island red
rooster who had wandered too far from his own farmyard crossed the road and
Eddie hit him without running too far off the road. Sitting in the back of the
truck, Hazel picked him as they went and let the feathers fly from his hand,
the most widely distributed evidence on record, for there was a little breeze
in the morning blowing down from Jamesburg and some of the red chicken feathers
were deposited on Pt. Lobos and some even blew out to sea.
The Carmel is a lovely little
river. It isn't very long but in its course it has everything a river should
have. It rises in the mountains, and tumbles down a while, runs through
shallows, is dammed to make a lake, spills over the dam, crackles among round
boulders, wanders lazily under sycamores, spills into pools where trout live,
drops in against banks where crayfish live. In the winter it becomes a torrent,
a mean little fierce river, and in the summer it is a place for children to
wade in and for fishermen to wander in. Frogs blink from its banks and the deep
ferns grow beside it. Deer and foxes come to drink from it, secretly in the
morning and evening, and now and then a mountain lion crouched flat laps its
waters. The farms of the rich little valley back up to the river and take its
water for the orchards and the vegetables. The quail call beside it and the
wild doves come whistling in at dusk. Raccoons pace its edges looking for
frogs. It's everything a river should be.
A few
miles up the valley the river cuts in under a high cliff from which vines and
ferns hang down. At the base of this duff there is a pool, green and deep, and
on the other side of the pool there is a little sandy place where it is good to
sit and to cook your dinner.
Mack
and the boys came down to this place happily. It was perfect. If frogs were
available, they would be here. It was a place to relax, a place to be happy. On
the way out they had thriven. In addition to the big red chicken there was a
sack of carrots which had fallen from a vegetable truck, half a dozen onions which
had not. Mack had a bag of coffee in his pocket. In the truck there was a
five-gallon can with the top cut off. The wining jug was nearly half full. Such
things as salt and pepper had been brought. Mack and the boys would have
thought anyone who traveled without salt, pepper, and coffee very silly indeed.
Without
effort, confusion, or much thought, four round stones were rolled together on
the little beach. The rooster who had challenged the sunrise of this very day
lay dismembered and clean in water in the five gallon can with peeled onions
about him, while a little fire of dead willow sticks sputtered between the
stones, a very little fire. Only fools build big fires. It would take a long
time to cook this rooster, for it had taken him a long time to achieve his size
and muscularity. But as the water began to boil gently about him, he smelled
good from the beginning.
Mack
gave them a pep talk. "The best time for frogs is at night," he said,
"so I guess we'll just lay around 'til it gets dark." They sat in the
shade and gradually one by one they stretched out and slept.
Mack
was right. Frogs do not move around much in the daytime; they hide under ferns
and they look secretly out of holes under rocks. The way to catch frogs is with
a flashlight at night. The men slept knowing they might have a very active
night. Only Hazel stayed awake to replenish the little fire under the cooking
chicken. Hazel stuck his pocket knife into the muscles of the chicken.
There
is no golden afternoon next to the cliff. When the sun went over it at about
two o'clock a whispering shade came to the beach. The sycamores rustled in the
afternoon breeze. Little water snakes slipped down to the rocks and then gently
entered the water and swam along through the pool, their heads held up like
little periscopes and a tiny wake spreading behind them. A big trout jumped in
the pool. The gnats and mosquitoes which avoid the sun came out and buzzed over
the water. All of the sun bugs, the flies, the dragonflies, the wasps, the
hornets, went home. And as the shadow came to the beach, as the first quail
began to call, Mack and the boys awakened. The smell of the chicken stew was
heartbreaking. Hazel had picked a fresh bay leaf from a tree by the river and
he had dropped it in. The carrots were in now. Coffee in its own can was
simmering on its own rock, far enough from the flame so that it did not boil
too hard. Mack awakened, started up, stretched, staggered to the pool, washed
his face with cupped hands, hacked, spat, washed out his mouth, broke wind,
tightened his belt, scratched his legs, combed his wet hair with his fingers,
drank from the jug, belched and sat down by the fire. "By God that smells
good," he said.
Men
all do about the same things when they wake up. Mack's process was loosely the
one all of them followed. And soon they had all come to the fire and
complimented Hazel. Hazel stuck his pocket knife into the muscles of the
chicken.
"He
ain't going to be what you'd call tender," said Hazel. "You'd have to
cook him about two weeks to get him tender. How old about do you judge he was,
Mack?"
"I'm
forty-eight and I ain't as tough as he is," said Mack.
Eddie
said, "How old can a thicken get, do you think-- that's if nobody pushes
him around or he don't get sick?"
"That's
something nobody isn't ever going to find out," said Jones. It was a
pleasant time, The jug went around and warmed them.
Jones
said, "Eddie, I don't mean to complain none. I was just thinkin'. S'pose
you had two or three jugs back of the bar. S'pose you put all the whiskey in
one and all the wine in another and all the beer in another--"
A
slightly shocked silence followed the suggestion. "I didn't mean
nothing," said Jones quickly. "I like it this way--" Jones
talked too much then because he knew he had made a social blunder and he wasn't
able to stop. "What I like about it this way is you never know what kind
of a drunk you're going to get out of it," he said, "You take
whiskey," he said hurriedly. "You more or less know what you'll do. A
fightin' guy fights and a cryin' guy cries, but this--" he said
magnaminously-- "why you don't know whether it'll run you up a pine tree
or start you swimming to Santa Cruz .
It's more fun that way," he said weakly.
"Speaking
of swimming," said Mack to fill in the indelicate place in the
conversation and to shut Jones up. "I wonder whatever happened to that guy
McKinley Moran. Remember that deep sea diver?"
"I
remember him," said Hughie. "I and him used to hang around together.
He just didn't get much work and then he got to drinking. It's kind of tough on
you divin' and drinkin'. Got to worryin' too. Finally he sold his suit and
helmet and pump and went on a hell of a drunk and then he left town. I don't
know where he went. He wasn't no good after he went down after that Wop that
got took down with the anchor from the Twelve Brothers. McKinley just dove
down. Bust his eardrums, and he wasn't no good good after that. Didn't hurt the
Wop a bit."
Mack
sampled the jug again. "He used to make a lot of dough during
Prohibition," Mack said. "Used to get twenty-five bucks a day from
the government to dive lookin' for liquor on the bottom and he got three
dollars a case from Louie for not findin' it. Had it worked out so he brought
up one case a day to keep the government happy. Louie didn't mind that none.
Made it so they didn't get in no new divers. McKinley made a lot of
dough."
"Yeah,"
said Hughie. "But he's like everybody else--gets some dough and he wants
to get married. He got married three times before his dough run out. I could always
tell. He'd buy a white fox fur piece and bang I--next thing you'd know, he's
married."
"I
wonder what happened to Gay," Eddie asked. It was the first time they had
spoken of him.
"Same
thing, I guess," said Mack. "You just can't trust a married guy. No
matter how much he hates his old lady why he'll go back to her. Get to thinkin'
and broodin' and back he'll go. You can't trust him no more. Take Gay,"
said Mack. "His old lady hits him. But I bet you when Gay's away from her
three days, he gets it figured out that it's his fault and he goes back to make
it up to her,"
They
ate long and daintily, spearing out pieces of chicken, holding the dripping
pieces until they cooled and then gnawing the musded meat from the bone. They
speared the carrots on pointed willow switches and finally they passed the can
and drank the juice. And around them the evening crept in as delicately as
music. The quail called each other down to the water. The trout jumped in the
pool. And the moths came down and fluttered about the pool as the daylight
mixed into the darkness. They passed the coffee can about and they were warm
and fed and silent. At last Mack said, "God damn it. I hate a liar,"
"Who's
been lyin' to you?" Eddie asked.
"Oh,
I don't mind a guy that tells a little one to get along or to hop up a
conversation, but I hate a guy that lies to himself."
"Who
done that?" Eddie asked.
"Me,"
said Mack. "And maybe you guys. Here we are," he said earnestly,
"the whole God damn shabby lot of us. We worked it out that we wanted to
give Doc a party. So we come out here and have a hell of a lot of fun. Then
we'll go back and get the dough from Doc. There's five of us, so we'll drink
five times as much liquor as he will. And I ain't sure we're doin' it for Doc.
I ain't sure we ain't doin' it for ourselves. And Doc's too nice a fella to do
that to. Doc is the nicest fella I ever knew. I don't want to be the kind of a
guy that would take advantage of him. You know one time I put the bee on him
for a buck. I give him a hell of a story. Right in the middle I seen he knew
God damn well the story was so much malarky. So right in the middle I says,
'Doc, that's a fuggin' lie!' And he put his hand in his pocket and brought out
a buck. 'Mack,' he says, 'I figure a guy that needs it bad enough to make up a
lie to get it, really needs it,' and he give me the buck. I paid him that buck
back the next day. I never did spend it. Just kept it overnight and then give
it back to him."
Hazel
said, "There ain't nobody likes a party better than Doc. We're givin' him
the party. What the hell is the beef ?"
"I
don't know," said Mack, "I'd just like to give him something when I
didn't get most of it back."
"How
about a present?" Hughie suggested. "S'pose we just bought the
whiskey and give it to him and let him do what he wants."
"Now
you're talkin'," said Mack. "That's just what we'll do. We'll just
give him the whiskey and fade out."
"You
know what'll happen," said Eddie. "Henri and them people from Carmel will smell that
whiskey out and then instead of only five of us there'll be twenty. Doc told me
one time himself they can smell him fryin' a steak from Cannery Row clear down
to Point Sur. I don't see the percentage. He'd come out better if we give him
the party ourselves."
Mack
considered this reasoning, "Maybe you're right," he said at last.
"But s'pose we give him something except whiskey, maybe cuff links with
his initials."
"Oh,
horse shit," said Hazel. "Doc don't want stuff like that."
The
night was in by now and the stars were white in the sky. Hazel fed the fire and
it put a little room of light on the beach. Over the hill a fox was barking
sharply. And now in the night the smell of sage came down from the hills. The
water thudded on the stones where it went out of the deep pool.
Mack
was mulling over the last piece of reasoning when the sound of footsteps on the
ground made them turn. A man dark and large stalked near and he had a shotgun
over his arm and a pointer walked shyly and delicately at his heel.
"What
the hell are you doing here?" he asked.
"Nothing,"
said Mack.
"The
land's posted. No fishing, hunting, fires, camping. Now you just pack up and
put that fire out and get off this land."
Mack
stood up humbly. "I didn't know, Captain," he said. "Honest we
never seen the sign, Captain."
"There's
signs all over. You couldn't have missed them.".
"Look,
Captain, we made a mistake and we're sorry," said Mack. He paused and
looked closely at the slouching figure. "You are a military man, aren't
you, sir? I can always tell. Military man don't carry his shoulders the same as
ordinary people. I was in the army so long, I can always tell."
Imperceptibly
the shoulders of the man straightened, nothing obvious, but he held himself
differently.
"I
don't allow fires on my place," he said.
"Well,
we're sorry," said Mack. "We'll get right out, Captain. You see,
we're workin' for some scientists, We're tryin' to get some frogs. They're
workin' on cancer and we're helpin' out getting some frogs."
The
man hesitated for a moment. "What do they do with the frogs?" he
asked.
"Well,
sir," said Mack, "they give cancer to the frogs and then they can
study and experiment and they got it nearly licked if they can just get some
frogs. But if you don't want us on your land, Captain, we'll get right out.
Never would of come in if we knew." Suddenly Mack seemed to see the
pointer for the first time. "By God that's a fine-lookin' bitch," he
said enthusiastically. "She looks like Nola that win the field trials in Virginia last year. She
a Virginia
dog, Captain?"
The
captain hesitated and then he lied. "Yes," he said shortly.
"She's lame. Tick got her right on her shoulder."
Mack
was instantly solicitous. "Mind if I look, Captain? Come, girl. Come on,
girl." The pointer looked up at her master and then sidled up to Mack.
"Pile on some twigs so I can see," he said to Hazel.
"It's
up where she can't lick it," said the captain and hc leaned over Mack's
shoulder to look.
Mack
pressed some pus out of the evil-looking crater on the dog's shoulder, "I
had a dog had a thing like this and it went right in and killed him. She just
had pups, didn't she?"
"Yes,"
said the captain, "six. I put iodine on that place."
"No,"
said Mack, "that won't draw. You got any epsom salts up at your
place?"
"Yes--there's
a big bottle."
"Well
you make a hot poultice of epsom salts and put it on there. She's weak, you
know, from the pups. Be a shame if she got sick now. You'd lose the pups
too." The pointer looked deep into Mack's eyes and then she licked his
hand.
"Tell
you what I'll do, Captain. I'll look after her myself. Epsom salt'll do the
trick. That's the best thing."
The
captain stroked the dog's head. "You know, I've got a pond up by the house
that's so full of frogs I can't sleep nights. Why don't you look up there? They
bellow all night. I'd be glad to get rid of them."
"That's
mighty nice of you," said Mack. "I'll bet those docs would thank you
for that. But I'd like to get a poultice on this dog." He turned to the
others. "You put out this fire," he said. "Make sure there ain't
a spark left and clean up around. You don't want to leave no mess. I and the
captain will go and take care of Nola here. You fellows follow along when you
get cleared up." Mack and the captain walked away together.
Hazel
kicked sand on the fire. "I bet Mack could of been president of the U.S. if he
wanted," he said.
"What
could he do with it if he had it?" Jones asked. "There wouldn't be no
fun in that."
CHAPTER XIV
Early
morning is a time of magic in Cannery Row. In the gray time after the light has
come and before the sun has risen, the Row seems to hang suspended out of time
in a silvery light. The street lights go out, and the weeds are a brilliant
green. The corrugated iron of the canneries glows with the pearly lucence of
platinum or old pewter. No automobiles are running then. The street is silent
of progress and business. And the rush and drag of the waves can be heard as
they splash in among the piles of the canneries. It is a time of great peace, a
deserted time, a little era of rest. Cats drip over the fences and slither like
syrup over the ground to look for fish heads. Silent early morning dogs parade
majestically picking and choosing judiciously whereon to pee. The sea gulls
come flapping in to sit on the cannery roofs to await the day of re fuse, They
sit on the roof peaks shoulder to shoulder. From the rocks near the Hopkins
Marine Station comes the barking of sea lions like the baying of hounds. The
air is cool and fresh. In the back gardens the gophers push up the morning
mounds of fresh damp earth and they creep out and drag flowers into their
holes. Very few people are about, just enough to make it seem more deserted
than it is. One of Dora's girls comes home from a call on a patron too wealthy
or too sick to visit the Bear Flag. Her makeup is a little sticky and her feet
are tired. Lee Chong brings the garbage cans out and stands them on the curb.
The old Chinaman comes out of the sea and flapflaps across the street and up
past the Palace. The cannery watchmen look out and blink at the morning light.
The bouncer at the Bear Flag steps out on the porch in his shirtsleeves and
stretches and yawns and scratches his stomach. The snores of Mr. Malloy's
tenants in the pipes have a deep tannelly quality. It is the hour of the
pearl--the interval between day and night when time stops and examines itself.
On
such a morning and in such a light two soldiers and two girls strolled easily
along the street, They had come out of La Ida and they were very tired and very
happy. The girls were hefty, big breasted and strong and their blonde hair was
in slight disarray. They wore printed rayon party dresses, wrinided now and
dinging to their convexities, And each girl wore a soldier's cap, one far back
on her head and the other with the visor down almost on her nose. They were
full-lipped, broadnosed, hippy girls and they were very tired.
The
soldier's tunics were unbuttoned and their belts were threaded through their
epaulets. The ties were pulled down a little so the shirt collars could be
unbuttoned. And the soldiers wore the girls' hats, one a tiny yellow straw
boater with a bunch of daisies on the crown, the other a white knitted halfhat
to which medallions of blue cellophane adhered. They walked holding hands,
swinging their hands rhythmically. The soldier on the outside had a large brown
paper bag ftlled with cold canned beer. They strolled softly in the pearly
light. They had had a hell of a time and they felt good. They smiled delicately
like weary children remembering a party. They looked at one another and smiled
and they swung their hands. Past the Bear Flag they went and said
"Hiya," to the bouncer who was scratching his stomach. They listened
to the snores from the pipes and laughed a little. At Lee Chong's they stopped
and looked into the messy display window where tools and clothes and food
crowded for attention. Swinging their hands and scuffing their feet, they came
to the end of Cannery Row and turned up to the railroad track. The girls
climbed up on the rails and walked along on them and the soldiers put their
arms around the plump waists to keep them from falling. Then they went past the
boat works and turned down into the park-like property of the Hopkins Marine
Station. There is a tiny curved beach in front of the station, a miniature
beach between little reefs. The gentle morning waves licked up the beach and
whispered softly The fine smell of seaweed came from the exposed rocks. As the
four came to the beach a sliver of the sun broke over Tom Work's land across
the head of the bay and it gilded the water and made the rocks yellow. The
girls sat formally down in the sand and straightened their skirts over their
knees. One of the soldiers punched holes in four cans of beer and handed them
around. And then the men lay down and put their heads in the girls' laps and
looked up into their faces. And they smiled at each other, a tired and peaceful
and wonderful secret.
From
up near the station came the barking of a dog--the watchman, a dark and surly
man, had seen them and his black and surly cocker spaniel had seen them. He
shouted at them and when they did not move he came down on the beach and his
dog barked monotonously. "Don't you know you can't lay around here? You
got to get off. This is private property!"
The
soldiers did not even seem to hear him They smiled on and the girls were
stroking their hair over the temples. At last in slow motion one of the
soldiers turned his head so that his cheek was cradled between the girl's legs,
He smiled benevolently at the caretaker. "Why don't you take a flying
fuggut the moon ?" he said kindly and he turned back to look at the girl.
The
sun lighted her blonde hair and she scratched him over one ear. They didn't
even see the caretaker go back to his house.
CHAPTER XV
By
the time the boys got up to the farmhouse Mack was in the kitchen. The pointer
bitch lay on her side, and Mack held a cloth saturated with epsom salts against
her tick bite. Among her legs the big fat wiener pups nuzzled and bumped for
milk and the bitch looked patiently up into Mack's face saying, "You see
how it is? I try to tell him but he doesn't understand."
