tudent." "No credit." I put some coins down. "Give me an Eastside." He came back with the bottle. "Where can a fellow get a girl?" I asked. He picked up some of the coins. "I don't know anything," he said and walked to the register. That first night I closed the bar. Nobody bothered me. A few blond women left with the Filipinos. The men were quiet drinkers. They sat in little groups with their heads close together, talking, now and then laughing in a very quiet manner. I liked them. When the bar closed and I got up to leave the bartender said, "Thank you." That was never done in American bars, not to me anyhow. I liked my new situation. All I needed was money. I decided to keep going to college. It would give me some place to be during the daytime. My friend Becker had dropped out. There wasn't anybody that I much cared for there except maybe the instructor in Anthropology, a known Communist. He didn't teach much Anthropology. He was a large man, casual and likeable. "Now the way you fry a porterhouse steak," he told the class, "you get the pan red hot, you drink a shot of whiskey and then you pour a thin layer of salt in the pan. You drop the steak in and sear it but not for too long. Then you flip it, sear the other side, drink another shot of whiskey, take the steak out and eat it immediately." Once when I was stretched out on the campus lawn he had come walking by and had stopped and stretched out beside me. "Chinaski, you don't believe all that Nazi hokum you're spreading around, do you?" "I'm not saying. Do you believe your crap?" "Of course I do." "Good luck." "Chinaski, you're nothing but a wienerschnitzel." He got up, brushed off the grass and leaves and walked away . . . I had been at the Temple Street place only for a couple of days when Jimmy Hatcher found me. He knocked on the door one night and I opened it and there he was with two other guys, fellow aircraft workers, one called Delmore, the other, Fastshoes. "How come he's called 'Fastshoes'?" "You ever lend him money, you'll know." "Come on in . . . How in Christ's name did you find me?" "Your folks had you traced by a private dick." "Damn, they know how to take the boy out of a man's life." "Maybe they're worried?" "If they're worried all they have to do is send money." "They claim you'll drink it up." "Then let them worry . . ." The three of them came in and sat around on the bed and the floor. They had a fifth of whiskey and some paper cups. Jimmy poured all around. "Nice place you've got. here." "It's great. I can see the City Hall every time I stick my head out the window." Fastshoes pulled a deck of cards from his pocket. He was sitting on the rug. He looked up at me. "You gamble?" "Every day. You got a marked deck?" "Hey, you son-of-a-bitch!" "Don't curse me or I'll hang your wig on my mantlepiece." "Honest, man, these cards are straight!" "All I play is poker and 21. What's the limit?" "Two bucks." "We'll split for the deal." I got the deal and called for draw poker, regular. I didn't like wild cards, too much luck was needed that way. Two bits for the kitty. As I dealt, Jimmy poured another round. "How are you making it. Hank?" "I'm writing term papers for the other people." "Brilliant." "Yeah .. ." "Hey, you guys," said Jimmy, "I told you this guy was a genius." "Yeah," said Delmore. He was to my right. He opened. "Two bits," he said. We followed him in. "Three cards," said Delmore. "One," said Jimmy. "Three," said Fastshoes. "I'll stand," I said. "Two bits," said Delmore. We all stayed in and then I said, "I'll see your two bits and raise you two bucks." Delmore dropped out, Jimmy dropped out. Fastshoes looked at me. "What else do you see besides City Hall when you stick your head out the window?" "Just play your hand. I'm not here to chat about gymnastics or the scenery." "All right," he said, "I'm out." I scooped up the pot and gathered in their cards, leaving mine face down. "What did ya have?" asked Fastshoes. "Pay to see or weep forever," I said sweeping my cards into the deck and mixing them together, shuffling them, feeling like Gable before he got weakened by God at the time of the San Francisco earthquake. The deck changed hands but my luck held, most of the time. It had been payday at the aircraft plant. Never bring a lot of money to where a poor man lives. He can only lose what little he has. On the other hand it is mathematically possible that he might win whatever you bring with you. What you must do, with money and the poor, is never let them get too close to one another. Somehow I felt that the night was to be mine. Delmore soon tapped out and left. "Fellows," I said, "I've got an idea. Cards are too slow. Let's just match coins, ten bucks a toss, odd man wins." "O.K.," said Jimmy. "O.K.," said Fastshoes. The whiskey was gone. We were into a bottle of my cheap