Part One Chapter 14

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At dawn my bus was zooming across the Arizona desert--Indio, Ely the Salome (where she danced); the great dry stretches leading to Mex- ican  mountains in the south. Then we swung north to the Arizona mountains,  Flagstaff, clifftowns. I had a book with me I stole from a Hollywood stall,  "iLe Grand Meaulnesi" by Alain-Fournier, but I preferred reading the  American landscape as we went along. Every bump, rise, and stretch in it  mystified my longing. In inky night we crossed New Mexico; at gray dawn it was Dalhart, Texas; in the bleak Sunday  afternoon  we  rode  through  one  Oklahoma  flat-town  after another; at nightfall it was Kansas. The bus  roared on. I was going home in October. Everybody goes home in October.
We arrived in St. Louis at noon. I took a walk down by the Mississippi River and watched the logs that came floating from Montana in  the  north--grand  Odyssean  logs  of  our continental  dream.  Old steamboats   with  their  scrollwork  more  scrolled  and  withered  by weathers sat in the  mud inhabited by rats. Great clouds of afternoon overtopped the  Mississippi  Valley. The bus roared through Indiana cornfields that night; the moon illuminated the ghostly gathered husks; it was almost Halloween. I  made the acquaintance of a girl and we necked all the way to Indianapolis. She was nearsighted. When we got off to eat I had to lead her by the hand to the lunch counter. She bought my meals; my sandwiches were all gone. In exchange I told her long stories. She was coming from Washington State, where she had spent the summer picking apples. Her home was on an  upstate New York farm. She invited me to come there. We made a date to meet at a New York hotel anyway. She got off at Columbus, Ohio, and I slept all the way to Pittsburgh. I was wearier than I'd been for years and years. I had three hundred and sixty-five miles yet to hitchhike to New York,and a dime in my pocket. I walked five miles to get out of Pittsburgh, and two rides, an apple truck and a big trailer truck, took me to Har- risburg  in  the  soft  Indian-summer  rainy  night.  I  cut  right  along.  I wanted to get home.
It was the night of the Ghost of the Susquehanna. The Ghost was a shriveled little old man with a paper satchel who claimed he was headed for "Canady." He walked very fast, commanding me to follow, and said there was a bridge up ahead we could cross. He was about sixty years old; he  talked incessantly of the meals he had, how much butter they gave him for  pancakes, how many extra slices of bread, how the old men had called him  from a porch of a charity home in Maryland and invited him to stay for the weekend, how he took a nice warm bath before he left; how he found a brand-new hat by the side of the road in Virginia and that was it on his head; how he hit every Red Cross in town and showed them his World War I credentials; how the Harrisburg Red Cross was not worthy of the name; how he managed in  this  hard  world.  But  as  far  as  I  could  see  he  was  just  a  semi- respectable walking hobo of some kind who covered the entire Eastern Wilderness on foot, hitting Red Cross offices and sometimes bumming on Main Street corners for a dime. We were bums together. We walked seven miles along the mournful Susquehanna. It is a terrifying river. It has bushy cliffs on both sides that lean like hairy ghosts over the un- known waters. Inky night covers all. Sometimes from the railyards across  the river rises a great red locomotive flare that illuminates the horrid cliffs. The little man said he had a fine belt in his satchel and we stopped for him to fish it out. "I got me a fine belt here somewheres-- got it in Frederick, Maryland. Damn, now did I leave that thing on the counter at Fredericksburg?"
"You mean Frederick."
"No, no, Fredericksburg, iVirginiai!" He was always talking about  Frederick, Maryland, and Fredericksburg, Virginia. He walked right in the  road in the teeth of advancing traffic and almost got hit several times. I plodded along in the ditch. Any minute I expected the poor little madman to go flying in the night, dead. We never found that bridge. I left him at a railroad underpass and, because I was so sweaty from the hike, I changed shirts and put on two sweaters; a roadhouse illuminated my sad  endeavors. A whole family came walking down the dark road and wondered what I was doing. Strangest thing of all, a tenorman was blowing very fine blues in this Pennsylvania hick house; I listened and moaned. It  began to rain hard. A man gave me a ride back to Harrisburg and told me I was on the wrong road. I suddenly saw the little hobo standing under a  sad streetlamp with his thumb stuck  out--poor  forlorn  man,  poor  lost  sometime  boy,  now  broken ghost of the penniless wilds. I told my driver the story and he stopped to tell the old man.
"Look here, fella, you're on your way west, not east."
"Heh?" said the little ghost. "Can't tell me I don't know my way around here. Been walkin this country for years. I'm headed for Canady."
"But this ain't the road to Canada, this is the road to Pittsburgh and Chicago." The little man got disgusted with us and walked off. The last I saw  of him was his bobbing little white bag dissolving in the darkness of the mournful Alleghenies.