The
captain held a lamp and looked down on Mack.
"I'm
glad to know about that," he said.
Mack
said, "I don't want to tell you about your business, sir, but these pups
ought to be weaned. She ain't got a hell of a lot of milk left and them pups
are chewin' her to pieces."
"I
know," said the captain. "I s'pose I should have drowned them all but
one. I've been so busy trying to keep the place going. People don't take the
interest in bird dogs they used to. It's all poodles and boxers and
Dobermans."
"I
know," said Mack. "And there ain't no dog like a pointer for a man. I
don't know what's come over people. But you wouldn't of drowned them, would
you, sir?"
"Well,"
said the captain, "since my wife went into politics, I'm just running
crazy. She got elected to the Assembly for this district and when the
Legislature isn't in session, she's off making speeches. And when she's home
she's studying all the time and writing bills."
"Must
be lousy in--I mean it must be pretty lonely," said Mack. "Now if I
had a pup like this--" he picked up a squirming puzz-faced pup-- "why
I bet I'd have a real bird dog in three years. I'd take a bitch every
time."
"Would
you like to have one?" the captain asked.
Mack
looked up. "You mean you'd let me have one? Oh! Jesus Christ yes."
"Take
your pick," said the captain. "Nobody seems to understand bird dogs
any more."
The
boys stood in the kitchen and gathered quick impressions. It was obvious that
the wife was away--the opened cans, the frying pan with lace from fried eggs
still sticking to it, the crumbs on the kitchen table, the open box of shotgun
shells on the bread box all shrieked of the lack of a woman, while the white
curtains and the papers on the dish shelves and the too small towels on the
rack told them a woman had been there, And they were unconsciously glad she
wasn't there. The kind of women who put papers on shelves and had little towels
like that instinctively distrusted and disliked Mack and the boys. Such women
knew that they were the worst threats to a home, for they offered ease and
thought and companionship as opposed to neatness, order, and properness. They
were very glad she was away.
Now
the captain seemed to feel that they were doing him a favor. He didn't want
them to leave, He said hesitantly, "S'pose you boys would like a little
something to warm you up before you go out for the frogs?"
The
others looked at Mack. Mack was frowning as though he was thinking it through.
"When we're out doin' scientific stuff, we make it a kind of a rule not to
touch nothin'," he said, and then quickly as though he might have gone too
far, "But seein' as how you been so nice to us--well I wouldn't mind a
short one myself. I don't know about the boys."
The
boys agreed that they wouldn't mind a short one either. The captain got a
flashlight and went down in the cellar. They could hear him moving lumber and
boxes about and he came back upstairs with a five-gallon oak keg in his arms. He
set it on the table. "During Prohibition I got some corn whiskey and laid
it away. I just got to thinking I'd like to see how it is. It's pretty old now.
I'd almost forgot it. You see--my wife--" he let it go at that because it
was apparent that they understood. The captain knocked out the oak plug from
the end of the keg and got glasses down from the shelf that had scallopedged
paper laid on it. It is a hard job to pour a small drink from a five-gallon
keg. Each of them got half a water glass of the clear brown liquor. They waited
ceremoniously for the captain and then they said, "Over the river,"
and tossed it back. They swallowed, tasted their tongues, sucked their lips,
and there was a far-away look in their eyes.
Mack
peered into his empty glass as though some holy message were written in the
bottom. And then he raised his eyes. "You can't say nothin' about
that," he said. "They don't put that in bottles." He breathed in
deeply and sucked his breath as it came out. "I don't think I ever tasted
nothin' as good as that," he said,
The
captain looked pleased. His glance wandered back to the keg. "It is
good," he said. "You think we might have another little one?"
Mack
stared into his glass again. "Maybe a short one," he agreed.
"Wouldn't it be easier to pour out some in a pitcher? You're liable to
spill it that way."
Two
hours later they recalled what they had come for.
The
frog pool was square--fifty feet wide and seventy feet long and four feet deep.
Lush soft grass grew about its edge and a little ditch brought the water from
the river to it and from it little ditches went out to the orchards. There were
frogs there all right, thousands of them. Their voices beat the night, they
boomed and barked and croaked and rattled. They sang to the stars, to the
waning moon, to the waving grasses. They bellowed love songs and challenges.
The men crept through the darkness toward the pool. The captain carried a
nearly filled pitcher of whiskey and every man had his own glass. The captain
had found them flashlights that worked. Hughie and Jones carried gunny sacks.
As they drew quietly.1 near, the frogs heard them coming. The night had been
roaring with frog song and then suddenly it was silent Mack and the boys and
the captain sat down on the ground to have one last short one and to map their
campaign. And the plan was bold.
During
the millennia that frogs and men have lived in the same world, it is probable
that men have hunted frogs. And during that time a pattern of hunt and parry
has developed. The man with net or bow or lance or gun creeps noiselessly, as
he thinks, toward the frog. The pattern requires that the frog sit still, sit
very still and wait. The rules of the game require the frog to wait until the
final flicker of a second, when the net is descending, when the lance is in the
air, when the finger squeezes the trigger, then the frog jumps, plops into the
water, swims to the bottom and waits until the man goes away. That is the way
it is done, the way it has always been done. Frogs have every right to expect
it will always be done that way. Now and then the net is too quick, the lance
pierces, the gun flicks and that frog is gone, but it is all fair and in the
framework. Frogs don't resent that, But how could they have anticipated Mack's
new method? How could they have foreseen the horror that followed? The sudden
flashing of lights, the shouting and squealing of men, the rush of feet. Every
frog leaped, plopped into the pool, and swam frantically to the bottom. Then
into the pooi plunged the line of men, stamping, churning, moving in a crazy
line up the pool, flinging their feet about. Hysterically the frogs displaced
from their placid spots swam ahead of the crazy thrashing feet and the feet
came on. Frogs are good swimmers but they haven't much endurance. Down the pool
they went until finally they were bunched and crowded against the end. And the
feet and wildly plunging bodies followed them. A few frogs lost their heads and
floundered among the feet and got through and these were saved. But the majority
decided to leave this pool forever, to find a new home in a new country where
this kind of thing didn't happen. A wave of frantic, frustrated frogs, big
ones, little ones, brown ones, green ones, men frogs and women frogs, a wave of
them broke over the bank, crawled, leaped, scrambled. They clambered up the
grass, they dutched at each other, little ones rode on big ones, And
then--horror on horror--the flashlights found them. Two men gathered them like
berries. The line came out of the water and closed in on their rear and
gathered them like potatoes. Tens and fifties of them were flung into the gunny
sacks, and the sacks filled with tired, frightened, and disillusioned frogs,
with dripping whimpering frogs. Some got away, of course, and some had been saved
in the pool. But never in frog history had such an execution taken place. Frogs
by the pound, by the fifty pounds. They weren't counted but there must have
been six or seven hundred, Then happily Mack tied up the necks of the sacks.
They were soaking, dripping wet and the air was cool. They had a short one in
the grass before they went back to the house so they wouldn't catch cold.
It is
doubtful whether the captain had ever had so much fun. He was indebted to Mack
and the boys. Later when the curtains caught fire and were put out with the
little towels, the captain told the boys not to mind it. He felt it was an
honor to have them burn his house clear down, if they wanted to. "My wife
is a wonderful woman," he said in a kind of peroration: "Most
wonderful woman. Ought to of been a man, If she was a man I wouldn' of married
her." He laughed a long time over that and repeated it three or four times
and resolved to remember it so he could tell it to a lot of other people. He
filled a jug with whiskey and gave it to Mack. He wanted to go to live with
them in the Palace Flophouse. He decided that his wife would like Mack and the
boys if she only knew them. Finally he went to sleep on the floor with his head
among the puppies. Mack and the boys poured themselves a short one and regarded
him seriously.
Mack
said, "He give me that jug of whiskey, didn't he? You heard him?"
"Sure
he did," said Eddie. "I heard him."
"And
he give me a pup?"
"Sure,
pick of the litter. We all heard him. Why?"
"I
never did roll a drunk and I ain't gonna start now," said Mack. "We
got to get out of here. He's gonna wake up feelin' lousy and it's goin' to be
all our fault. I just don't want to be here." Mack glanced at the burned
curtains, at the floor glistening with whiskey and puppy dirt, at the bacon
grease that was coagulating on the stove ffónt. He went to the pups, looked
them over carefully, felt bone and frame, looked in eyes and regarded jaws, and
he picked out a beautifully spotted bitch with a liver-colored nose and a fine
dark yellow eye. "Come on, darling," he said.
They
blew out the lamp because of the danger of fire, It was just turning dawn as
they left the house.
"I
don't think I ever had such a fine trip," said Mack. "But I got to
thinkin' about his wife comin' back and it gave me the shivers." The pup
whined in his arms and he put in under his coat. "He's a real nice
fella," said Mack. "After you get him feelin' easy, that is." He
strode on toward the place where they had parked the Ford. "We shouldn't
go forgettin' we're doin' all this for Doc," he said. "From the way
things are pannin' out, it looks like Doc is a pretty lucky guy."
CHAPTER XVI
Probably
the busiest time the girls of the Bear Flag ever had was the March of the big
sardine catch. It wasn't only that the fish ran in silvery billions and money
ran almost as freely. A new regiment moved into the Presidio and a new bunch of
soldiers always shop around a good deal before they settle down. Dora was short
handed just at that time too, for Eva Flanegan had gone to East St. Louis on a
vacation, Phyllis Mae had broken her leg getting out of the roller coaster in
Santa Cruz, and Elsie Doublebottom had made a novena and wasn't much good for
anything else, The men from the sardine fleet, loaded with dough, were in and
out all afternoon. They sail at dark and fish all night so they must play in
the afternoon. In the evening the soldiers of the new regiment came down and
stood around playing the joke box and drinking Coca-Cola and sizing up the
girls for the time when they would be paid, Dora was having trouble with her
income tax, for she was entangled in that curious enigma which said the
business was illegal and then taxed her for it. In addition to everything else
there were the regulars--the steady customers who had been coming down for
years, the laborers from the gravel pits, the riders from the ranches, the
railroad men who came in the front door, and the city officials and prominent
business men who came in the rear entrance back by the tracks and who had little
chintz sitting rooms assigned to them.
All
in all it was a terrific month and right in the middle of it the influenza
epidemic had to break out. It came to the whole town. Mrs. Talbot and her
daughter of the San Carlos Hotel had it. Tom Work had it. Benjamin Peabody and
his wife had it. Excelentisima Maria Antonia Field had it. The whole Gross
family came down with it.
The
doctors of Monterey--and there were enough of them to take care of the ordinary
diseases, accidents and neuroses-- were running crazy. They had more business
than they could do among clients who if they didn't pay their bills, at least
had the money to pay them. Cannery Row which produces a tougher breed than the
rest of the town was late in contracting it, but finally it got them too. The
schools were closed. There wasn't a house that hadn't feverish children and
sick parents. It was not a deadly disease as it was in 1917 but with children
it had a tendency to go into the mastoids. The medical profession was very
busy, and besides, Cannery Row was not considered a very good financial risk,
Now
Doc of the Western Biological Laboratory had no right to practice medicine. It
was not his fault that everyone in the Row came to him for medical advice.
Before he knew it he found himself running from shanty to shanty taking
temperatures, giving physics, borrowing and delivering blankets and even taking
food from house to house where mothers looked at him with inflamed eyes from
their beds, and thanked him and put the full responsibility for their
children's re covery on him. When a case got really out of hand he phoned a
local doctor and sometimes one came if it seemed to be an emergency. But to the
families it was all emergency. Doc didn't get much sleep. He lived on beer and
canned sardines. In Lee Chong's where he went to get beer he met Dora who was
there to buy a pair of nail clippers.
"You
look done in," Dora said.
"I
am," Doc admitted. "I haven't had any sleep for about a week."
"I
know," said Dora. "I hear it's bad. Comes at a bad time too."
"Well,
we haven't lost anybody yet," said Doc. "But there are some awful
sick kids. The Ransel kids have all developed mastoiditis."
"Is
there anything I can do?" Dora asked.
Doc
said, "You know there is. People get so scared and helpless. Take the
Ransels--they're scared to death and they're scared to be alone. If you, or
some of the girls, could just sit with them."
Dora,
who was soft as a mouse's belly, could be as hard as carborundum. She went back
to the Bear Flag and organized it for service. It was a bad time for her but
she did it. The Greek cook made a ten-gallon cauldron of strong soup and kept
it full and kept it strong. The girls tried to keep up their business but they
went in shifts to sit with the families, and they carried pots of soup when
they went. Doc was in almost constant demand. Dora consulted him and detailed
the girls where he suggested. And all the time the business at the Bear Flag
was booming. The joke box never stopped playing. The men of the fishing fleet
and the soldiers stood in line. And the girls did their work and then they took
their pots of soup and went to sit with the Ransels, with the McCarthys, with
the Ferrias. The girls slipped out the back door, and sometimes staying with
the sleeping children the girls dropped to sleep in their chairs. They didn't
use makeup for work any more. They didn't have to. Dora herself said she could
have used the total membership of the old ladies' home. It was the busiest time
the girls at the Bear Flag could remember. Every. one was glad when it was
over.
CHAPTER XVII
In
spite of his friendliness and his friends Doc was a lonely and a set-apart man.
Mack probably noticed it more than anybody. In a group, Doc seemed always
alone. When the lights were on and the curtains drawn, and the Gregorian music
played on the great phonograph, Mack used to look down on the laboratory from
the Palace Flophouse. He knew Doc had a girl in there, but Mack used to get a
dreadful feeling of loneliness out of it. Even in the clear close contact with
a girl Mack felt that Doc would be lonely. Doc was a night crawler. The lights
were on in the lab all night and yet he seemed to be up in the daytime too. And
the great shrouds of music came out of the lab at any time of the day or night.
Sometimes when it was all dark and when it seemed that sleep had come at last,
the diamond-true child voices of the Sistine Choir would come from the windows
of the laboratory.
Doc
had to keep up his collecting. He tried to get to the good tides along the coast.
The sea rocks and the beaches were his stock pile. He knew where everything was
when he wanted it All the articles of his trade were filed away on the coast,
sea cradles here, octopi here, tube worms in another place, sea pansies in
another. He knew where to get them but he could not go for them exactly when he
wanted. For Nature locked up the items and only released them occasionally. Doc
had to know not only the tides but when a particular low tide was good in a
particular place. When such a low tide occurred, he packed his collecting tools
in his car, he packed his jars, his bottles, his plates and preservatives and
he went to the beach or reef or rock ledge where the animals he needed were
stored.
Now
he had an order for small octopi and the nearest place to get them was the
boulder-strewn inter-tidal zone at La Jolla between Los Angeles and San Diego.
It meant a five-hundredmile drive each way and his arrival had to coincide with
the retreating waters.
The
little octopi live among the boulders imbedded in sand. Being timid and young,
they prefer a bottom on which there. are many caves and little crevices and
lumps of mud where they may hide from predators and protect themselves from the
waves. But on the same flat there are millions of sea cradles. While filling a
definite order for octopi, Doc could replenish his stock of the cradles.
Low
tide was 5:17 A.M. on a Thursday. If Doc left Monterey on Wednesday morning he
could be there easily in time for the tide on Thursday. He would have taken
someone with him for company but quite by accident everyone was away or was
busy. Mack and the boys were up Carmel Valley collecting frogs. Three young
women he knew and would have enjoyed as companions had jobs and couldn't get
away in the middle of the week. Henri the painter was occupied, for Holman's
Department Store had employed not a flag-pole sitter but a flag-pole skater. On
a tall mast on top of the store he had a little round platform and there he was
on skates going around and around. He had been there three days and three
nights. He was out to set a new record for being on skates on a platform. The
previous record was 127 hours so he had some time to go. Henri had taken up his
post across the street at Red Williams' gas station. Henri was fascinated. He thought
of doing a huge abstraction called Substratum Dream of a Flagpole Skater. Henri
couldn't leave town while the skater was up there. He protested that there were
philosophic implications in flag-pole skating that no one had touched. Henri
sat in a chair, leaned back against the lattice which concealed the door of the
men's toilet at Red Williams'. He kept his eye on the eyrie skating platform
and obviously he couldn't go with Doc to La Jolla. Doc had to go alone because
the tide would not wait
Early
in the morning he got his things together. Personal things went in a small
satchel. Another satchel held instruments and syringes. Having packed, he
combed and trimmed his brown beard, saw that his pencils were in his shirt
pocket and his magnifying glass attached to his lapel. He packed the trays,
bottles, glass plates, preservatives, rubber boots and a blanket into the back
of his car. He worked through the pearly time, washed three days' dishes, put
the garbage into the surf. He closed the doors but did not lock them and by
nine o'dock was on his way.
It
took Doc longer to go places than other people. He didn't drive fast and he
stopped and ate hamburgers very often. Driving up to Lighthouse Avenue he waved
at a dog that looked around and smiled at him. In Monterey before he even
started, he felt hungry and stopped at Herman's for a hamburger and beer. While
he ate his sandwich and sipped his beer, a bit of conversation came back to
him. Blaisedell, the poet, had said to him, "You love beer so mud. I'll bet
some day you'll go in and order a beer milk shake." It was a simple piece
of foolery but it had bothered Doc ever since. He wondered what a beer milk
shake would taste like. The idea gagged him but he couldn't let it alone. It
cropped up every time he had a glass of beer. Would it curdle the milk? Would
you add suger? It was like a shrimp ice cream. Once the thing got into your
head you couldn't forget it. He finished his sandwich and paid Herman. He
purposely didn't look at the milk shake machines lined up so shiny against the
back wall. If a man ordered a beer milk shake, he thought, he'd better do it in
a town where he wasn't known. But then, a man with a beard, ordering a beer
milk shake in a town where he wasn't known--they might call the police. A man
with a beard was always a little suspect anyway. You couldn't say you wore a
beard because you liked a beard. People didn't like you for telling the truth.
You had to say you had a scar so you couldn't shave. Once when Doc was at the
University of Chicago he had love trouble and he had worked too hard. He
thought it would be nice to take a very long walk. He put on a little knapsack
and he walked through Indiana and Kentucky and North Carolina and Georgia clear
to Florida. He walked among farmers and mountain people, among the swamp people
and fishermen. And everywhere people asked him why he was walking through the
country.