wine. "All right," I said, "flip the coins high! Catch them on your palms. And when I say lift,' we'll check the result." We flipped them high. Caught them. "Lift!" I said. I was odd man. Shit. Twenty bucks, just like that. I jammed the tens into my pocket. "Flip!" I said. We did. "Lift!" I said. I won again. "Flip!" I said. "Lift!" I said. Fastshoes won. I got the next. Then Jimmy won. I got the next two. "Wait," I said, "I've got to piss!" I walked over to the sink and pissed. We had finished the bottle of wine. I opened the closet door. "I got another bottle of wine in here," I told them. I took most of the bills out of my pocket and threw them into the closet. I came out, opened the bottle, poured drinks all around. "Shit," said Fastshoes looking into his wallet, "I'm almost broke." "Me too," said Jimmy. "I wonder who's got the money?" I asked. They weren't very good drinkers. Mixing the wine and the whiskey was bad for them. They were weaving a bit. Fastshoes fell back against the dresser knocking an ashtray to the floor. It broke in half. "Pick it up," I said. "I won't pick up shit," he said. "I said, 'pick it up'!" "I won't pick up shit." Jimmy reached and picked up the broken ashtray. "You guys get out of here," I said. "You can't make me go," said Fastshoes. "All right," I said, "just open your mouth owe more time, say owe word and you won't be able to separate your head from your asshole!" "Let's go, Fastshoes," said Jimmy. I opened the door and they filed past unsteadily. I followed them down the hall to the head of the stairway. We stood there. "Hank," said Jimmy, "I'll see you again. Take it easy." "All right, Jim ..." "Listen," Fastshoes said to me, "You . . ." I shot a straight right into his mouth. He fell backward down the stairway, twisting and bouncing. He was about my size, six feet and one- eighty, and you could hear the sound of him for a block. Two Filipinos and the blond landlady were in the lobby. They looked at Fastshoes laying there but they didn't move toward him. "You killed him!" said Jimmy. He ran down the stairway and turned Fastshoes over. Fastshoes had a bloody nose and mouth. Jimmy held his head. Jimmy looked up at me. "That wasn't right, Hank . . ." "Yeah, what ya gonna do?" "I think," said Jimmy, "that we're going to come back and get you . . ." "Wait a minute," I said. I walked back to my room and poured myself a wine. I hadn't liked Jimmy's paper cups and I had been drinking out of a used jelly glass. The paper label was still on the side, stained with dirt and wine. I walked back out. Fastshoes was reviving. Jimmy was helping him to his feet. Then he put Fastshoes' arm around his neck. They were standing there. "Now what did you say?" I asked. "You're an ugly man, Hank. You need to be taught a lesson." "You mean I'm not pretty?" "I mean, you act ugly . . ." "Take your friend out of here before I come down there and finish him off!" Fastshoes raised his bloody head. He had on a flowered Hawaiian shirt, only now many of the colors were stained with red. He looked at me. Then he spoke. I could barely hear him. But I heard it. He said, "I'm going to kill you . . ." "Yeah," said Jimmy, "we'll get you." "YEAH, FUCKERS?" I screamed. "I'M NOT GOING ANYWHERE! ANYTIME YOU WANT TO FIND ME I'LL BE IN ROOM 5! I'LL BE WAITING! ROOM 5, GOT IT? AND THE DOOR WILL BE OPEN!" I lifted the jelly glass full of wine and drained it. Then I hurled that jelly glass at them. I threw the son-of-a-bitch, hard. But my aim was bad. It hit the side of the stairway wall, glanced off and shot into the lobby between the landlady and her two Filipino friends. Jimmy turned Fastshoes toward the exit door and began slowly walking him out. It was a tedious, agonizing journey. I heard Fastshoes again, half moaning, half weeping, "I'll kill him . . . I'll kill him . . ." Then Jimmy had him out the doorway. They were gone. The blond landlady and the two Filipinos were still standing in the lobby, looking up at me. I was barefooted, and had gone five or six days without a shave. I needed a haircut. I only combed my hair once, in the morning, then didn't bother again. My gym teachers were always after me about my posture: "Pull your shoulders back! Why are you looking at the ground? What's down there?" I would never set any trends or styles. My white t-shirt was stained with wine, burned, with many cigarettes and cigar holes, spotted with blood and vomit. It was too small, it rode up exposing my gut and belly button. And my pants were too small. They gripped me tightly and rose well above my ankles. The three of them stood and looked at me. I looked down at them. "Hey, you guys, come on up for a little drink!" The two little men looked up at me and grinned. The landlady, a faded Carole Lombard type, looked on impassively. Mrs. Kansas, they called her. Could