Okay, he said. Together they walked back.
That sure is good hash, isnt it? Donna said.
Bob Arctor said, Its black sticky hash, which means its saturated with opium alkaloids. What youre smoking is opium, not hashdo you know that? Thats why it costs so muchdo you know that? He heard his voice rise; he stopped walking. You arent doing hash, sweetie. Youre doing opium, and that means a lifetime habit at a cost of whats hash selling for now a pound? And youll be smoking and nodding off and nodding off and not being able to get your car in gear and rear-ending trucks and needing it every day before you go to work
I need to now, Donna said. Take a hit before I go to work. And at noon and as soon as I get home. Thats why I deal, to buy my hash. Hash is mellow. Hash is where its at.
Opium, he repeated. Whats hash sell for now?
About ten thousand dollars a pound, Donna said. The good kind.
Christ! As much as smack.
I would never use a needle. I never have and I never will. You last about six months when you start shooting, whatever you shoot. Even tap water. You get a habit
You have a habit.
Donna said, We all do. You take Substance D. So what? Whats the difference now? Im happy; arent you happy? I get to come home and smoke high-grade hash every night its my trip. Dont try to change me. Dont ever try to change me. Me or my morals. I am what I am. And I get off on hash. Its my life.
You ever seen pictures of an old opium smoker? Like in China in the old days? Or a hash smoker in India now, what they look like later on in life?
Donna said, I dont expect to live long. So what? I dont want to be around long. Do you? Why? Whats in this world? And have you even seenShit, what about Jerry Fabin; look at someone too far into Substance D. Whats there really in this world, Bob? Its a stopping place to the next where they punish us here because we were born evil
You are a Catholic.
Were being punished here, so if we can get off on a trip now and then, fuck it, do it. The other day I almost cashed in driving my MG to work. I had the eight-track stereo on and I was smoking my hash pipe and I didnt see this old dude in an eighty-four Ford Imperator
You are dumb, he said. Super dumb.
I am, you know, going to die early. Anyhow. Whatever I do. Probably on the freeway. I got hardly any brakes on my MG, you realize that? And Ive picked up four speeding tickets this year already. Now I got to go to traffic school. Its a bummer. For six whole months.
So someday, he said, I will all of a sudden never lay eyes on you again. Right? Never again.
Because of traffic school? No, after the six months
In the marble orchard, he explained. Wiped out before youre allowed under California law, fucking goddamn California law, to purchase a can of beer or a bottle of booze.
Yeah! Donna exclaimed, alerted. The Southern Comfort! Right on! Are we going to do a fifth of Southern Comfort and take in the Ape flicks? Are we? Theres still like eight left, including the one
Listen to me, Bob Arctor said, taking hold of her by the shoulder; she instinctively pulled away.
No, she said.
He said, You know what they ought to let you do one time? Maybe just one time? Let you go in legally, just once, and buy a can of beer.
Why? she said wonderingly.
A present to you because you are good, he said.
They served me once! Donna exclaimed in delight. At a bar! The cocktail waitressI was dressed up and like with some peopleasked me what I wanted and I said, Ill have a vodka collins, and she served me. It was at the La Paz, too, which is a really neat place. Wow, can you believe it? I memorized that, the vodka collins, from an ad. So if I even got asked at a bar, like that, Id sound cool. Right? She suddenly put her arm through his, and hugged him as they walked, something she almost never did. It was the most all-time super trip of my life.
Then I guess, he said, you have your present. Your one present.
I can dig it, Donna said. I can dig it! Of course they told me laterthese people I was withI should have ordered a Mexican drink like a tequila sunrise, because, see, its a Mexican kind of bar, there with the La Paz Restaurant. Next time Ill know that; Ive got that taped in my memory banks, if I go there again. You know what Im going to do someday, Bob? Im going to move north to Oregon and live in the snow. Im going to shovel snow off the front walk every morning. And have a little house and garden with vegetables.
He said, You have to save up for that. Save all your money. It costs.
Glancing at him, suddenly shy, Donna said, Hell get me that. Whats-his-name.
Who?
You know. Her voice was soft, sharing her secret. Imparting to him because he, Bob Arctor, was her friend and she could trust him. Mister Right. I know what hell be likehell drive an Aston-Martin and hell take me north in it. And thats where the little old-fashioned house will be in the snow, north from here. After a pause she said, Snow is supposed to be nice, isnt it?
He said, Dont you know?
I never have been in the snow except once in San Berdoo up in those mountains and then it was half sleet and muddy and I fucking fell. I dont mean snow like that; I mean real snow.
Bob Arctor, his heart heavy in a certain way, said, You feel positive about all this? Itll really happen?
Itll happen! She nodded. Its in the cards for me.
They walked on then, in silence. Back to her place, to get her MG. Donna, wrapped up in her own dreams and plans; and hehe recalled Barris and he recalled Luckman and Hank and the safe apartment, and he recalled Fred.
Hey, man, he said, can I go with you to Oregon? When you do take off finally?
She smiled at him, gently and with acute tenderness, with the answer no.
And he understood, from knowing her, that she meant it. And it would not change. He shivered.
Are you cold? she asked.
Yeah, he said. Very cold.
I got that good MG heater in my car, she said, for when were at the drive-in youll warm up there. She took his hand, squeezed it, held it, and then, all at once, she let it drop.
But the actual touch of her lingered, inside his heart. That remained. In all the years of his life ahead, the long years without her, with never seeing her or hearing from her or knowing anything about her, if she was alive or happy or dead or what, that touch stayed locked within him, sealed in himself, and never went away. That one touch of her hand.
He brought a cute little needle-freak named Connie home with him that night, to ball her in exchange for him giving her a bag of ten mex hits.
Skinny and lank-haired, the girl sat on the edge of his bed, combing her odd hair; this was the first time she had ever come along with himhe had met her at a head partyand he knew very little about her, although hed carried her phone number for weeks. Being a needle-freak, she was naturally frigid, but this wasnt a downer; it made her indifferent to sex in terms of her own enjoyment, but on the other hand, she didnt mind what sort of sex it was.
This was obvious just watching her. Connie sat half-dressed, her shoes off, a bobby pin in her mouth, gazing off listlessly, evidently doing a private trip in her head. Her face, elongated and bony, had a strength to it; probably, he decided, because the bones, especially the jaw lines, were pronounced. On her right cheek was a zit. Undoubtedly she neither cared about nor noticed that, either; like sex, zits meant little to her.