Because
he loved true things he tried to explain. He said he was nervous and besides he
wanted to see the country, smell the ground and look at grass and birds and
trees, to savor the country, and there was no other way to do it save on foot.
And people didn't like him for telling the truth. They scowled, or shook and
tapped their heads, they laughed as though they knew it was a lie and they
appreciated a liar. And some, afraid for their daughters or their pigs, told
him to move on, to get going, just not to stop near their place if he knew what
was good for him.
And
so he stopped trying to tell the truth. He said he was doing it on a bet--that
he stood to win a hundred dollars. Everyone liked him then and believed him.
They asked him in to dinner and gave him a bed and they put lunches up for him
and wished him good luck and thought he was a hell of a fine fellow. Doc still
loved true things but he knew it was not a general love and it could be a very
dangerous mistress.
Doc
didn't stop in Salinas for a hamburger. But he stopped in Gonzales, in King
City, and in Paso Robles. He had hamburger and beer at Santa Maria--two in
Santa Maria because it was a long pull from there to Santa Barbara. In Santa
Barbara he had soup, lettuce and string bean salad, pot roast and mashed
potatoes, pineapple pie and blue cheese and coffee, and after that he filled
the gas tank and went to the toilet While the service station checked his oil
and tires, Doc washed his face and combed his beard and when he came back to
the car a number of potential hitchhikers were waiting.
"Going
south, Mister?"
Doc
traveled on the highways a good deal. He was an old hand. You have to pick your
hitchhikers very carefully. It's best to get an experienced one, for he
relapses into silence. But the new ones try to pay for their ride by being
interesting. Doc had had a leg talked off by some of these. Then after you have
made up your mind about the one you want to take, you protect yourself by
saying you aren't going far. If your man turns out too much for you, you can
drop him. On the other hand, you may be just lucky and get a man very much
worth knowing. Doc made a quick survey of the line and chose his company, a
thin-faced salesman-like man in a blue suit He had deep lines beside his mouth
and dark brooding eyes.
He
looked at Doc with dislike. "Going south, Mister?"
"Yes,"
said Doc, "a little way."
"Mind
taking me along?"
"Get
in!" said Doc.
When
they got to Ventura it was pretty soon after the heavy dinner so Doc only
stopped for beer. The hitchhiker hadn't spoken once. Doc pulled up at a
roadside stand.
"Want
some beer?"
"No,"
said the hitchhiker. "And I don't mind saying I think it's not a very good
idea to drive under the influence of alcohol. It's none of my business what you
do with your own life but in this case you've got an automobile and that can be
a murderous weapon in the hands of a drunken driver."
At the
beginning Doc had been slightly startled. "Get out of the car," he
said softly.
"What?"
"I'm
going to punch you in the nose," said Doc. "If you aren't out of this
car before I count ten--One--two---three--"
The
man fumbled at the door catch and backed hurriedly out of the car. But once
outside he howled, "I'm going to find an officer. I'm going to have you
arrested."
Doc
opened the box on the dashboard and took out a monkey wrench. His guest saw the
gesture and walked hurriedly away.
Doc
walked angrily to the counter of the stand.
The
waitress, a blonde beauty with just the hint of a goiter, smiled at him.
"What'll it be?"
"Beer
milk shake," said Doc.
"What?"
Well
here it was and what the hell, Might just as well get it over with now as some
time later.
The
blonde asked, "Are you kidding?"
Doc
knew wearily that he couldn't explain, couldn't tell the truth. "I've got
a bladder complaint," he said. "Bipalychaetorsonectomy the doctors
call it, I'm supposed to drink a _beer milk shake_. Doctor's orders."
The
blonde smiled reassuringly. "Oh! I thought you was kidding," she said
archly. "You tell me how to make it. I didn't know you was sick."
"Very
sick," said Doc, "and due to be sicker. Put in some milk, and add
half a bottle of beer. Give me the other half in a glass--no sugar in the milk
shake." When she served it, he tasted it wryly. And it wasn't so bad--it
just tasted like stale beer and milk.
"It
sounds awful," said the blonde.
"It's
not so bad when you get used to it," said Doc. "I've been drinking it
for seventeen years."
CHAPTER XVIII
Doc
had driven slowly. It was late afternoon when he stopped in Ventura, so late in
fact that when he stopped in Carpenteria he only had a cheese sandwich and went
to the toilet. Besides he intended to get a good dinner in Los Angeles and it
was dark when he got there. He drove on through and stopped at a big
Chicken-in-the-Rough place he knew about. And there he had fried chicken,
julienne potatoes, hot biscuits and honey, and a piece of pineapple pie and
blue cheese. And here he filled his thermos bottle with hot coffee, had them
make up six ham sandwiches and bought two quarts of beer for breakfast.
It
was not so interesting driving at night. No dogs to see, only the highway
lighted with his headlights. Doc speeded up to finish the trip. It was about
two o'dock when he got to La Jolla. He drove through the town and down to the
duff below which his tidal fiat lay. There he stopped the car, ate a sandwich,
drank some beer, turned out the lights and curled up in the seat to sleep.
He
didn't need a dock. He had been working in a tidal pattern so long that he
could feel a tide change in his sleep. In the dawn he awakened, looked out
through the windshield and saw that the water was already retreating down the
bouldery flat. He drank some hot coffee, ate three sandwiches and had a quart
of beer.
The
tide goes out imperceptibly. The boulders show and seem to rise up and the
ocean recedes leaving little pools, leaving wet weed and moss and sponge,
iridescence and brown and blue and China red. On the bottoms lie the incredible
refuse of the sea, shells broken and chipped and bits of skeleton, daws, the
whole sea bottom a fantastic cemetery on which the living scamper and scramble.
Doc
pulled on his rubber boots and set his rain hat fussily. He took his buckets
and jars and his crowbar and put his sandwiches in one pocket and his thermos
bottle in another pocket and he went down the cliff to the tidal flat. Then he
worked down the flat after the retreating sea. He turned over the boulders with
his crowbar and now and then his hand darted quickly into the standing water
and brought out a little angry squirming octopus which blushed with rage and
spat ink on his hand. Then he dropped it into a jar of sea water with the
others and usually the newcomer was so angry that it attacked its fellows.
It
was good hunting that day. He got twenty-two little octopi. And he picked off
several hundred sea cradles and put them in his wooden bucket. As the tide
moved out he followed it while the morning came and the sun rose. The flat
extended out two hundred yards and then there was a line of heavy weedcrusted
rocks before it dropped off to deep water. Doc worked out to the barrier edge.
He had about what he wanted now and the rest of the time he looked under
stones, leaned down and peered into the tide pools with their brilliant mosaics
and their scuttling, bubbling life. And he came at last to the outer barrier
where the long leathery brown algae hung down into the water. Red starfish
dustered on the rocks and the sea pulsed up and down against the barrier
waiting to get in again. Between two weeded rocks on the barrier Doc saw a
flash of white under water and then the floating weed covered it. He climbed to
the place over the slippery rocks, held himself firmly, and gently reached down
and parted the brown algae. Then he grew rigid. A girl's face looked up at him,
a pretty, pale girl with dark hair. The eyes were open and clear and the face
was firm and the hair washed gently about her head. The body was out of sight,
caught in the crevice. The lips were slightly parted and the teeth showed and
on the face was only comfort and rest. Just under water it was and the clear
water made it very beautiful. It seemed to Doc that he looked at it for many
minutes, and the face burned into his picture memory.
Very
slowly he raised his hand and let the brown weed float back and cover the face.
Doc's heart pounded deeply and his throat felt tight. He picked up his bucket
and his jars and his crowbar and went slowly over the slippery rocks back
toward the beach.
And
the girl's face went ahead of him. He sat down on the beach in the coarse dry
sand and pulled off his boots. In the jar the little octopi were huddled up
each keeping as far as possible from the others. Music sounded in Doc's ears, a
high thin piercingly sweet flute carrying a melody he could never remember, and
against this, a pounding surf-like wood-wind section. The flute went up into
regions beyond the hearing range and even there it carried its unbelievable
melody. Goose pimples came out on Doc's arms. He shivered and his eyes were wet
the way they get in the focus of great beauty. The girl's eyes had been gray
and clear and the dark hair floated, drifted lightly over the face. The picture
was set for all time. He sat there while the first little spout of water came
over the reef bringing the returning tide. He sat there hearing the music while
the sea crept in again over the bouldery flat. His hand tapped out the rhythm,
and the terrifying flute played in his brain The eyes were gray and the mouth
smiled a little and seemed to catch its breath in ecstasy.
A
voice seemed to awaken him. A man stood over him. "Been fishing?"
"No,
collecting."
"Well--what
are them things?"
"Baby
octopi."
"You
mean devilfish? I didn't know there was any there. I've lived here all my
life."
"You've
got to look for them," said Doc listlessly.
"Say,"
said the man, "aren't you feeling well? You look sick."
The
flute climbed again and plucked cellos sounded below and the sea crept in and
in toward the beach. Doc shook off the music, shook off the face, shook the
chill out of his body, "Is there a police station near?"
"Up
in town. Why, what's wrong?"
"There's
a body out on the reef."
"Where?"
"Right
out there--wedged between two rocks. A girl."
"Say--"
said the man. "You get a bounty for finding a body. I forget how
much."
Doc
stood up and gathered his equipment. "Will you report it? I'm not feeling
well."
"Give
you a shock, did it? Is it--bad? Rotten or eat up?"
Doc
turned away. "You take the bounty," he said. "I don't want
it." He started toward the car. Only the tiniest piping of the flute
sounded in his head.
CHAPTER XIX
Probably
nothing in the way of promotion Holman's Department Store ever did attracted so
much favorable comment as the engagement of the flag-pole skater. Day after
day, there he was up on his little round platform skating around and around and
at night he could be seen up there too, dark against the sky so that everybody
knew he didn't come down. It was generally agreed, however, that a steel rod
came up through the center of the platform at night and he strapped himself to
it. But he didn't sit down and no one minded the steel rod. People came from
Jamesburg to see him and from down the coast as far as Grimes Point. Salinas
people came over in droves and the Farmers Mercantile of that town put in a bid
for the next appearance when the skater could attempt to break his own record
and thus give the new world's record to Salinas. Since there weren't many
flag-pole skaters and since this one was by far the best, he had for the last
year gone about breaking his own world's record.
Holman's
was delighted about the venture. They had a white sale, a remnant sale, an
aluminum sale, and a crockery sale all going at the same time. Crowds of people
stood in the street watching the lone man on his platform.
His
second day up, he sent down word that someone was shooting at him with an air
gun. The display department used its head. It figured the angles and located
the offender. It was old Doctor Merrivale hiding behind the curtains of his
office, plugging away with a Daisy air rifle. They didn't denounce him and he
promised to stop. He was very prominent in the Masonic Lodge.
Henri
the painter kept' his chair at Red Williams' service station, He worked out
every possible philosophic approach to the situation and came to the condusion
that he would have to build a platform at home and try it himself. Everyone in
the town was more or less affected by the skater. Trade. fell off out of sight
of him and got better the nearer you came to Holman's. Mack and the boys went
up and looked for a moment and then went back to the Palace, They couldn't see
that it made much sense.
Holman's
set up a double bed in their window. When the skater broke the world's record
he was going to come down and sleep right in the window without taking off his
skates. The trade name of the mattress was on a little card at the foot of the
bed.
Now
in the whole town there was interest and discussion about this sporting event,
but the most interesting question of all and the one that bothered the whole
town was never spoken of. No one mentioned it and yet it was there haunting
everyone. Mrs. Trolat wondered about it as she came out of the Scotch bakery
with a bag of sweet buns. Mr. Hall in men's furnishings wondered about it. The
three Willoughby girls giggled whenever they thought of it. But no one had the
courage to bring it into the open.
Richard
Frost, a high strung and brilliant young man, worried about it more than anyone
else. It haunted him. Wednesday night he worried and Thursday night he
fidgeted. Friday night he got drunk and had a fight with his wife. She cried
for a while and then pretended to be asleep. She heard him slip from bed and go
into the kitchen. He was getting another drink. And then she heard him dress
quietly and go out. She cried some more then. It was very late. Mrs. Frost was
sure he was going down to Dora's Bear Flag.
Richard
walked sturdily down the hill through the pines until he came to Lighthouse
Avenue. He turned left and went up toward Holman's. He had the bottle in his
pocket and just before he came to the store he took one more slug of it. The
street lights were turned down low. The town was deserted. Not a soul moved.
Richard stood in the middle of the street and looked up.
Dimly
on top of the high mast he could see the lonely figure of the skater. He took
another drink. He cupped his hand and called huskily, "Hey!" There
was no answer. "Hey!" he called louder and looked around to see if
the cops had come out of their place beside the bank.
Down
from the sky came a surly reply: "What do you want ?"
Richard
cupped his hands again. "How--how do you--go to the toilet?"
"I've
got a can up here," said the voice.
Richard
turned and walked back the way he had come. He walked along Lighthouse and up
through the pines and he came to his house and let himself in. As he undressed
he knew his wife was awake. She bubbled a little when she was asleep. He got
into bed and she made room for him.
"He's
got a can up there," Richard said.
CHAPTER XX
In
mid-morning the Model T truck rolled triumphantly home to Cannery Row and
hopped the gutter and creaked up through the weeds to its place behind Lee
Chong's. The boys blocked up the front wheels, drained what gasoline was left
into a five-gallon can, took their frogs and went wearily home to the Palace
Flophouse. Then Mack made a ceremonious visit to Lee Chong while the boys got a
fire going in the big stove. Mack thanked Lee with dignity for lending the
truck. He spoke of the great success of the trip, of the hundreds of frogs
taken. Lee smiled shyly and waited for the inevitable.
"We're
in the chips," Mack said enthusiastically. "Doc pays us a nickel a
frog and we got about a thousand."
Lee
nodded. The price was standard. Everybody knew that.
"Doc's
away," said Mack. "Jesus, is he gonna be happy when he sees all them
frogs."
Lee
nodded again. He knew Doc was away and he also knew where the conversation was
going,
"Say,
by the way," said Mack as though he had just thought of it. 'We're a
little bit short right now--" He managed to make it sound like a very
unusual situation.
"No
whiskey," said Lee Chong and he smiled.
Mack
was outraged. "What would we want whiskey for? Why we got a gallon of the
finest whiskey you ever laid a lip over--a whole full God damned running over
gallon. By the way," he continued, "I and the boys would like to have
you just step up for a snort with us. They told me to ask you."
In
spite of himself Lee smiled with pleasure. They wouldn't offer it if they
didn't have it.
"No,"
said Mack, "I'll lay it on the line. I and the boys. are pretty short and
we're pretty hungry. You know the price of frogs is twenty for a buck, Now Doc
is away and we're hungry. So what we thought is this. We don't want to see you
lose nothing so we'll make over to you twenty-five frogs for a buck. You got a
five-frog profit there and nobody loses his shirt."
"No,"
said Lee. "No money."
"Well,
hell, Lee, all we need is a little groceries. I'll tell you what--we want to
give Doc a little party when he gets back. We got plenty of liquor but we'd
like to get maybe some steaks, and stuff like that. He's such a nice guy. Hell,
when your wife had that bad tooth, who give her the laudanum?"
Mack
had him. Lee was indebted to Doc--deeply indebted. What Lee was having trouble
comprehending was how his indebtedness to Doc made it necessary that he give
credit to Mack,
"We
don't want you to have like a mortgage on frogs," Mack went on. "We
will actually deliver right into your hands twenty-five frogs for every buck of
groceries you let us have and you can come to the party too."
Lee's
mind nosed over the proposition like a mouse in a cheese cupboard. He could
find nothing wrong with it The whole thing was legitimate. Frogs _were_ cash as
far as Doc was concerned, the price was standard and Lee had a double profit He
had his five-frog margin and also he had the grocery mark-up. The whole thing
hinged on whether they actually had any frogs.
"We
go see flog," Lee said at last.
In
front of the Palace he had a drink of the whiskey, inspected the damp sacks of
frogs, and agreed to the transaction. He stipulated, however, that he would
take no dead frogs. Now Mack counted fifty frogs into a can and walked back to
the grocery with Lee and got two dollars' worth of bacon and eggs and bread.
Lee,
antidpating a brisk business, brought a big packing case out and put it into
the vegetable department. He emptied the fifty frogs into it and covered it
with a wet gunny sack to keep his charges happy.
And
business was brisk, Eddie sauntered down and bought two frogs' worth of Bull
Durham. Jones was outraged a little later when the price of Coca-Cola went up
from one to two frogs. In fact bitterness arose as the day wore on and prices
went up. Steak, for instance--the very best steak shouldn't have been more than
ten frogs a pound but Lee set it at twelve and a half. Canned peaches were sky
high, eight frogs for a No. 2 can. Lee had a stranglehold on the consumers, He
was pretty sure that the Thrift Market or Holman's would not approve of this
new monetary system. If the boys wanted steak, they knew they had to pay Lee's
prices. Feeling ran high when Hazel, who had coveted a pair of yellow silk arm
bands for a long time, was told that if he didn't want to pay thirty-five frogs
for them he could go somewhere else. The poison of of greed was already
creeping into the innocent and laudable merchandising agreement. Bitterness was
piling up. But in Lee's packing case the frogs were piling up too.
Financial
bitterness could not eat too deeply into Mack and the boys, for they were not
mercantile men. They did not measure their joy in goods sold, their egos in
bank balances, nor their loves in what they cost. While they were mildly
irritated that Lee was taking them for an ecomonic ride or perhaps hop, two
dollars' worth of bacon and eggs was in their stomachs lying right on top of a
fine slug of whiskey and right on top of the breakfast was another slug of
whiskey. And they sat in their own chairs in their own house and watched
Darling learning to drink canned milk out of a sardine can. Darling was and was
destined to remain a veiy happy dog, for in the group of five men there were five
distinct theories of dog training, theories which dashed so that Darling never
got any training at all. From the first she was a precocious bitch. She slept
on the bed of the man who had given her the last bribe. They really stole for
her sometimes. They wooed her away from one another. Occasionally all five
agreed that things had to change and that Darling must be disciplined, but in
the discussion of method the intention invariably drifted away. They were in
love with her. They found the little puddles she left on the floor charming.