she be in love with me? She was wearing pink shoes with high heels and a black sparkling sequinned dress. Little chips of light flashed at me. Her breasts were something that no mere mortal would ever see -- they were only for kings, dictators, rulers, Filipinos. "Anybody got a smoke?" I asked. "I'm out of smokes." The little dark fellow standing to one side of Mrs. Kansas made a slight motion with one hand toward his jacket pocket and a pack of Camels jumped in the lobby air. Deftly he caught the pack in his other hand. With the invisible tap of a finger on the bottom of the pack a smoke leaped up, tall, true, singular and exposed, ready to be taken. "Hey, shit, thanks," I said. I started down the stairway, made a mis-step, lunged, almost fell, grabbed the bannister, righted myself, readjusted my perceptions, and walked on down. Was I drunk? I walked up to the little guy holding the pack. I bowed slightly. I lifted out the Camel. Then I flipped it in the air, caught it, stuck it into my mouth. My dark friend remained expressionless, the grin having vanished when I had begun down the stairway. My little friend bent forward, cupped his hands around the flame and lit my smoke. I inhaled, exhaled. "Listen, why don't you all come up to my place and we'll have a couple of drinks?" "No," said the little guy who had lit my cigarette. "Maybe we can catch the Bee or some Bach on my radio! I'm educated, you know. I'm a student . . ." "No," said the other little guy. I took a big drag on my smoke, then looked at Carole Lombard -- Mrs. Kansas. Then I looked at my two friends. "She's yours. I don't want her. She's yours. Just come on up. We'll drink a little wine. In good old room 5." There was no answer. I rocked on my heels a bit as the whiskey and the wine fought for possession. I let my cigarette dangle a bit from the right side of my mouth as I sent up a plume of smoke. I continued letting the cigarette dangle like that. I knew about stilettoes. In the little time I had been there I had seen two enactments of the stiletto. From my window one night, looking out at the sound of sirens, I saw a body there just below my window on the Temple Street sidewalk, in the moonlight, under the streetlight. Another time, another body. Nights of the stiletto. Once a white man, the other time one of them. Each time, blood running on the pavement, real blood, just like that, moving across the pavement and into the gutter, you could see it going along in the gutter, meaningless, dumb . . . that so much blood could come from just one man. "All right, my friends," I said to them, "no hard feelings. I'll drink alone . . ." I turned and started to walk toward the stairway. "Mr. Chinaski," I heard Mrs. Kansas' voice. I turned and looked at her flanked by my two little friends. "Just go to your room and sleep. If you cause any more disturbance I will phone the Los Angeles Police Department." I turned and walked back up the stairway. No life anywhere, no life in this town or this place or in this weary existence.. . My door was open. I walked in. There was one-third of a cheap bottle of wine left. Maybe there was another bottle in the closet? I opened the closet door. No bottle. But there were tens and twenties everywhere. There was a rolled twenty lying between a pair of dirty socks with holes in the toes; and there from a shirt collar, a ten dangling; and here from an old jacket, another ten caught in a side pocket. Most of the money was on the floor. I picked up a bill, slipped it into the side pocket of my pants, went to the door, closed and locked it, then went down the stairway to the bar. 55 A couple of nights later Becker walked in. I guess my parents gave him my address or he located me through the college. I had my name and address listed with the employment division at the college, under "unskilled labor." "I will do anything honest or otherwise," I had written on my card. No calls. Becker sat in a chair as I poured the wine. He had on a Marine uniform. "I see they sucked you in," I said. "I lost my Western Union job. It was all that was left." I handed him his drink. "You're not a patriot then?" "Hell no." "Why the Marines?" "I heard about boot camp. I wanted to see if I could get through it." "And you did." "I did. There are some crazy guys there. There's a fight almost every night. Nobody stops it. They almost kill each other." "I like that." "Why don't you join?" "I don't like to get up early in the morning and I don't like to take orders." "How are you going to make it?" "I don't know. When I get down to my last dime I'll just walk over to skid row." "There are some real weirdos down there." "They're everywhere." I poured Becker another wine. "The problem is," he said, "that there's not much time to write." "You still want to be a writer?" "Sure. How about