I thought all the wilderness of America was in the West till theGhost of the Susquehanna showed me different. No, there is a wilder- ness in the East; it's the same wilderness Ben Franklin plodded in the oxcart days when he was postmaster, the same as it was when George Washington was a wild-buck Indian-fighter, when Daniel Boone told stories by Pennsylvania  lamps and promised to find the Gap, when Bradford built his road and men whooped her up in log cabins. There were not great Arizona spaces for the little man, just the bushy wilder- ness of eastern Pennsylvania, Maryland,  and Virginia, the backroads, the black-tar roads that curve among the mournful rivers like Susque- hanna, Monongahela, old Potomac and Monocacy. 
That night in Harrisburg I had to sleep in the railroad station on a bench; at dawn the station masters threw me out. Isn't it true that you start your life a sweet child believing in everything under your father's roof? Then comes the day of the Laodiceans, when you know you are wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked, and with the visage  of  a  gruesome  grieving  ghost  you  go  shuddering  through nightmare life. I stumbled haggardly out of the station; I had no more control. All I could see of the morning was a whiteness like the white- ness of the tomb. I was starving to death. All I had left in the form of calories were the last of the  cough drops I'd bought in Shelton, Ne- braska, months ago; these I sucked for their sugar. I didn't know how to panhandle. I stumbled out of town with barely enough strength to reach the city limits. I knew I'd be arrested if  I spent another night in Harrisburg. Cursed city! The ride I proceeded to get was with a skinny, haggard man who believed in controlled starvation for  the sake of health. When I told him I was starving to death as we rolled east he said, "Fine, fine, there's nothing better for you. I myself haven't eaten for three days. I'm going to live to be a hundred and fifty years old." He was a bag of bones, a floppy doll, a broken stick, a maniac. I might have  gotten a ride with an affluent fat man who'd say, "Let's stop at this restaurant and have some pork chops and beans." No, I had to get a ride that morning with a maniac who believed in controlled starva- tion for the sake of health. After a hundred miles he grew lenient and took out bread-and-butter sandwiches from the back of the car. They were hidden  among his salesman samples. He was selling plumbing fixtures around Pennsylvania. I devoured the bread and butter. Sud- denly I began to laugh. I was all alone in the car, waiting for him as he made business calls in Allentown, and I laughed and laughed. Gad, I was sick and tired of life.  But  the madman drove me home to New York.
Suddenly I found myself on Times Square. I had traveled eight thousand miles  around  the American  continent and I  was back  on Times Square; and right in the middle of a rush hour, too, seeing with my  innocent road-eyes the absolute madness and fantastic hoorair of New York  with its millions and millions hustling forever for a buck among themselves, the mad dream--grabbing, taking, giving, sighing, dying,  just  so  they  could  be  buried  in  those  awful  cemetery  cities beyond Long Island City. The high towers of the land--the other end of the land, the place where Paper America is born. I stood in a subway doorway, trying to get enough nerve to pick up a beautiful long butt, and every time I stooped great  crowds rushed by and obliterated it from my sight, and finally it was crushed. I had no money to go home in the bus. Paterson is quite a few miles from Times Square. Can you picture me walking those last miles through the Lincoln Tunnel or over the Washington Bridge and into New Jersey? It was dusk. Where was Hassel? I dug the square for Hassel; he wasn't there, he was in Riker's Island, behind bars. Where Dean? Where everybody? Where life? I had my home to go to, my place to lay my head down and figure the losses and figure the gain that I knew was in there somewhere too. I had to panhandle two bits for the bus. I finally hit a Greek minister who was standing around the corner. He gave me the quarter with  a nervous lookaway. I rushed immediately to the bus.
When I got home I ate everything in the icebox. My aunt got up and  looked at me. "Poor little Salvatore," she said in Italian. "You're thin, you're  thin. Where have you been all this time?" I had on two shirts and two sweaters; my canvas bag had torn cottonfield pants and the tattered remnants  of my huarache shoes in it. My aunt and I de- cided to buy a new electric refrigerator with the money I had sent her from California; it was to be the first one in the family. She went to bed, and late at night I couldn't sleep and  just smoked in bed. My half- finished manuscript was on the desk. It was October, home, and work again. The first cold winds rattled the windowpane, and I had made it just in time. Dean had come to my house, slept several  nights there, waiting for me; spent afternoons talking to my aunt as she worked on a great rag rug woven of all the clothes in my family for years, which was now finished and spread on my bedroom  floor, as complex and as rich as the passage of time itself; and then he had left, two days before I arrived,  crossing  my  path  probably  somewhere in  Pennsylvania  or Ohio, to go to San Francisco. He had his own life there; Camille had just gotten an apartment. It had never occurred to me to look her up while I was in Mill City.
Now it  was too late and I had also missed Dean.

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