They bored all their acquaintances with her cuteness and they would have killed
her with food if in the end she hadn't had better sense than they.
Jones
made her a bed in the bottom of the grandfather clock but Darling never used
it. She slept with one or another of them as the fancy moved her. She chewed
the blankets, tore the mattresses, sprayed the feathers out of the pillows. She
coquetted and played her owners against one another. They thought she was
wonderful. Mack intended to teach her tricks and go in vaudeville and he didn't
even housebreak her.
They
sat in the afternoon, smoking, digesting, considering, and now and then having
a delicate drink from the jug. And each time they warned that they must not
take too much, for it was to be for Doc. They must not forget that for a
minute.
"What
time you figure he'll be back?" Eddie asked.
"Usually
gets in about eight or nine o'clock," said Mack. "Now we got to
figure when we're going to give it. I think we ought to give it tonight."
"Sure,"
the others agreed.
"Maybe
he might be tired," Hazel suggested. "That's a long drive."
"Hell,"
said Jones, "nothing rests you like a good party. I've been so dog tired
my pants was draggin' and then I've went to a party and felt fine."
"We
got to do some real thinkin'," said Mack. 'Where we going to give
it--here?"
"Well,
Doc, he likes his music. He's always got his phonograph going at a party. Maybe
he'd be more happy if we give it over at his place."
"You
got something there," said Mack. "But I figure it ought to be like a
surprise party. And how we going to make like it's a party and not just us
bringin' over a jug of whiskey?"
"How
about decorations?" Hughie suggested. "Like Fourth of July or
Halloween."
Mack's
eyes looked off into space and his lips were parted. He could see it all.
"Hughie," he said, "I think you got something there. I never
would of thought you could do it, but by God you really rang a duck that
time." His voice grew mellow and his eyes looked into the future. "I
can just see it," he said. "Doc comes home. He's tired. He drives up.
The place is all lit up. He thinks somebody's broke in. He goes up the slairs
and by God the place has got the hell decorated out of it. There's crepe paper
and there's favors and a big cake. Jesus, he'd know it was a party then. And it
wouldn't be no little mouse fart party neither. And we're kind of hiding so for
a minute he don't know who done it. And then we come out yelling. Can't you see
his face? By God, Hughie, I don't know how you thought of it"
Hughie
blushed. His conception had been much more conservative, based in fact on the
New Year's party at La Ida, but if it was going to be like that why Hughie was
willing to take credit. "I just thought it would be nice," he said.
"Well,
it's a pretty nice thing," said Mack, "and I don't mind saying when
the surprise kind of wears off, I'm going to tell Doc who thought it up."
They leaned back and considered the thing. And in their minds the decorated
laboratory looked like the conservatory at the Hotel del Monte. They had a
couple more drinks, just to savor the plan.
Lee
Chong kept a very remarkable store. For instance, most stores buy yellow and
black crepe paper and black paper cats, masks and papier-maché pumpkins in
October. There is a brisk business for Halloween and then these items
disappear. Maybe they are sold or thrown out, but you can't buy them say in
June. The same is true of Fourth of July equipment, flags and bunting and
skyrockets. Where are they in January? Gone--no one knows where. This was not
Lee Chong's way. You could buy Valentines in November at Lee Chong's,
shamrocks, hatchets and paper cherry trees in August. He had firecrackers he
had laid up in 1920. One of the mysteries was where he kept his stock since his
was not a very large store. He had bathing suits he had bought when long skirts
and black stockings and head bandanas were in style. He had bicycle dips and
tatting shuttles and Mah Jong sets. He had badges that said "Remember the
Maine" and felt pennants commemorating "Fighting Bob." He had
mementos of the Panama Pacific International Exposition of 1915--little towers
of jewels. And there was one other unorthodoxy in Lee's way of doing business.
He never had a sale, never reduced a price and never remaindered. An article
that cost thirty cents in 1912 still was thirty cents although mice and moths
might seem to some to have reduced its value. But there was no question about
it. If you wanted to decorate a laboratory in a general way, not being specific
about the season but giving the impression of a cross between Saturnalia and a
pageant of the Flags of all Nations, Lee Chong's was the place to go for your
stuff.
Mack
and the boys knew that, but Mack said. "Where we going to get a big cake?
Lee hasn't got nothing but them little bakery cakes."
Hughie
had been so successful before he tried again. "Why'n't Eddie bake a
cake?" he suggested. "Eddie used to be fry cook at the San Carlos for
a while."
The
instant enthusiasm for the idea drove from Eddie's brain the admission that he
had never baked a cake.
Mack
put it on a sentimental basis besides. "It would mean more to Doc,"
he said. "It wouldn't be like no God damned old soggy bought cake. It
would have some heart in it."
As
the afternoon and the whiskey went down the enthusiasm rose. There were endless
trips to Lee Chong's. The frogs were gone from one sack and Lee's packing case
was getting crowded. By six o'dock they had finished the gallon of whiskey and
were buying half pints of Old Tennis Shoes at fifteen frogs a crack, but the
pile of decorating materials was heaped on the floor of the Palace
Flophouse--miles of crepe paper commemorating every holiday in vogue and some
that had been abandoned.
Eddie
watched his stove like a mother hen. He was baking a cake in the wash basin.
The recipe was guaranteed not to fail by the company which made the shortening.
But from the first the cake had acted strangely. When the batter was completed
it writhed and panted as though animals were squirming and crawling inside it.
Once in the oven it put up a bubble like a baseball which grew tight and shiny
and then collapsed with a hissing sound. This left such a crater that Eddie
made a new batch of batter and filled in the hole. And now
the cake was behaving very curiously for while the bottom was burning and
sending out a black smoke the top was rising and falling glueyly with a series
of little explosions.
When Eddie finally put it out to cool, it looked like one
of Bel Geddes' miniatures of a battlefield on a lava bed.
This cake was not fortunate, for while the boys were
decorating the laboratory Darling ate what she could of it, was sick in it, and
finally curled up in its still warm dough and went to sleep.
But Mack and the boys had taken the crepe paper, the masks,
the broomsticks and paper pumpkins, the red, white, and blue bunting, and moved
over the lot and across the street to the laboratory. They disposed of the last
of the frogs for a quart of Old Tennis Shoes and two gallons of 49-cent wine.
"Doc is very fond of wine," said Mack. "I
think he likes it even better than whiskey."
Doc never locked the laboratory. He went on the theory
that anyone who really wanted to break in could easily do it, that people were
essentially honest and that finally, there wasn't much the average person would
want to steal there anyway. The valuable things were books and records,
surgical instruments and optical glass and such things that a practical working
burglar wouldn't look at twice. His theory had been sound as far as burglars,
snatch thieves, and kleptomaniacs were concerned, but it had been completely
ineffective regarding his friends. Books were often "borrowed." No
can of beans ever survived his absence and on several occasions, returning
late, he had found guests in his bed.
The boys piled the decorations in the anteroom and then
Mack stopped them. "What's going to make Doc happiest?" he asked.
"The party!" said Hazel.
"No," said Mack.
"The decorations?" Hughie suggested. He felt
responsible for the decorations.
"No," said Mack, "the frogs. That's going
to make him feel best of all. And maybe by the time he gets here, Lee Chong
might be closed and he can't even see his frogs until tomorrow. No, sir,"
Mack cried. "Them frogs ought to be right here, right in the middle of the
room with a piece of bunting on it and a sign that says, Welcome Home,
Doc."
The committee which visited Lee met with stern
opposition. All sorts of possibilities suggested themselves to his suspicious
brain. It was explained that he was going to be at the party so he could watch
his property, that no one questioned that they were his. Mack wrote out a paper
transferring the frogs to Lee in case there should be any question.
When his protests weakened a little they carried the
packing case over to the laboratory, tacked red, white, and blue bunting over
it, lettered the big sign with iodine on a card, and they started the
decorating from there. They had finished the whiskey by now and they really
felt in a party mood. They criss-crossed the crepe paper, and put the pumpkins
up. Passers-by in the street joined the party and rushed over to Lee's to get
more to drink. Lee Chong joined the party for a while but his stomach was
notoriously weak and he got sick and had to go home. At eleven o'clock they
fried the steaks and ate them. Someone digging through the records found an
album of Count Basie and the great phonograph roared out. The noise could be
heard from the boat works to La Ida. A group of customers from the Bear Flag
mistook Western Biological for a rival house and charged up the stairs whooping
with joy. They were evicted by the outraged hosts but only after a long, happy,
and bloody battle that took out the front door and broke two windows. The
crashing of jars was unpleasant. Hazel going through the kitchen to the toilet
tipped the frying pan of hot grease on himself and the floor and was badly
burned.
At one-thirty a drunk wandered in and passed a remark
which was considered insulting to Doc. Mack hit him a clip which is still
remembered and discussed. The man rose off his feet, described a small arc, and
crashed through the packing case in among the frogs. Someone trying to change a
record dropped the tone down and broke the crystal.
No one has studied the psychology of a dying party. It
may be raging, howling, boiling, and then a fever sets in and a little silence
and then quickly, quiddy it is gone, the guests go home or go to sleep or
wander away to some other affair and they leave a dead body.
The lights blazed in the laboratory. The front door hung
sideways by one hinge. The floor was littered with broken glass. Phonograph
records, some broken, some only nicked, were strewn about. The plates with
pieces of steak ends and coagulating grease were on the floor, on top of the
bookcases, under the bed. Whiskey glasses lay sadly on their sides. Someone
trying to climb the bookcases had pulled out a whole section of books and
spilled them in broken-backed confusion on the floor. And it was empty, it was
over.
Through the broken end of the packing case a frog hopped
and sat feeling the air for danger and then another joined him. They could
smell the fine damp cool air coming in the door and in through the broken
windows. One of them sat on the fallen card which said 'Welcome Home, Doc."
And then the two hopped timidly toward the door.
For quite a while a little river of frogs hopped down the
steps, a swirling, moving river. For quite a while Cannery Row crawled with
frogs--was overrun with frogs. A taxi which brought a very late customer to the
Bear Flag squashed five frogs in the street. But well before dawn they had all
gone. Some found the sewer and some worked their way up the hill to the
reservoir and some went into culverts and some only hid among the weeds in the
vacant lot
And the lights blazed in the quiet empty laboratory.
CHAPTER XXI
In the back room of the laboratory the white rats in
their cages ran and skittered and squeaked. In the corner of a separate cage a
mother rat lay over her litter of blind naked children and let them suckle and
the mother stared about nervously and fiercely.
In the rattlesnake cage the snakes lay with their chins
resting on their own coils and they stared straight ahead out of their scowling
dusty black eyes. In another cage a Gila monster with a skin like a beaded bag
reared slowly up and dawed heavily and sluggishly at the wire. The anemones in
the aquaria blossomed open, with green and purple tentades and pale green
stomachs. The little sea water pump whirred softly and the needles of driven water
hissed into the tanks forcing lines of bubbles under the surface,
It was the hour of the pearl. Lee Chong brought his
garbage cans out to the curb. The bouncer stood on the porch of the Bear Flag
and scratched his stomach. Sam Malloy crawled out of the boiler and sat on his
wood block and looked at the lightening east. Over on the rocks near Hopkins
Marine Station the sea lions barked montonously. The old Chinaman came up out
of the sea with his dripping basket and flipflapped up the hill.
Then a car turned into Cannery Row and Doc drove up to
the front of the laboratory. His eyes were red rimmed with fatigue. He moved
slowly with tiredness. When the car had stopped, he sat still for a moment to
let the road jumps get out of his nerves. Then he climbed out of the car. At
his step on the stairs, the rattlesnakes ran out their tongues and listened
with their waving forked tongues. The rats scampered madly about the cages. Doc
dimbed the stairs. He looked in wonder at the sagging door and at the broken window.
The weariness seemed to go out of him. He stepped quickly inside. Then he went
quickly from room to room, stepping around the broken glass. He bent down
quickly and picked up a smashed phonograph record and looked at its title.
In the kitchen the spilled grease had turned white on the
floor. Doc's eyes flamed red with anger. He sat down on his couch and his head
settled between his shoulders and his body weaved a little in his rage.
Suddenly he jumped up and turned on the power in his great phonograph. He put
on a record and put down the arm. Only a hissing roar came from the
loudspeaker. He lifted the arm, stopped the turntable, and sat down on the
couch again.
On the stairs there were bumbling uncertain footsteps and
through the door came Mack. His face was red. He stood uncertainly in the
middle of the room. "Doc--" he said-- "I and the boys--"
For the moment Doc hadn't seemed to see him, Now he
leaped to his feet. Mack shuffled backward. "Did you do this?"
"Well, I and the boys--" Doc's small hard fist
whipped out and splashed against Mack's mouth. Doc's eyes shone with a red
animal rage. Mack sat down heavily on the floor. Doc's fist was hard and sharp.
Mack's lips were split against his teeth and one front tooth bent sharply
inward. "Get up!" said Doc.
Mack lumbered to his feet. His hands were at his sides.
Doc hit him again, a cold calculated punishing punch in the mouth, The blood
spurted from Mack's lips and ran down his chin. He tried to lick his lips.
"Put up your hands. Fight, you son of a bitch,"
Doc cried, and he hit him again and heard the crunch of breaking teeth.
Mack's head jolted but he was braced now so he wouldn't
fall. And his hands stayed at his sides. "Go ahead, Doc," he said
thickly through his broken lips. "I got it coming."
Doc's shoulders sagged with defeat. "You son of a
bitch," he said bitterly. "Oh you dirty son of a bitch." He sat
down on the couch and looked at his cut knuckles.
Mack sat down in a chair and looked at him. Mack's eyes
were wide and full of pain. He didn't even wipe away the blood that flowed down
his chin. In Doc's head the monotonal opening of Monteverdi's _Hor ch' el Ciel
e la Terra_ began to form, the infinitely sad and resigned mourning of Petrarch
for laura. Doc saw Mack's broken mouth through the music, the music that was in
his head and in the air. Mack sat perfectly still, almost as though he could
hear the music too. Doc glanced at the place where the Monteverdi album was and
then he remembered that the phonograph was broken.
He got to his feet. "Go wash your face," he
said and he went out and down the stairs and across the street to Lee Chong's.
Lee wouldn't look at him as he got two quarts of beer out of the icebox. He
took the money without saying anything. Doc walked back across the street.
Mack was in the toilet cleaning his bloody face with wet
paper towels. Doc opened a bottle and poured gently into a glass, holding it at
an angle so that very little collar rose to the top. He filled a second tall
glass and carried the two into the front room. Mack came back dabbing at his
mouth with wet towelling. Doc indicated the beer with his head. Now Mack opened
his throat and poured down half the glass without swallowing. He sighed
explosively and stared into the beer. Doc had already finished his glass. He
brought the bottle in and filled both glasses again. He sat down on his couch.
"What happened ?" he asked.
Mack looked at the floor and a drop of blood fell from
his lips into his beer. He mopped his split lips again. "I and the boys
wanted to give you a party. We thought you'd be home last night."
Doc nodded his head. "I see."
"She got out of hand," said Mack. "It
don't do no good to say I'm sorry. I been sorry all my life. This ain't no new
thing. It's always like this." He swallowed deeply from his glass. "I
had a wife," Mack said. "Same thing. Ever'thing I done turned sour.
She couldn't stand it any more. If I done a good thing it got poisoned up some
way. If I give her a present they was something wrong with it. She only got
hurt from me. She couldn't stand it no more. Same thing ever' place 'til I just
got to downing. I don't do nothin' but down no more. Try to make the boys
laugh."
Doc nodded again. The music was sounding in his head
again, complaint and resignation all in one. "I know," he said.
"I was glad when you hit me," Mack went on.
"I thought to myself--'Maybe this will teach me. Maybe I'll remember
this.' But, hell, I won't remember nothin'. I won't learn nothin'. Doc,"
Mack cried, "the way I seen it, we was all happy and havin' a good time.
You was glad because we was givin' you a party. And we was glad. The way I seen
it, it was a good party." He waved his hand at the wreckage on the floor.
"Same thing when I was married. I'd think her out and then--but it never
come off that way."
"I know," said Doc. He opened the second quart
of beer and poured the glasses full.
"Doc," said Mack, "I and the boys will
clean up here-- and we'll pay for the staff that's broke. If it takes us five
years we'll pay for it."
Doc shook his head slowly and wiped the beer foam from
his mustache. "No," he said, "I'll clean it up. I know where
everything goes."
"We'll pay for it, Doc."
"No you won't, Mack," said Doc. "You'll
think about it and it'll worry you for quite a long time, but you won't pay for
it. There's maybe three hundred dollars in broken museum glass. Don't say
you'll pay for it. That will just keep you aneasy. It might be two or three
years before you forget about it and felt entirely easy again. And you wouldn't
pay it anyway."
"I guess you're right," said Mack. "God
damn it, I _know_ you're right What can we do?"
"I'm over it," said Doc. "Those socks in
the mouth got it out of my system. Let's forget it."
Mack finished his beer and stood up. "So long,
Doc," he said.
"So long. Say, Mack--what happened to your
wife?"
"I don't know," said Mack, "She went
away." He walked clumsily down the stairs and crossed over and walked up
the lot and up the chicken walk to the Palace Flophouse. Doc watched his
progress through the window. And then wearily he got a broom from behind the
water heater. It took him all clay to clean up the mess.
CHAPTER XXII
Henri the painter was not French and his name was not
Henri. Also he was not really a painter. Henri had so steeped himself in
stories of the Left Bank in Paris that he lived there although he had never
been there. Feverishly he followed in periodicals the Dadaist movements and
schisms, the strangely feminine jealousies and religiousness, the obscurantisms
of the forming and breaking schools. Regularly he revolted against outworn
techniques and materials. One season he threw out perspective. Another year he
abandoned red, even as the mother of purple. Finally he gave up paint entirely.
It is not known whether Henri was a good painter or not for he threw himself so
violently into movements that he had very little time left for painting of any
kind.
About his painting there is some question. You couldn't
judge very much from his productions in different colored chicken feathers and
nutshells. But as a boat builder he was su. path. Henri was a wonderful
craftsman. He had lived in a tent years ago when he started his boat and until
galley and cabin were complete enough to move into. But once he was housed and
dry he had taken his time on the boat The boat was sculptured rather than
built. It was thirty-five feet long and its lines were in constant state of
flux. For a while it had a clipper bow and a fantail like a destroyer. Another
time it had looked vaguely like a caravel. Since Henri had no money, it
sometimes took him months to find a plank or a piece of iron or a dozen brass
screws. That was the way he wanted it, for Henri never wanted to finish his
boat.
It sat among the pine trees on a lot Henri rented for
five dollars a year. This paid the taxes and satisfied the owner. The boat
rested in a cradle on concrete foundations. A rope ladder hang over the side
except when Henri was at home. Then he pulled up the rope ladder and only put
it down when guests arrived. His little cabin had a wide padded seat that ran
around three sides of the room. On this he slept and on this his guests sat. A
table folded down when it was needed and a brass lamp hung from the ceiling.
His galley was a marvel of compactness but every item in it had been the result
of months of thought and work.
Henri was swarthy and morose. He wore a beret long after
other people abandoned them, he smoked a calabash pipe and his dark hair fell
about his face. Henri had many friends whom he loosely dassifted as those who
could feed him and those whom he had to feed. His boat had no name. Henri said
he would name it when it was finished.
Henri had been living in and building his boat for ten
years. During that time he had been married twice and had promoted a number of
semi-permanent liaisons. And all of these young women had left him for the same
reason. The sevenfoot cabin was too small for two people. They resented bumping
their heads when they stood up and they definitely felt the need for a toilet.
Marine toilets obviously would not work in a shore-bound boat and Henri refused
to compromise with a spurious landsman's toilet. He and his friend of the
moment had to stroll away among the pines. And one after another his loves left
him.
Just after the girl he had called Alice left him, a very
curious thing happened to Henri. Each time he was left alone, he mourned
formally for a while but actually he felt a sense of relief. He could stretch
out in his little cabin. He could eat what he wanted. He was glad to be free of
the endless female biologic functions for a while.
It had become his custom, each time he was deserted, to
buy a gallon of wine, to stretch out on the comfortably hard bunk and get
drunk. Sometimes he cried a little all by himself but it was luxurious stuff
and he usually had a wonderful feeling of well-being from it. He would read
Rimbaud aloud with a very bad accent, marveling the while at his fluid speech.
It was during one of his ritualistic mournings for the
lost Alice that the strange thing began to happen. It was night and his lamp
was burning and he had just barely begun to get drunk when suddenly he knew he
was no longer alone. He let his eye wander cautiously up and across the cabin
and there on the other side sat a devilish young man, a dark handsome young man.
His eyes gleamed with cleverness and spirit and energy and his teeth flashed.
There was something very dear and yet terrible in his face. And beside him sat
a golden-haired little boy, hardly more than a baby. The man looked down at the
baby and the baby looked back and laughed delightedly as though something
wonderful were about to happen. Then the man looked over at Henri and smiled
and he glanced back at the baby. From his upper left vest pocket he took an
oldfashioned straight-edged razor. He opened it and indicated the child with a
gesture of his head. He put a hand among the curls and the baby laughed
gleefully and then the man tilted the chin and cut the baby's throat arid the
baby went right on laughing. But Henri was howling with terror. It took him a
long time to realize that neither the man nor the baby was still there.
Henri, when his shaking had subsided a little, rushed out
of his cabin, leaped over the side of the boat and hurried away down the hill
through the pines. He walked for several hours and at last he walked down to
Cannery Row.
Doc was in the basement working on cats when Henri burst
in. Doc went on working while Henri told about it and when it was over Doc
looked closely at him to see how much actual fear and how much theater was there.
And it was mostly fear.
"Is it a ghost do you think?" Henri demanded.
"Is it some reflection of something that has happened or is it some
Freudian horror out of me or am I completely nuts? I saw it, I tell you. It
happened right in front of me as plainly as I see you."
"I don't know," said Doc.
"Well, will you come up with me, and see if it comes
back?"
"No," said Doc. "If I saw it, it might be
a ghost and it would scare me badly because I don't believe in ghosts. And if
you saw it again and I didn't it would be a hallucination and you would be
frightened."
"But what am I going to do?" Henri asked,
"If I see it again I'll know what's going to happen and I'm sure I'll die.
You see he doesn't look like a murderer. He looks nice and the kid looks nice
and neither of them give a damn. But he cut that baby's throat. I saw it."
"I don't know," said Doc. "I'm not a
psychiatrist or a witch hunter and I'm not going to start now."
A girl's voice called into the basement. "Hi, Doc,
can I come in?"
"Come along," said Doc.
She was a rather pretty and a very alert girl.
Doc introduced her to Henri.
"He's got a problem," said Doc. "He either
has a ghost or a terrible conscience and he doesn't know which. Tell her about
it, Henri."
Henri went over the story again and the girl's eyes
sparkled.
"But that's horrible," she said when he
finished. "I've never in my life even caught the smell of a ghost. Let's
go back up and see if he comes again."
Doc watched them go a little sourly. After all it had
been his date.
The girl never did see the ghost but she was fond of
Henri and it was five months before the cramped cabin and the lack of a toilet
drove her out.
CHAPTER XXIII
A black gloom settled over the Palace Flophouse. All the
joy went out of it. Mack came back from the laboratory with his mouth torn and
his teeth broken. As a kind of pennance, he did not wash his face. He went to
his bed and pulled his blanket over his head and he didn't get up all day. His
heart was as bruised as his mouth. He went over all the bad things he had done
in his life and everything he had ever done seemed bad. He was very sad.
Hughie and Jones sat for a while staring into space and
then morosely they went over to the Hediondo Cannery and applied for jobs and
got them,
Hazel felt so bad that he walked to Monterey and picked a
fight with a soldier and lost it on purpose. That made him feel a little better
to be utterly beaten by a man Hazel could have licked without half trying.
Darling was the only happy one of the whole dub. She
spent the day under Mack's bed happily eating up his shoes, She was a dever dog
and her teeth were very sharp. Twice in his black despair, Mack reached under
the bed and caught her and put her in bed with him for company but she squirmed
out and went back to eating his shoes.
Eddie mooned on down to La Ida and talked to his friend
the bartender. He got a few drinks and borrowed some nickels with which he
played _Melancholy Baby_ five times on the juke box.
Mack and the boys were under a doud and they knew it and
they knew they deserved it They had become social outcasts. All of their good
intentions were forgotten now. The fact that the party was given for Doc, if it
was known, was never mentioned or taken into consideration. The story ran
through the Bear Flag. It was told in the canneries. At La Ida drunks discussed
it virtuously. Lee Chong refused to comment. He was feeling financially
bruised. And the story as it grew went this way: They had stolen liquor and
money. They had maliciously broken into the laboratory and systematically
destroyed it out of pure malice and evil. People who really knew better took
this view. Some of the drunks at La Ida considered going over and beating the
hell out of the whole lot of them to show them they couldn't do a thing like
that to Doc.
Only a sense of the solidarity and fighting ability of
Mack and the boys saved them from some kind of reprisal. There were people who
felt virtuous about the affair who hadn't had the material of virtue for a long
time. The fiercest of the whole lot was Tom Sheligan who would have been at the
party if he had known about it.
Socially Mack and the boys were beyond the pale. Sam
Malloy didn't speak to them as they went by the boiler. They drew into
themselves and no one could foresee how they would come out of the doud. For
there are two possible reactions to social ostracism--either a man emerges
determined to be better, purer, and kindlier or he goes bad, challenges the
world and does even worse things. This last is by far the commonest reaction to
stigma.
Mack and the boys balanced on the scales of good and
evil. They were kind and sweet to Darling; they were forbearing and patient
with one another. When the first reaction was over they gave the Palace
Flophouse a cleaning such as it had never had. They polished the bright work on
the stove and they washed all their dothes and blankets. Financially they had
become dull and solvent. Hughie and Jones were working and bringing home their
pay. They bought groceries up the hill at the Thrift Market because they could
not stand the reproving eyes of Lee Chong.
It was during this time that Doc made an observation
which may have been true, but since there was one factor missing in his
reasoning it is not known whether he was correct. It was the Fourth of July.
Doc was sitting in the laboratory with Richard Frost. They drank beer and
listened to a new album of Scarlatti and looked out the window. In front of the
Palace Flophouse there was a large log of wood where Mack and the boys were
sitting in the mid-morning sun. They faced down
the hill toward the laboratory.
Doc said, "Look at them. There are your true
philosophers. I think," he went on, "that Mack and the boys know
everything that has ever happened in the world and possibly everything that
will happen. I think they survive in this particular world better than other
people. In a time when people tear themselves to pieces with ambition and
nervousness and covetousness, they are relaxed. All of our so-called successful
men are sick men, with bad stomachs, and bad souls, but Mack and the boys are
healthy and curiously clean. They can do what they want, They can satisfy their
appetites without calling them something else." This speech so dried out
Doc's throat that he drained his beer glass. He waved two fingers in the air
and smiled. "There's nothing like that first taste of beer," he said.
Richard Frost said, "I think they're just like
anyone else, They just haven't any money."
"They could get it," Doc said. "They could
ruin their lives and get money. Mack has qualities of genius. They're all very
dever if they want something. They just know the nature of things too well to
be caught in that wanting."
If Doc had known of the sadness of Mack and the boys he
would not have made the next statement, but no one had told him about the
social pressure that was exerted against the inmates of the Palace.
He poured beer slowly into his glass. "I think I can
show you proof," he said. "You see how they are sitting facing this
way? Well--in about half an hour the Fourth of July Parade is going to pass on
Lighthouse Avenue. By just turning their heads they can see it, by standing up
they can watch it, and by walking two short blocks they can be right beside it.
Now I'll bet you a quart of beer they won't even turn their heads."
"Suppose they don't?" said Richard Frost.
"What will that prove ?"
"What will it prove?" cried Doc. "Why just
that they know what will be in the parade. They will know that the Mayor will
ride first in an automobile with bunting streaming from the hood. Next will
come Long Bob on his white horse with the flag. Then the city council, then two
companies of soldiers from the Presidio, next the Elks with purple umbrellas,
then the Knights Templar in white ostrich feathers and carrying swords. Next
the Knights of Columbus with red ostrich feathers and carrying swords. Mack and
the boys know that The band will play. They've seen it all. They don't have to
look again."
"The man doesn't live who doesn't have to look at a
parade," said Richard Frost.
"Is it a bet then?"
"It's a bet."
"It has always seemed strange to me," said Doc.
"The things we admire in men, kindness and generosity, openness, honesty,
understanding and feeling are the concomitants of failure in our system. And
those traits we detest, sharpness, greed, acquisitiveness, meanness, egotism
and self-interest are the traits of success. And while men admire the quality
of the first they love the produce of the second."
"Who wants to be good if he has to be hungry
too?" said Richard Frost.
"Oh, it isn't a matter of hunger. It's something
quite dif. ferent. The sale of souls to gain the whole world is completely
voluntary and almost unanimous--but not quite. Everywhere in the world there
are Mack and the boys. I've seen them in an ice-cream seller in Mexico and in
an Aleut in Alaska. You know how they tried to give me a party and something
went wrong. But they wanted to give me a party. That was their impulse.
Listen," said Doc. "Isn't that the band I hear?" Quickly he
filled two glasses with beer and the two of them stepped close to the window.
Mack and the boys sat dejectedly on their log and faced
the laboratory. The sound of the band came from Lighthouse Avenue, the drums
echoing back from the buildings. And soddenly the Mayor's car crossed and it
sprayed bunting from the radiator--then Long Bob on his white horse carrying
the flag, then the band, then the soldiers, the Elks, the Knights Templar, the
Knights of Columbus. Richard and the Doc leaned forward tensely but they were
watching the line of men sitting on the log.
And not a head turned, not a neck straightened up. The
parade filed past and they did not move. And the parade was gone. Doc drained
his glass and waved two fingers gently in the air and he said, "Hah! There's
nothing in the world like that first taste of beer."
Richard started for the door. "What kind of beer do
you want?"
"The same kind," said Doc gently. He was
smiling up the bill at Mack and the boys.
It's all fine to say, "Time will heal everything, this
too shall pass away. People will forget"--and things like that when you
are not involved, but when you are there is no passage of time, people do not
forget and you are in the middle of something that does not change. Doc didn't
know the pain and selfdestructive criticism in the Palace Flophouse or he might
have tried to do something about it. And Mack and the boys did not know how he
felt or they would have held up their heads again.
It was a bad time. Evil stalked darkly in the vacant lot.
Sam Malloy had a number of fights with his wife and she cried all the time. The
echoes inside the boiler made it sound as though she were crying under water.
Mack and the boys seemed to be the node of trouble. The nice bouncer at the
Bear Flag threw out a drunk, but threw him too hard and too far and broke his
back. Alfred had to go over to Salinas three times before it was cleared up and
that didn't make Alfred feel very well. Ordinarily he was too good a bouncer to
hurt anyone. His A and C was a miracle of rhythm and grace.
On top of that a group of high-minded ladies in the town
demanded that dens of vice must close to protect young American manhood. This
happened about once a year in the dead period between the Fourth of July and
the County Fair. Dora usually closed the Bear Flag for a week when it happened.
It wasn't so bad. Everyone got a vacation and little repairs to the plumbing
and the walls could be made. But this year the ladies went on a real crusade.
They wanted somebody's scalp. It had been a dull summer and they were restless.
It got so bad that they had to be told who actually owned the property where
vice was practiced, what the rents were and what little hardships might be the
result of their closing. That was how close they were to being a serious menace.
Dora was closed a full two weeks and there were three
conventions in Monterey while the Bear Flag was closed. Word got around and
Monterey lost five conventions for the following year. Things were bad all
over. Doc had to get a loan at the bank to pay for the glass that was broken at
the party. Elmer Rechati went to sleep on the Southern Pacific track and lost
both legs. A sudden and completely unexpected storm tore a purse-seiner and
three lampara boats loose from their moorings and tossed them broken and sad on
Del Monte beach.
There is no explaining a series of misfortunes like that.
Every man blames himself. People in their black minds remember sins committed
secretly and wonder whether they have caused the evil sequence. One man may put
it down to sun spots while another invoking the law of probabilities doesn't
be. lieve it. Not even the doctors had a good time of it, for while many people
were sick none of it was good-paying sickness. It was nothing a good physic or
a patent medicine wouldn't take care of.
And to cap it all, Darling got sick. She was a very fat
and lively puppy when she was struck down, but five days of fever reduced her
to a little skin-covered skeleton. Her liver-colored nose was pink and her gums
were white. Her eyes glazed with illness and her whole body was hot although
she trembled sometimes with cold. She wouldn't eat and she wouldn't drink and
her fat little belly shriveled up against her spine, and even her tail showed
the articulations through the skin. It was obviously distemper.
Now a genuine panic came over the Palace Flophouse.
Darling had come to be vastly important to them. Hughie and Jones instantly
quit their jobs so they could be near to help. They sat up in shifts. They kept
a cool damp doth on her forehead and she got weaker and sicker. Finally,
although they didn't want to, Hazel and Jones were chosen to call on Doc. They
found him working over a tide chart while he ate a chicken stew of which the
principal ingredient was not thicken but sea cucumber. They thought he looked
at them a little coldly.
"It's Darling," they said. "She's
sick."
"What's the matter with her?"
"Mack says it's distemper."
"I'm no veterinarian," said Doc. "I don't
know how to treat these things."
Hazel said, "Well, couldn't you just take a look at
her? She's sick as hell."
They stood in a cirde while Doc examined Darling. He
looked at her eyeballs and her gums and felt in her ear for fever. He ran his
finger over the ribs that stuck out like spokes and at the poor spine.
"She won't eat?" he asked.
"Not a thing," said Mack.
"You'll have to force feed her--strong soup and eggs
and cod liver oil."
They thought he was cold and professional. He went back
to his tide charts and his stew.
But Mack and the boys had something to do now. They
boiled meat until it was as strong as whiskey. They put cod liver oil far back
on her tongue so that some of it got down her. They held up her head and made a
little funnel of her chops and poured the cool soup in. She had to swallow or
drown. Every two hours they fed her and gave her water. Before they had slept
in shifts--now no one slept. They sat silently and waited for Darling's crisis.
It came early in the morning. The boys sat in their
chairs half asleep but Mack was awake and his eyes were on the puppy. He saw
her ears flip twice, and her chest heave. With infinite weakness she climbed
slowly to her spindly legs, dragged herself to the door, took four laps of
water and collapsed on the floor.
Mack shouted the others awake. He danced heavily. All the
boys shouted at one another. Lee Chong heard them and snorted to himself as he
carried out the garbage cans. Alfred the bouncer heard them and thought they
were having a party.
By nine o'dock Darling had eaten a raw egg and half a
pint of whipped cream by herself. By noon she was visibly putting on weight. In
a day she romped a little and by the end of the week she was a well dog.
At last a crack had developed in the wall of evil. There
were evidences of it everywhere. The purse-seiner was hauled back into the
water and floated. Word came down to Dora that it was all right to open up the
Bear Flag. Earl Wakefield caught a sculpin with two heads and sold it to the
museum for eight dollars. The wall of evil and of waiting was broken. It broke
away in chunks. The curtains were drawn at the laboratory that night and
Gregorian music played until two o'dock and then the music stopped and no one
came out. Some force wrought with Lee Chong's heart and all in an Oriental
mometit he forgave Mack and the boys and wrote off the frog debt which had been
a monetary headache from the beginning. And to prove to the boys that he had
forgiven them he took a pint of Old Tennis Shoes up and presented it to them.
Their trading at the Thrift Market had hurt his feelings but it was all over
now. Lee's visit coincided with the first destructive healthy impulse Darling
had since her illness. She was completely spoiled now and no one thought of
house-breaking her. When Lee Chong came in with his gift, Darling was
deliberately and happily destroying Hazel's only pair of rubber boots while her
happy masters applauded her.
Mack never visited the Bear Flag professionally. It would
have seemed a little like incest to him. There was a house out by the baseball
park he patronized. Thus, when he went into the front bar, everyone thought he
wanted a beer. He stepped up to Alfred. "Dora around?" he asked.
"What do you want with her?" Alfred asked.
"I got something I want to ask her."
"What about?"
"That's none of your God damn business," said
Mack.
"Okay. Have it your way. I'll see if she wants to
talk to you."
A moment later he led Mack into the sanctum. Dora sat at
a rolltop desk. Her orange hair was piled in ringlets on her head and she wore
a green eyeshade. With a stub pen she was bringing her books up to date, a fine
old double entry ledger. She was dressed in a magnificent pink silk wrapper
with lace at the wrists and throat. When Mack came in she whirled her pivot
chair about and faced him. Alfred stood in the door and waited. Mack stood
until Alfred closed the door and left.
Dora scrutinized him suspiciously. 'Well--what can I do
for you?" she demanded at last.
"You see, ma'am," said Mack-- 'Well I guess you
heard what we done over at Doc's some time back."
Dora pushed the eyeshade back up on her head and she put
the pen in an old-fashioned coil-spring holder. "Yeah!" she said.
"I heard."
"Well, ma'am, we did it for Doc. You may not believe
it but we wanted to give him a party. Only he didn't get home in time and--well
she got out of hand."
"So I heard," said Dora. "Well, what you
want me to do?"
"Well," said Mack, "I and the boys thought
we'd ask you. You know what we think of Doc. We wanted to ask you what you
thought we could do for him that would kind of show him."
Dora said, "Hum," and she flopped back in her
pivot chair and crossed her legs and smoothed her wrapper over her knees. She
shook out a cigarette, lighted it and studied. "You gave him a party he
didn't get to. Why don't you give him a party he does get to?" she said.
"Jesus," said Mack afterwards talking to the
boys. "It was just as simple as that. Now there is one hell of a woman. No
wonder she got to be a madam. There is one hell of a woman."
CHAPTER XXIV
Mary Talbot, Mrs. Tom Talbot, that is, was lovely. She
had red hair with green lights in it Her skin was golden with a green undercast
and her eyes were green with little golden spots. Her face was triangular, with
wide cheekbones, wide-set eyes, and her chin was pointed. She had long dancer's
legs and dancer's feet and she seemed never to touch the ground when she
walked. When she was excited, and she was excited a good deal of the time, her
face flushed with gold. Her greatgreat-great-great-great grandmother had been
burned as a witch.
More than anything in the world Mary Talbot loved
parties. She loved to give parties and she loved to go to parties. Since Tom
Talbot didn't make much money Mazy couldn't give parties all the time so she
tricked people into giving them. Sometimes she telephoned a friend and said
bluntly, "Isn't it about time you gave a party?"
Regularly Mary had six birthdays a year, and she
organized costume parties, surprise parties, holiday parties. Christmas Eve at
her house was a very exciting thing. For Mary glowed with parties. She carried
her husband Tom along on the wave of her excitement.
In the afternoon when Tom was at work Mary sometimes gave
tea parties for the neighborhood cats. She set a footstool with doll cups and
saucers. She gathered the cats and there were plenty of them, and then she held
long and detailed conversations with them. It was a kind of play she enjoyed
very much-- a kind of satiric game and it covered and concealed from Mary the
fact that she didn't have very nice dothes and the Talbots didn't have any
money. They were pretty near absolute bottom most of the time, and when they
really scraped, Mary managed to give some kind of party.
She could do that. She could infect a whole house with
gaiety and she used her gift as a weapon against the despondency that lurked
always around outside the house waiting to get in at Tom. That was Mary's job
as she saw it--to keep the despondency away from Tom because everyone knew he
was going to be a great success some time. Mostly she was successful in keeping
the dark things out of the house but sometimes they got in at Tom and laid him
out. Then he would sit and brood for hours while Mary frantically built up a
backfire of gaiety.
One time when it was the first of the month and there
were curt notes from the water company and the rent wasn't paid and a
manuscript had come back from _Collier's_ and the car. toons had come back from
_The New Yorker_ and pleurisy was hurting Tom pretty badly, he went into the
bedroom and lay down on the bed.
Mary came softly in, for the blue-gray color of his gloom
had seeped out under the door and through the keyhole. She had a little bouquet
of candy tuft in a collar of paper lace.
"Smell," she said and held the bouquet to his
nose. He smelled the flowers and said nothing. "Do you know what day this
is?" she asked and thought wildly for something to make it a bright day.
Tom said, "Why don't we face it for once? We're
down. We're going under. What's the good kidding ourselves?"
"No we're not," said Mary. "We're magic
people. We always have been. Remember that ten dollars you found in a
book--remember when your cousin sent you five dollars? Nothing can happen to
us."
"Well, it has happened," said Tom. "I'm
sorry," he said. "I just can't talk myself out of it this time. I'm
sick of pre.. tending everything. For once I'd like to have it real--just for
once."
"I thought of giving a little party tonight,"
said Mary.
"On what? You're not going to cut out the baked ham
picture from a magazine again and serve it on a platter, are you? I'm sick of
that kind of kidding. It isn't funny any more. It's sad."
"I could give a little party," she insisted.
"Just a small affair. Nobody will dress. It's the anniversary of the
founding of the Bloomer League--you didn't even remember that."
"It's no use," said Tom. "I know it's mean
but I just can't rise to it. Why don't you just go out and shut the door and
leave me alone? I'll get you down if you don't."
She looked at him closely and saw that he meant it. Mary
walked quietly out and shut the door, and Tom turned over on the bed and put
his face down between his arms. He could hear her rustling about in the other
room.
She decorated the door with old Christmas things, glass
balls, and tinsel, and she made a placard that said "Welcome Tom, our Hero."
She listened at the door and couldn't hear anything. A little disconsolately
she got out the footstool and spread a napkin over it. She put her bouquet in a
glass in the middle of the footstool and set out four little cups and saucers,
She went into the kitchen, put the tea in the teapot and set the kettle to
boil. Then she went out into the yard.
Kitty Randolph was sunning herself by the front fence.
Mary said, "Miss Randolph--I'm having a few friends in to tea if you would
care to come." Kitty Randolph rolled over languorously on her back and
stretched in the warm sun. "Don't be later than four o'clock," said
Mary. "My husband and I are going to the Boomer League Centennial
Reception at the Hotel."
She strolled around the house to the backyard where the
blackberry vines dambered over the fence. Kitty Casini was squatting on the
ground growling to herself and flickering her tail fiercely. "Mrs.
Casini," Mary began and then she stopped for she saw what the cat was
doing. Kitty Casini had a mouse. She patted it gently with her unarmed paw and
the mouse squirmed horribly away dragging its paralyzed hind legs behind it.
The cat let it get nearly to the cover of the blackberry vines and then she
reached delicately out and white thorns had sprouted on her jaw. Daintly she
stabbed the mouse through the back and drew it wriggling to her and her tail
flicked with tense delight.
Tom must have been at least half asleep when he heard his
name called over and over. He jumped up shouting, "What is it? Where are
you?" He could hear Mary crying. He ran out into the yard and saw what was
happeing. "Turn your head," he shouted and he killed the mouse. Kitty
Casini had leaped to the top of the fence where she watched him angrily. Tom
picked up a rock and hit her in the stomach and knocked her off the fence.
In the house Mary was still crying a little. She poured
the water into the teapot and brought it to the table. "Sit there,"
she told Tom and he squatted down on the floor in front of the footstool.
"Can't I have a big cup ?" he asked.
"I can't blame Kitty Casini," said Mary.
"I know how cats are. It isn't her fault. But--Oh, Tom! I'm going to have
trouble inviting her again. I'm just not going to like her for a while no
matter how much I want to." She looked closely at Tom and saw that the
lines were gone from his forehead and that he was not blinking badly. "But
then I'm so busy with the Bloomer League these days," she said, "I
just don't know how I'm going to get everything done."
Mary Talbot gave a pregnancy party that year. And
everyone said, "God! A kid of hers is going to have fun."
CHAPTER XXV
Certainly all of Cannery Row and probably all of
Monterery felt that a change had come. It's all right not to believe in luck
and omens. Nobody believes in them. But it doesn't do any good to take chances
with them and no one takes chances. Cannery Row, like every place else, is not
superstitious but will not walk under a ladder or open an umbrella in the
house. Doc was a pure scientist and incapable of superstition and yet when he
came in late one night and found a line of white flowers across the doorsill he
had a bad time of it. But most people in Cannery Row simply do not believe in
such things and then live by them.
There was no doubt in Mack's mind that a dark cloud had
hung on the Palace Flophouse. He had analyzed the abortive party and found that
a misfortune had crept into every crevice, that bad luck had come up like hives
on the evening. And once you got into a routine like that the best thing to do
was just to go to bed until it was over. You couldn't buck it. Not that Mack
was superstitious.
Now a kind of gladness began to penetrate into the Row
and to spread out from there. Doc was almost supernaturally successful with a
series of lady visitors. He didn't half try. The puppy at the Palace was
growing like a pole bean, and having a thousand generations of training behind
her, she began to train herself. She got disgusted with wetting on the floor
and took to going outside. It was obvious that Darling was going to grow up a
good and charming dog. And she had developed no chorea from her distemper.
The benignant influence crept like gas through the Row.
It got as far as Herman's hamburger stand, it spread to the San Carlos Hotel.
Jimmy Brucia felt it and Johnny his singing bartender. Sparky Evea felt it and
joyously joined battle with three new out of town cops. It even got as far as
the County Jail in Salinas where Gay, who had lived a good life by letting the
sheriff beat him at checkers, suddenly grew cocky and never lost another game.
He lost his privileges that way but he felt a whole man again.
The sea lions felt it and their barking took on a tone
and a cadence that would have gladdened the heart of St. Francis. Little girls
studying their catechism suddenly looked up and giggled for no reason at all
Perhaps some electrical finder could have been developed so delicate that it
could have located the source of all this spreading joy and fortune And
triangulation might possibly have located it in the Palace Flophouse and Grill.
Certainly the Palace was lousy with it Mack and the boys were charged. Jones
was seen to leap from his chair only to do a quick tap dance and sit down
again. Hazel smiled vaguely at nothing at all. The joy was so general and so
sdfused that Mack had a hard time keeping it centered and aimed at its
objective. Eddie who had worked at La Ida pretty regularly was accumulating a
cellar of some promise. He no longer added beer to the wining jug. It gave a
flat taste to the mixture, he said.
Sam Malloy had planted morning glories to grow over the
boiler. He had put out a little awning and under it he and his wife often sat
in the evening. She was crocheting a bedspread.
The joy even got into the Bear Flag. Business was good.
Phyllis Mae's leg was knitting nicely and she was nearly ready to go to work
again. Eva Flanegan got back from East St. Louis very glad to be back. It had
been hot in East St. Louis and it hadn't been as fine as she remembered it. But
then she had been younger when she had had so much fun there.
The knowledge or conviction about the party for Doc was
no sudden thing. It did not burst out full blown. People knew about it but let
it grow gradually like a pupa in the cocoons of their imaginations.
Mack was realistic about it. "Last time we forced
her," he told the boys. "You can't never give a good party that way.
You got to let her creep up on you."
"Well when's it going to be?" Jones asked
impatiently.
"I don't know," said Mack.
"Is it gonna be a surprise party ?" Hazel asked.
"It ought to, that's the best kind," said Mack.
Darling brought him a tennis ball she had found and he
threw it out the door into the weeds. She bounced away after it.
Hazel said, "If we knew when was Doc's birthday, we
could give him a birthday party."
Mack's mouth was open. Hazel constantly surprised him.
"By God, Hazel, you got something," he cried. "Yes, sir, if it
was his birthday there'd be presents. That's just the thing. All we got to find
out is when it is."
"That ought to be easy," said Hughie. "Why
don't we ask him?"
"Hell," said Mack. "Then he'd catch on.
You ask a guy when is his birthday and especially if you've already give him a
party like we done, and he'll know what you want to know for. Maybe I'll just
go over and smell around a little and not let on."
"I'll go with you," said Hazel.
"No--if two of us went, he might figure we were up
to something."
"Well, hell, it was my idear," said Hazel.
"I know," said Mack. "And when it comes
off why I'll tell Doc it was your idear. But I think I better go over
alone."
"How is he--friendly ?" Eddie asked.
"Sure, he's all right."
Mack found Doc way back in the downstairs part of the
laboratory. He was dressed in a long rubber apron and he wore rubber gloves to
protect his hands from the formaldehyde. He was injectingthe veins and arteries
of small dogfish with color mass. His little ball mill rolled over and over,
mixing the blue mass. The red fluid was already in the pressure gun. Doc's fine
hands worked precisely, slipping the needle into place and pressing the
compressed air trigger that forced the color into the veins. He laid the
finished fish in a neat pile. He would have to go over these again to put blue
mass in the arteries. The dogfish made good dissection specimens.
"Hi, Doc," said Mack. "Keepin' pretty
busy?"
"Busy as I want," said Doc. "How's the pup
?"
"Doin' just fine. She would of died if it hadn't
been for you."
For a moment a wave of caution went over Doc and then
slipped off. Ordinarily a compliment made him wary. He had been dealing with
Mack for a long time. But the tone had nothing but gratefulness in it. He knew
how Mack felt about the pup. "How are things going up at the Palace
?"
"Fine, Doc, just fine. We got two new chairs. I wish
you'd come up and see us. It's pretty nice up there now."
"I will," said Doc. "Eddie still bring
back the jug?"
"Sure," said Mack. "He ain't puttin' beer
in it no more and I think the stuff is better. It's got more zip."
"It had plenty of zip before," said Doc.
Mack waited patiently. Sooner or later Doc was going to
wade into it and he was waiting. If Doc seemed to open the subject himself it
would be less suspicious. This was always Mack's method.
"Haven't seen Hazel for some time. He isn't sick, is
he?"
"No," said Mack and he opened the campaign.
"Hazel is all right. Him and Hughie are havin' one hell of a battle. Been
goin' on for a week," he thudded. "An' the funny thing is it's about
somethin' they don't neither of them know nothin' about. I stayed out of it
because I don't know nothin' about it neither, but not them. They've even got a
little mad at each other."
"What's it about?" Doc asked.
"Well, sir," said Mack, "Hazel's all the
time buyin' these here charts and lookin' up lucky days and stars and stuff
like that. And Hughie says it's all a bunch of malarky. Hazel he says if you
know when a guy is born you can tell about him and Hughie says they're just
sellin' Hazel them charts for two bits apiece. Me, I don't know nothin' about
it. What do you think, Doc?"
"I'd kind of side with Hughie," said Doc. He
stopped the ball mill, washed out the color gun and filled it with blue mass.
"They got goin' hot the other night," said
Mack. "They ask me when I'm born so I tell 'em April 12 and Hazel he goes
and buys one of them charts and read all about me. Well it did seem to hit in
some places. But it was nearly all good stuff and a guy will believe good stuff
about himself. It said I'm brave and smart and kind to my friends. But Hazel
says it's all true. When's your birthday, Doc?" At the end of the long
discussion it sounded perfectly casual. You couldn't put your finger on it. But
it must be remembered that Doc had known Mack a very long time. If he had not
he would have said December 18 which was his birthday instead of October 27
which was not. "October 27," said Doc. "Ask Hazel what that
makes me."
"It's probably so much malarky," said Mack,
"but Haze! he takes it serious. I'll ask him to look you up, Doc."
When Mack left, Doc wondered casually what the build-up
was. For he had recognized it as a lead. He knew Mack's technique, his method.
He recognized his style. And he wondered to what purpose Mack could put the
information. It was only later when rumors began to creep in that Doc added the
whole thing up. Now he felt slightly relieved, for he had expected Mack to put
the bite on him.
CHAPTER XXVI
The two little boys played in the boat works yard until a
cat climbed the fence. Instantly they gave chase, drove it across the tracks
and there filled their pockets with granite stones from the roadbed. The cat
got away from them in the tall weeds but they kept the stones because they were
perfect in weight, shape, and size for throwing. You can't ever tell when
you're going to need a stone like that. They turned down Cannery Row and
whanged a stone at the corrugated iron front of Morden's Cannery. A startled
man looked out the office window and then rushed for the door, but the boys
were too quick for him. They were lying behind a wooden stringer in the lot
before he even got near the door. He couldn't have found them in a hundred
years.
"I bet he could look all his life and he couldn't
find us," said Joey.
They got tired of hiding after a while with no one
looking for them. They got up and strolled on down Cannery Row. They looked a
long time in Lee's window coveting the pliers, the back saws, the engineers'
caps and the bananas. Then they crossed the street and sat down on the lower
step of the stairs that went to the second story of the laboratory.
Joey said, "You know, this guy in here got babies in
bottles."
"What kind of babies ?" Willard asked.
"Regular babies, only before they're borned."
"I don't believe it," said Willard.
"Well, it's true. The Sprague kid seen them and he
says they ain't no bigger than this and they got little hands and feet and
eyes."
"And hair?" Willard demanded.
"Well, the Sprague kid didn't say about hair."
"You should of asked him. I think he's a liar."
"You better not let him hear you say that,"
said Joey.
"Well, you can tell him I said it. I ain't afraid of
him and I ain't afraid of you. I ain't afraid of anybody. You want to make
something of it?" Joey didn't answer. "Well, do you?"
"No," said Joey. "I was thinkin', why
don't we just go up and ask the guy if he's got babies in bottles? Maybe he'd
show ___ them to us, that is if he's got any."
"He ain't here," said Willard. "When he's
here, his car's here. He's away some place. I think it's a lie. I think the
Sprague kid is a liar. I think you're a liar. You want to make something of that?"
It was a lazy day. Willard was going to have to work hard
to get up any excitement. "I think you're a coward, too. You want to make
something of that?" Joey didn't answer. Willard changed his tactics.
"Where's your old man now?" he asked in a conversational tone.
"He's dead," said Joey.
"Oh yeah? I didn't hear. What'd he die of?"
For a moment Joey was silent. He knew Willard knew but he
couldn't let on he knew, not without fighting Willard, and Joey was afraid of
Willard.
"He committed--he killed himself."
"Yeah ?" Willard put on a long face.
"How'd he do it?"
"He took rat poison."
Willard's voice shrieked with laughter. "What'd he
think-- he was a rat?"
Joey chuckled a little at the joke, just enough, that is.
"He must of thought he was a rat," Willard
cried. "Did he go crawling around like this--look, Joey--like this? Did he
wrinkle up his nose like this? Did he have a big old long tail ?" Willard
was helpless with laughter. "Why'n't he just get a rat trap and put his head
in it ?" They laughed themselves out on that one, Willard really wore it
out. Then he probed for another joke. "What'd he look like when he took
it--like this ?" He crossed his eyes and opened his mouth and stuck out
his tongue.
"He was sick all day," said Joey. "He
didn't die 'til the middle of the night. It hurt him."
Willard said, "What'd he do it for?"
"He couldn't get a job," said Joey.
"Nearly a year he couldn't get a job. And you know a funny thing? The next
morning a guy come around to give him a job."
Willard tried to recapture his joke. "I guess he
just figured he was a rat," he said, but it fell through even for Willard.
Joey stood up and put his hands in his pockets. He saw a
little coppery shine in the gutter and waJked toward it but just as he reached
it Willard shoved him aside and picked up the penny. -
"I saw it first," Joey cried. "It's
mine."
"You want to try and make something of it ?"
said Willard. "Why'n't you go take some rat poison?"
CHAPTER XXVII
Mack and the boys--the Virtues, the Beatitudes, the Beauties. They sat in the Palace Flophouse
and they were the stone dropped in the pool, the impulse which sent out ripples
to all of Cannery Row and beyond, to Pacific Grove, to Monterey, even over the
hill to Carmel.
"This time," said Mack, "we got to be sure
he gets to the party. If he don't get there, we don't give it."
"Where we going to give it this time?" Jones
asked.
Mack tipped his chair back against the wall and hooked
his feet around the front legs. "I've give that a lot of thought," he
said. "Of course we could give it here but it would be pretty hard to
surprise him here. And Doc likes his own place. He's got his music there."
Mack scowled around the room. "I don't know who broke his phonograph last
time," he said. "But if anybody so much as lays a finger on it next
time I personally will kick the hell out of him."
"I guess we'll just have to give it at his
place," said Hughie.
People didn't get the news of the party--the knowledge of
it just slowly grew up in them. And no one was invited. Everyone was going.
October 27 had a mental red drde around it. And since it was to be a birthday
party there were presents to be considered.
Take the girls at Dora's. All of them had at one time or
another gone over to the laboratory for advice or medicine or simply for
unprofessional company. And they had seen Doc's bed. It was covered with an old
faded red blanket full of fox tails and burrs and sand, for he took it on all
his collecting trips. If money came in he bought laboratory equipment. It never
occurred to him to buy a new blanket for himself. Dora's girls were making him
a patchwork quilt, a beautiful thing of silk. And since most of the silk
available came from underclothing and evening dresses, the quilt was glorious
in strips of flesh pink and orchid and pale yellow and cerise. They worked on
it in the late mornings and in the afternoons before the boys' from the sardine
fleet came in. Under the community of effort, those fights and ill feelings
that always are present in a whore house completely disappeared.
Lee Chong got out and inspected a twenty-five-foot string
of firecrackers and a big bag of China lily bulbs. These to his way of thinking
were the finest things you could have for a party.
Sam Malloy had long had a theory of antiques. He knew
that old furniture and glass and crockery, which had not been very valuable in
its day, had when time went by taken on desirability and cash value out of all
proportion to its beauty or utility. He knew of one chair that had brought five
hundred dollars. Sam collected pieces of historic automobiles and he was
convinced that some day his collection, after making him very rich, would
repose on black velvet in the best museums. Sam gave the party a good deal of
thought and then he went over his treasures which he kept in a big locked box
behind the boiler, He decided to give Doc one of his finest pieces--the
connecting rod and piston from a 1916 Chalmers. He rubbed and polished this
beauty until it gleamed like a piece of ancient armor. He made a little box for
it and lined it with black doth.
Mack and the boys gave the problem considerable thought
and came to the conclusion that Doc always wanted cats and had some trouble
getting them. Mack brought out his double cage. They borrowed a female in an
interesting condition and set their trap under the cypress tree at the top of
the vacant lot. In the corner of the Palace they built a wire cage and in it
their collection of angry torn cats grew with every night. Jones had to make
two trips a day to the canneries for fish heads to feed their charges. Mack
considered and correctly that twenty-five tom cats would be as nice a present
as they could give Doc.
"No decorations this time," said Mack.
"Just a good solid party with lots of liquor."
Gay heard about the party clear over in Salinas jail and
he made a deal with the sheriff to get off that night and borrowed two dollars
from him for a round trip bus ticket. Gay had been very nice to the sheriff who
wasn't a man to forget it, particularly because election was coming up and Gay
could, or said he could, swing quite a few votes. Besides, Gay could give the
Salinas jail a bad name if he wanted to.
Henri had suddenly decided that the old-fashioned
pincushion was an art form which had flowered and reached its peak in the
Nineties and had since been neglected. He revived the form and was delighted to
see what could be done with colored pins. The picture was never completed--you
could change it by rearranging the pins. He was preparing a group of these
pieces for a one-man show when he heard about the party and he instantly
abandoned his own work and began a giant pincushion for Doc. It was to be an
intricate and provocative design in green, yellow, and blue pins, all cool
colors, and its title was Pre-Cambrian Memory.
Henri's friend Eric, a learned barber who collected the
first editions of writers who never had a second edition or a second book,
decided to give Doc a rowing machine he had got at the bankruptcy proceedings
of a client with a three-year barber bill. The rowing machine was in fine
condition. No one had rowed it much. No one ever uses a rowing machine.
The conspiracy grew and there were endless visits back
and forth, discussion of presents, of liquor, of what time will we start and
nobody must tell Doc.
Doc didn't know when he first became aware that something
was going on that concerned him. In Lee Chong's, conversation stopped when he
entered. At first it seemed to him that people were cold to him. When at least
half a dozen people asked him what he was doing October 27 he was puzzled, for
he had forgotten he had given this date as his birthday. Actually he had been
interested in the horoscope for a spurious birth date but Mack had never
mentioned it again and so Doc forgot it.
One evening he stopped in at the Halfway House because
they had a draft beer he liked and kept it at the right temperature. He gulped
his first glass and then settled down to enjoy his second when he heard a drunk
talking to the bartender. "You goin' to the party?"
"What party?"
"Well," said the drunk confidentially,
"you know Doc, down in Cannery Row."
The bartender looked up the bar and then back.
"Well," said the drunk, "they're givin'
him a hell of a party on his birthday."
"Who is?"
"Everybody."
Doc mulled this over. He did not know the drunk at all.
His reaction to the idea was not simple. He felt a great
warmth that they should want to give him a party and at the same time he quaked
inwardly remembering the last one they had given.
Now everything fell into place--Mack's question and the
silences when he was about. He thought of it a lot that night sitting beside
his desk. He glanced about considering what things would have to be locked up.
He knew the party was going to cost him plenty.
The next day he began making his own preparations for the
party. His best records he carried into the back room where they could be
locked away. He moved every bit of equipment that was breakable back there too.
He knew how it would be--his guests would be hungry and they wouldn't bring
anything to eat. They would run out of liquor early, they always did. A little
wearily he went up to the Thrift Market where there was a fine and
understanding butcher. They discussed meat for some time. Doc ordered fifteen
pounds of steaks, ten pounds of tomatoes, twelve heads of lettuce, six loaves
of bread, a big jar of peanut butter and one of strawberry jam, five gallons of
wine and four quarts of a good substantial but not distinguished whiskey. He
knew he would have trouble at the bank the first of the mouth. Three or four
such parties, he thought, and he would lose the laboratory.
Meanwhile on the Row the planning reached a crescendo.
Doc was right, no one thought of food but there were odd pints and quarts put
away all over. The collection of presents was growing and the guest list, if
there had been one, was a little like a census. At the Bear Flag a constant
discussion went on about what to wear. Since they would not be working, the
girls did not want to wear the long beautiful dresses which were their
uniforms. They decided to wear street dothes. It wasn't as simple as it
sounded. Dora insisted that a skeleton crew remain on duty to take care of the
regulars. The girls divided up into shifts, some to stay until they were
relieved by others. They had to flip for who would go to the party first. The
first ones would see Doc's face when they gave him the beautiful quilt. They
had it on a frame in the dining room and it was nearly finished. Mrs. Malloy
had put aside her bedspread for a while. She was crocheting six doilies for
Doc's beer glasses. The first excitement was gone from the Row now and its
place was taken by a deadly cumulative earnestness. There were fifteen tom cats
in a cage at the Palace Flophouse and their yowling made Darling a little
nervous at night,
CHAPTER XXVIII
Sooner or later Frankie was bound to hear about the
party. For Frankie drifted about like a small cloud. He was always on the edge
of groups. No one noticed him or paid any attention to him. You couldn't tell
whether he was listening or not. But Frankie did hear about the party and he
heard about the presents and a feeling of fullness swelled in him and a feeling
of sick longing.
In the window of Jacob's Jewelry Store was the most
beautiful thing in the world, It had been there a long time. It was a black
onyx clock with a gold face but on top of it was the real beauty. On top was a
bronze group--St. George killing the dragon. The dragon was on his back with
his claws in the air and in his breast was St. George's spear. The Saint was in
full armor with the visor raised and he rode a fat, big-buttocked horse. With
his spear he pinned the dragon to the ground. But the wonderful thing was that
he wore a pointed beard and he looked a little like Doc.
Frankie walked to Alvarado Street several times a week to
stand in front of the window and look at this beauty. He dreamed about it too,
dreamed of running his fingers over the rich, smooth bronze. He had known about
it for months when he heard of the party and the presents.
Frankie stood on the sidewalk for an hour before he went
inside. "Well?" said Mr. Jacobs. He had given Frankie a visual frisk
as he came in and he knew there wasn't 75 cents on him.
"How much is that?" Frankie asked huskily.
"What?"
"That."
"You mean the clock? Fifty dollars--with the group
seventy-five dollars."
Frankie walked out without replying. He went down to the
beach and crawled under an overturned rowboat and peeked out at the little
waves, The bronze beauty was so strong in his head that it seemed to stand out
in front of him. And a frantic trapped feeling came over him. He had to get the
beauty. His eyes were fierce when he thought of it.
He stayed under the boat all day and at night he emerged
and went back to Alvarado Street. While people went to the movies and came out
and went to the Golden Poppy, he walked up and down the block. And he didn't
get tired or sleepy, for the beauty burned in him like fire.
At last the people thinned out and gradually disappeared
from the streets and the parked cars drove away and the town settled to sleep.
A policeman looked closely at Frankie, "What you
doing out?" he asked.
Frankie took to his heels and fled around the corner and
hid behind a barrel in the alley. At two-thirty he crept to the door of Jacob's
and tried the knob. It was locked. Frankie went back to the alley and sat
behind the barrel and thought. He saw a broken piece of concrete lying beside
the barrel and he picked it up.
The policeman reported that he heard the crash and ran to
it. Jacob's window was broken. He saw the prisoner walking rapidly away and
chased him. He didn't know how the boy could run that far and that fast
carrying fifty pounds of dock and bronze, but the prisoner nearly got away. If
he had not blundered into a blind street he would have got away.
The chief called Doc the next day. "Come on down,
will you? I want to talk to you."
They brought Frankie in very dirty and frowzy. His eyes
were red but he held his mouth firm and he even smiled a little welcome when he
saw Doc.
"What's the matter, Frankie?" Doc asked.
"He broke into Jacob's last night," the chief
said. "Stole some stuff. We got in touch with his mother. She say it's not
her fault because he hangs around your place all the time."
"Frankie--you shouldn't have done it," said
Doc. The heavy stone of inevitability was on his heart. "Can't you parole
him to me?" Doc asked.
"I don't think the judge will do it," said the
chief, 'We've got a mental report. You know what's wrong with him?"
"Yes," said Doc, "I know."
"And you know what's likely to happen when he comes
into puberty ?"
"Yes," said Doc, "I know," and the
stone weighed terribly on his heart.
"The doctor thinks we better put him away. We
couldn't before, but now he's got a felony on him, I think we better."
As Frankie listened the welcome died in his eyes.
"What did he take?" Doc asked.
"A great big clock and a bronze statue."
"I'll pay for it."
"Oh, we got it back. I don't think the judge will
hear of it. It'll just happen again. You know that."
"Yes," said Doc softly, "I know. But maybe
he had a reason. Frankie," he said, "why did you take it?"
Frankie looked a long time at him. "I love
you," he said.
Doc ran out and got in his car and went collecting in the
caves below Pt. Lobos.
CHAPTER XXIX
At four o'clock on October 27 Doc finished bottling the
last of a lot of jellyfish. He washed out the formaline jug, cleaned his
foceps, powdered and took off his rubber gloves. He went upstairs, fed the
rats, and put some of his best records and his microscopes in the back room.
Then he locked it. Sometimes an illuminated guest wanted to play with the
rattlesnakes. By making careful preparations, by forseeing possibilities, Doc
hoped to make this party as non-lethal as possible without making it dull.
He put on a pot of coffee, started the _Great Fugue_ on
the phonograph, and took a shower. He was very quick about it, for he was
dressed in clean clothes and was having his cup of coffee before the music was
completed.
He looked out through the window at the lot and up at the
Palace but no one was moving. Doc didn't know who or how many were coming to
his party. But he knew he was watched. He had been conscious of it all day. Not
that he had seen anyone, but someone or several people had kept him in sight.
So it was to be a surprise party. He might as well be surprised. He would
follow his usual routine as though nothing were happening. He crossed to Lee
Chong's and bought two quarts of beer. There seemed to be a supressed Oriental
excitement at Lee's. So they were coming too. Doc went back to the laborataly
and poured out a glass of beer. He drank the first off fox thirst and poured a
second one to taste. The lot and the street were still deserted.
Mack and the boys were in the Palace and the door was
closed. All afternoon the stove had roared, heating water for baths. Even
Darling had been bathed and she wore a red bow around her neck.
"What time you think we should go over?" Hazel
asked.
"I don't think before eight o'dock," said Mack.
"But I don't see nothin' against us havin' a short one to kind of get
warmed up."
"How about Doc getting warmed up?" Hughie said.
"Maybe I ought to just take him a bottle like it was just nothin'."
"No," said Mack. "Doc just went over to
Lee's for some beer."
"You think he suspects anything?" Jones asked.
"How could he?" asked Mack.
In the corner cage two tom cats started an argument and
the whole cageful commented with growls and arched backs. There were only
twenty-one cats. They had fallen short of their mark.
"I wonder how we'll get them cats over there?"
Hazel begun. "We can't carry that big cage through the door."
"We won't," said Mack. "Remember how it
was with the frogs. No, we'll just tell Doc about them. He can come over and
get them." Mack got up and opened one of Eddie's wining jugs. 'We might as
well get warmed up," he said.
At five-thirty the old Chinaman flap-flapped down the
hill, past the Palace. He crossed the lot, crossed the street, and disappeared
between Western Biological and the Hediondo.
At the Bear Flag the girls were getting ready. A kind of
anthor watch had been chosen by straws. The ones who stayed were to be relieved
every hour.
Dora was splendid. Her hair freshly dyed orange was
curled and piled on her head. She wore her wedding ring and a big diamond
brooch on her breast Her dress was white silk with a black bamboo pattern. In
the bedrooms the reverse of ordinary procedure was in practice.
Those who were staying wore long evening dresses while
those who were going had on short print dresses and looked very pretty. The
quilt, finished and backed, was in a big cardboard box in the bar. The bouncer
grumbled a little, for it had been decided that he couldn't go to the party.
Someone had to look after the house. Contrary to orders, each girl had a pint
hidden and each girl watched for the signal to fortify herself a little for the
party.
Dora strode magnificently into her office and closed the
door, She unlocked the top drawer of the rolltop desk, took out a bottle and a
glass and poured herself a snort. And the bottle clinked softly on the glass. A
girl listening outside the door heard the dick and spread the word. Dora would
not be able to smell breaths now. And the girls rushed for their rooms and got
out their pints. Dusk had come to Cannery Row, the gray time between daylight
and street light. Phyllis Mae peeked around the curtain in the front parlor.
"Can you see him?" Doris asked.
"Yeah. He's got the lights on. He's sitting there
like he's reading. Jesus, how that guy does read. You'd think he'd ruin his
eyes. He's got a glass of beer in his hand."
"Well," said Doris, "we might as well have
a little one, I guess."
Phyllis Mae was still limping a little but she was as
good as new. She could, she said, lick her weight in City Councilmen.
"Seems kind of funny," she said. "There he is, sitting over
there and he don't know what's going to happen."
"He never comes in here for a trick," Doris
said a little sadly.
"Lot of guys don't want to pay," said Phyllis
Mae. "Costs them more but they figure it different."
"Well, hell, maybe he likes them."
"Likes who?"
"Them girls that go over there."
"Oh, yeah--maybe he does, I been over there. He
never made a pass at me."
"He wouldn't," said Doris. "But that don't
mean if you didn't work here you wouldn't have to fight your way out."
"You mean he don't like our profession?"
"No, I don't mean that at all. He probably figures a
girl that's workin' has got a different attitude."
They had another small snort.
In her office Dora poured herself one more, swallowed it
and locked the drawer again. She fixed her perfect hair in the wall mirror,
inspected her shining red nails, and went out to the bar. Alfred the bouncer
was sulking. It wasn't anything he said nor was his expression unpleasant, but
he was sulking just the same. Dora looked him over coldly. "I guess you
figure you're getting the blocks, don't you?"
"No," said Alfred. "No, it's quite all
right."
That quite threw Dora. "Quite all right, is it? You
got a job, Mister. Do you want to keep it or not?"
"It's quite all right," Alfred said frostily.
"I ain't putting out no beef." He put his elbows on the bar and
studied himself in the mirror. "You just go and enjoy yourself," he
said. "I'll take care of everything here. You don't need to worry."
Dora melted under his pain. "Look," she said.
"I don't like to have the place without a man. Some lush might get smart
and the kids couldn't handle him. But a little later you can come over and you
could kind of keep your eye on the place out the window, How would that be? You
could see if anything happened."
"Well," said Alfred. "I would like to
come." He was mollified by her permission. "Later I might drop over
for just a minute or two. They was a mean drunk in last night An' I don't know,
Dora--I kind of lost my nerve since I bust that guy's back. I just ain't sure
of myself no more. I'm gonna pull a punch some night and get took."
"You need a rest," said Dora. "Maybe I'll
get Mack to fill in and you can take a couple of weeks off." She was a
wonderful madam, Dora was.
Over at the laboratory, Doc had a little whiskey after
his beer. He was feeling a little mellow. It seemed a nice thing to him that
they would give him a party. He played the _Pavane to a Dead Princess_ and felt
sentimental and a little sad. And because of his feeling he went on with
_Daphnis and Chloe_. There was a passage in it that reminded him of something
else. The observers in Athens before Marathon reported seeing a great line of
dust crossing the Plain, and they heard the clash of arms and they heard the
Eleusinian Chant. There was part of the music that reminded him of that
picture.
When it was done he got another whiskey and he debated in
his mind about the _Brandenburg_. That would snap him out of the sweet and sickly
mood he was getting into. But what was wrong with the sweet and sickly mood? It
was rather pleasant. "I can play anything I want," he said aloud.
"I can play _Clair de Lune_ or _The Maiden with Flaxen Hair_. I'm a free
man."
He poured a whiskey and drank it. And he compromised with
the _Moonlight Sonata_. He could see the neon light of La Ida blinking on and
off. And then the street light in front of the Bear Flag came on.
A squadron of huge brown beetles hurled themselves
against the light and then fell to the ground and moved their legs and felt
around with their antennae. A lady cat strolled lonesornely along the gutter
looking for adventure. She wondered what had happened to all the torn cats who
had made life in. teresting and the nights hideous.
Mr. Mallow on his hands and knees peered out of the
boiler door to see if anyone had gone to the party yet. In the Palace the boys
sat restlessly watching the black hands of the alarm dock.
CHAPTER XXX
The nature of parties has been imperfectly studied. It
is, however, generally understood that a party has a pathology, that it is a
kind of an individual and that it is likely to be a very perverse individual.
And it is also generally understood that a party hardly ever goes the way it is
planned or intended. This last, of course, excludes those dismal slave parties,
whipped and controlled and dominated, given by ogreish professional hostesses.
These are not parties at all but acts and demonstrations, about as spontaneous
as peristalsis and as interesting as its end product.
Probably everyone in Cannery Row had projected his
imagination to how the party would be--the shouts of greeting, the
congratulations, the noise and good feeling. And it didn't start that way at
all. Promptly at eight o'clock Mack and the boys, combed and clean, picked up
their jugs and marched down the chicken walk, over the railroad track, through
the lot across the street and up the steps of Western Biological. Everyone was embarrassed. Doc held the door
open and Mack made a little speech. "Being as how it's your birthday, I
and the boys thought we would wish you happy birthday and we got twenty-one
cats for you for a present."
He stopped and they stood forlornly on the stairs.
"Come on in," said Doc. "Why--I'm--I'm
surprised. I didn't even know you knew it was my birthday."
"All tom cats," said Hazel. "We didn't
bring 'em down."
They sat down formally in the room at the left. There was
a long silence. "Well," said Doc, "now you're here, how about a
little drink?"
Mack said, "We brought a little snort," and he
indicated the three jugs Eddie had been accumulating. "They ain't no beer
in it," said Eddie.
Doc covered his early evening reluctance. "No,"
he said. "You've got to have a drink with me. It just happens I laid in
some whiskey."
They were just seated formally, sipping delicately at the
whiskey, when Dora and the girls came in. They presented the quilt. Doc laid it
over his bed and it was beautiful. And they accepted a little drink. Mr. and
Mrs. Malloy followed with their presents.
"Lots of folks don't know what this stuff's going to
be worth," said Sam Malloy as he brought out the Chalmers 1916 piston and
connecting rod. "There probably isn't three of these here left in the
world."
And now people began to arrive in droves. Henri came in
with a pincushion three by four feet. He wanted to give a lecture on his new
art form but by this time the formality was broken. Mr. and Mrs. Gay came in.
Lee Chong presented the great string of firecrackers and the China lily bulbs. Someone
ate the lily bulbs by eleven o'clock but the firecrackers lasted longer, A
group of comparative strangers came in from La Ida. The stiffness was going out
of the party quiddy. Dora sat in a kind of throne, her orange hair flaming. She
held her whiskey glass daintily with her little finger extended. And she kept
an eye on the girls to see that they conducted themselves properly. Doc put
dance music on the phonograph and he went to the kitchen and began to fry the
steaks.
The first fight was not a bad one. One of the group from
La Ida made an immoral proposal to one of Dora's girls. She protested and Mack
and the boys, outraged at this breach of propriety, threw him out quiddy and
without breaking anything. They felt good then, for they knew they were contributing.
Out in the kitchen Doc was frying steaks in three
skillets, and he cut up tomatoes and piled up sliced bread. He felt very good.
Mack was personally taking care of the phonograph. He had found an album of
Benny Goodman's trios. Dancing had started, indeed the party was beginning to
take on depth and vigor. Eddie went into the office and did a tap dance. Doc
had taken a pint with him to the kitchen and he helped himself from the bottle.
He was feeling better and better. Everyone was surprised when he served the
meat. Nobody was really hungry and they cleaned it up instantly. Now the food
set the party into a kind of rich digestive sadness. The whiskey was gone and
Doc brought out the gallons of wine.
Dora, sitting enthroned, said, "Doc, play some of
that nice music. I get Christ awful sick of that juke box over home."
Then Doc played _Ardo_ and the _Amor_ from an album of
Monteverdi. And the guests sat quietly and their eyes were inward. Dora
breathed beauty. Two newcomers crept up the stairs and entered quietly. Doc was
feeling a golden pleasant sadness. The guests were silent when the music
stopped. Doc brought out a book and he read in a clear, deep voice:
Even now
If I see in my soul the citron-breasted fair one
Still gold-tinted, her face like our night stars,
Drawing unto her; her body beaten about the flame,
Wounded by the flaring spear of love,
My first of all by reason of her fresh years,
Then is my heart buried alive in snow.
Even now
If my girl with lotus eyes came to me again
Weary with the dear weight of young love,
Again I would give her to these starved twins of arms
And from her mouth drink down the heavy wine,
As a reeeling pirate bee in fluttered ease
Steals up the honey from the nenuphar.
Even now
If I saw her lying all wide eyes
And with collyrium the indent of her cheek
Lengthened to the bright ear and her pale side
So suffering the fever of my distance,
Then would my love for her be ropes of flowers, and night
A black-haired lover on the breasts of day.
Even now
My eyes that hurry to see no more are painting, painting
Faces of my lost girl. O golden rings
That tap against cheeks of small magnolia leaves,
O whitest so soft parchment where
My poor divorced lips have written excellent
Stanzas of kisses, and will write no more,
Even now
Death sends me the flickering of powdery lids
Over wild eyes and the pity of her slim body
All broken up with the weariness of joy;
The little red flowers of her breasts to be my comfort
Moving above scarves, and for my sorrow
Wet crimson lips that once I marked as mine.
Even now
They chatter her weakness through the two bazaars
Who was so strong to love me. And small men
That buy and sell for silver being slaves
Crinkle the fat about their eyes; and yet
No Prince of the Cities of the Sea has taken her,
Leading to his grim bed. Little lonely one,
You clung to me as a garment clings; my girl.
Even now
I love long black eyes that caress like silk,
Ever and ever sad and laughing eyes,
Whose lids make such sweet shadow when they close
It seems another beautiful look of hers,
I love a fresh mouth, ah, a scented mouth,
And curving hair, subtle as a smoke,
And light fingers, and laughter of green gems.
Even now
I remember that you made answer very softly,
We being one soul, your hand on my hair,
The burning memory rounding your near lips:
I have seen the priestesses of Rati make love at moon
fail
And then in a carpeted hail with a bright gold lamp
Lie down carelessly anywhere to sleep.
["Black Marigolds," translated from the
Sanskrit by B. Powys Mathers.]
Phyllis Mae was openly weeping when he stopped and Dora
herself dabbed at her eyes. Hazel was so taken by the sound of the words that
he had not listened to their meaning. But a little world sadness had slipped
over all of them. Everyone was remembering a lost love, everyone a call.
Mack said, "Jesus, that's pretty. Reminds me of a
dame--" and he let it pass. They filled the wine glasses and became quiet
The party was slipping away in sweet sadness. Eddie went out in the office and
did a little tap dance and came back and sat down again. The party was about to
recline and go to sleep when there was a tramp of feet on the stairs. A great
voice shouted, "Where's the girls?"
Mack got up almost happily and crossed quickly to the
door. And a smile of joy illuminated the faces of Hughie and Jones. "What
girls you got in mind?" Mack asked softly.
"Ain't this a whore house? Cab driver said they was
one down here."
"You made a mistake, Mister." Mack's voice was
gay.
"Well, what's them dames in there?"
They joined battle then. They were the crew of a San
Pedro tuna boat, good hard happy fight-wise men. With the first rush they burst
through to the party. Dora's girls had each one slipped off a shoe and held it
by the toe. As the fight raged by they would dip a man on the head with a pike
heel. Dora leaped for the kitchen and came roaring out with a meat grinder.
Even Doc was happy. He flailed about with the Chalmers 1916 piston and connecting
rod.
It was a good fight. Hazel tripped and got kicked in the
face twice before he could get to his feet again. The Franklin stove went over
with a crash. Driven to a corner the newcomers defended themselves with heavy
books from the bookcases. But gradually they were driven back. The two front
windows were broken out. Suddenly Alfred, who had heard the trouble from across
the street, attacked from the rear with his favorite weapon, an indoor ball
bat. The fight raged down the steps and into the street and across into the
lot, The front door was hanging limply from one hinge again. Doc's shirt was
torn off and his slight strong shoulder dripped blood from a scratch. The enemy
was driven half-way up the lot when the sirens sounded. Doc's birthday party had
barely time to get inside the laboratory and wedge the broken door closed and
turn out the lights before the police car cruised up. The cops didn't find
anything. But the party was sitting in the dark giggling happily and drinking
wine. The shift changed at the Bear Flag. The fresh contingent raged in full of
hell. And then the party really got going. The cops came back, looked in,
clicked their tongues and joined it. Mack and the boys used the squad car to go
to Jimmy Brucia's for more wine and Jimmy came back with them. You could hear
the roar of the party from end to end of Cannery Row. The party had all the
best qualities of a riot and a night on the barricades. The crew from the San
Pedro tuna boat crept humbly back and joined the party. They were embraced and
admired. A woman five blocks away called the police to complain about the noise
and couldn't get anyone. The cops reported their own car stolen and found it
later on the beach. Doc sitting cross-legged on the table smiled and tapped his
fingers gently on his knee. Mack and Phyllis Mae were doing Indian wrestling on
the floor. And the cool bay wind blew in through the broken windows. It was
then that someone lighted the twenty-five-foot string of firecrackers.
CHAPTER XXXI
A well-grown gopher took up residence in a thicket of
mallow weeds in the vacant lot on Cannery Row. It was a perfect place. The deep
green luscious mailows towered up crisp and rich and as they matured their
little cheeses hung down provocatively. The earth was perfect for a gopher hole
too, black and soft and yet with a little day in it so that it didn't crumble
and the tunnels didn't cave in. The gopher was fat and sleek and he had always
plenty of food in his cheek pouches. His little ears were clean and well set
and his eyes were as black as old-fashioned pin heads and just about the same
size. His digging hands were strong and the fur on his back was glossy brown
and the fawn-colored fur on his chest was incredibly soft and rich. He had long
curving yellow teeth and a little short tail. Altogether he was a beautiful
gopher and in the prime of his life.
He came to the place over land and found it good and he
began his burrow on a little eminence where he could look out among the mallow
weeds and see the trucks go by on Cannery Row. He could watch the feet of Mack
and the boys as they crossed the lot to the Palace Flophouse. As he dug down
into the coal-black earth he found it even more perfect, for there were great
rocks under the soil. When he made his great chamber for the storing of food it
was under a rock so that it could never cave in no matter how hard it rained.
It was a place where he could settle down and raise any number of families and
the burrow could increase in all directions.
It was beautiful in the early morning when he first poked
his head out of the burrow. The mallows filtered green light down on him and
the first rays of the rising sun shone into his hole and warmed it so that he
lay there content and very comfortable.
When he had dug his great chamber and his four emergency
exits and his waterproof deluge room, the gopher began to store food. He cut
down only the perfect mallow stems and trimmed them to the exact length he
needed and he took them down the hole and stacked them neatly in his great chamber,
and arranged them so they wouldn't ferment or get sour. He had found the
perfect place to live. There were no gardens about so no one would think of
setting a trap for him. Cats there were, many of them, but they were so bloated
with fish heads and guts from the canneries that they had long ago given up
hunting. The soil was sandy enough so that water never stood about or filled a
hole for long. The gopher worked and worked until he had his great chamber
crammed with food. Then he made little side chambers for the babies who would
inhabit them. In a few years there might be thousands of his progeny spreading
out from this original hearthstone.
But as time went on the gopher began to be a little
impatient, for no female appeared. He sat in the entrance of his hole in the
morning and made penetrating squeaks that are inaudible to the human ear but
can be heard deep in the earth by other gophers. And still no female appeared.
Finally in a sweat of impatience he went up across the track until he found
another gopher hole. He squeaked provocatively in the entrance. He heard a
rustling and smelled female and then out of the hole came an old battle-tom
bull gopher who mauled and bit him so badly that he crept home and lay in his
great chamber for three days recovering and he lost two toes from one front paw
from that fight.
Again he waited and squeaked beside his beautiful burrow
in the beautiful place but no female ever came and after a while he had to move
away. He had to move two blocks up the hill to a dahlia garden where they put
out traps every night.
CHAPTER XXXII
Doc awakened very slowly and clumsily like a fat man
getting out of a swimmng pool. His mind broke the surface and fell back several
times. There was red lipstick on his beard. He opened one eye, saw the
brilliant colors of the quilt and closed his eye quickly. But after a while he
looked again. His eye went past the quilt to the floor, to the broken plate in
the corner, to the glasses standing on the table turned over on the floor, to
the spilled wine and the books like heavy fallen butterflies. There were little
bits of curled red paper all over the place and the sharp smell of
firecrackers. He could see through the kitchen door to the steak plates stacked
high and the skillets deep in grease. Hundreds of cigarette butts were stamped
out on the floor. And under the firecracker smell was a fine combination of
wine and whiskey and perfume. His eye stopped for a moment on a little pile of
hairpins in the middle of the floor.
He rolled over slowly and supporting himself on one elbow
he looked out the broken window. Cannery Row was quiet and sunny. The boiler
door was open. The door of the Palace Flophouse was closed. A man slept
peacefully among the weeds in the vacant lot. The Bear Flag was shut up tight.
Doc got up and went into the kitchen and lighted the gas
water heater on his way to the toilet Then he came back and sat on the edge of
his bed and worked his toes together while he surveyed the wreckage. From up
the hill he could hear the church bells ringing. When the gas heater began
rumbling he went back to the bathroom and took a shower and he put on blue
jeans and a flannel shirt. Lee Chong was closed but he saw who was at the door
and opened it. He went to the refrigerator and brought out a quart of beer
without being asked. Doc paid him.
"Good time?" Lee asked. His brown eyes were a
little inflamed in their pouches.
"Good time!" said Doc and he went back to the
laboratory with his cold beer. He made a peanut butter sandwich to eat with his
beer. It was very quiet in the street No one went by at all. Doc heard music in
his head--violas and cellos, he thought. And they played cool, soft, soothing
music with nothing much to distinguish it. He ate his sandwich and sipped his
beer and listened to the music. When he had finished his beer, Doc went into
the kitchen, and cleared the dirty dishes out of the sink. He ran hot water in
it and poured soap chips under the running water so that the foam stood high
and white. Then he moved about collecting all the glasses that weren't broken.
He put them in the soapy hot water. The steak plates were piled high on the
stove with their brown juice and their white grease sticking them together. Doc
cleared a place on the table for the clean glasses as he washed them. Then he
unlocked the door of the back room and brought out one of his albums of
Gregorian music and he put a Pater Noster and Agnus Dei on the turntable and
started it going. The angelic, disembodied voices filled the laboratory. They
were incredibly pure and sweet. Doc worked carefully washing the glasses so
that they would not dash together and spoil the music. The boys' voices carried
the melody up and down, simply but with the richness that is in no other
singing. When the record had finished, Doc wiped his hands and turned it off.
He saw a book lying half under his bed and picked it up and he sat down on the
bed. For a moment he read to himself but then his lips began to move and in a
moment he read aloud--slowly, pausing at the end of each line.
Even now
I mind the coming and talking of wise men from towers
Where they had thought away their youth. And I,
listening,
Found not the salt of the whispers of my girl,
Murmur of confused colors, as we lay near sleep;
Little wise words and little witty words,
Wanton as water, honied with eagerness.
In the sink the high white foam cooled and ticked as the
bubbles burst. Under the piers it was very high tide and the waves splashed on
rocks they had not reached in a long time.
Even now
I mind that I loved cypress and roses, dear,
The great blue mountains and the small gray hills,
The sounding of the sea. Upon a day
I saw
strange eyes and hands like butterflies;
For
me at morning larks flew from the thyme
And
children came to bathe in little streams.
Doc
closed the book. He could hear the waves beat under the piles and he could hear
the scampering of white rats against the wire. He went into the kitchen and
felt the cooling water in the sink. He ran hot water into it. He spoke aloud to
the sink and the white rats, and to himself:
Even
now
I
know that I have savored the hot taste of life
Lifting
green cups and gold at the great feast.
Just
for a small and a forgotten time
I
have had full in my eyes from off my girl
The
whitest pouring of eternal light--
He
wiped his eyes with the back of his hand. And the white rats scampered and
scrambled in their cages. And behind the glass the rattlesnakes lay still and
stared into space with their dusty frowning eyes.
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