you?" "Yeah," I said, "but it's pretty hopeless." "You mean you're not good enough?" "No, they're not good enough." "What do you mean?" "You read the magazines? The 'Best Short Stories of the Year' books? There are at least a dozen of them." "Yeah, I read them . . ." "You read The New Yorker" Harper's? The Atlantic?" "Yeah ..." "This is 1940. They're still publishing 19th Century stuff, heavy, labored, pretentious. You either get a headache reading the stuff or you fall asleep.". "What's wrong?" "It's a trick, it's a con, a little inside game." "Sounds like you've been rejected." "I knew I would be. Why waste the stamps? I need wine." "I'm going to break through," said Becker. "You'll see my books on the library shelves one day." "Let's not talk about writing." "I've read your stuff," said Becker. "You're too bitter and you hate everything." "Let's not talk about writing." "Now you take Thomas Wolfe . . ." "God damn Thomas Wolfe! He sounds like an old woman on the telephone!" "O.K., who's your boy?" "James Thurber." "All that upper-middle-class folderol . . ." "He knows that everyone is crazy." "Thomas Wolfe is of the earth . . ." "Only assholes talk about writing . . ." "You calling me an asshole?" "Yes ..." I poured him another wine and myself another wine. "You're a fool for getting into that uniform." "You call me an asshole and you call me a fool. I thought we were friends." "We are. I just don't think you're protecting yourself." "Every time I see you you have a drink in your hand. You call that protecting yourself?" "It's the best way I know. Without drink I would have long ago cut my god-damned throat." "That's bullshit." "Nothing's bullshit that works. The Pershing Square preachers have their God. I have the blood of my god!" I raised my glass and drained it. "You're just hiding from reality," Becker said. "Why not?" "You'll never be a writer if you hide from reality." "What are you talking about? That's what writers do.'" Becker stood up. "When you talk to me, don't raise your voice." "What do you want to do, raise my dick?" "You don't have a dick!" I caught him unexpectedly with a right that landed behind his ear. The glass flew out of his hand and he staggered across the room. Becker was a powerful man, much stronger than I was. He hit the edge of the dresser, turned, and I landed another straight right to the side of his face. He staggered over near the window which was open and I was afraid to hit him then because he might fall into the street. Becker gathered himself together and shook his head to clear it. "All right now," I said, "let's have a little drink. Violence nauseates me." "O.K.," said Becker. He walked over and picked up his glass. The cheap wine I drank didn't have corks, the tops just unscrewed. I unscrewed a new bottle. Becker held out his glass and I poured him one. I poured myself one, set the bottle down. Becker emptied his. I emptied mine. "No hard feelings," I said. "Hell, no, buddy," said Becker, putting down his glass. Then he dug a right into my gut. I doubled over and as I did he pushed down on the back of my head and brought his knee up into my face. I dropped to my knees, blood running from my nose all over my shirt. "Pour me a drink, buddy," I said, "let's think this thing over." "Get up," said Becker, "that was just chapter one." I got up and moved toward Becker. I blocked his jab, caught his right on my elbow, and punched a short straight right to his nose. Becker stepped back. We both had bloody noses. I rushed him. We were both swinging blindly. I caught some good shots. He hit me with another good right to the belly. I doubled over but came up with an uppercut. It landed. It was a beautiful shot, a lucky shot. Becker lurched backwards and fell against the dresser. The back of his head hit the mirror. The mirror shattered. He was stunned. I had him. I grabbed him by the shirt front and hit him with a hard right behind his left ear. He dropped on the rug, and knelt there on all fours. I walked over and unsteadily poured myself a drink. "Becker," I told him, "I kick ass around here about twice a week. You just showed up on the wrong day." I emptied my glass. Becker got up. He stood a while looking at me. Then he came forward. "Becker," I said, "listen . . ." He started a right lead, pulled it back and slammed a left to my mouth. We started in again. There wasn't much defense. It was just punch, punch, punch. He pushed me over a chair and the chair flattened. I got up, caught him coming in. He stumbled backwards and I landed another right. He crashed backwards into the wall and the whole room shook. He bounced off and landed a right high on my forehead and I saw lights: green, yellow, red . . . Then he landed a left to the ribs and a right to the face. I swung and missed. God damn, I thought, doesn't anybody hear all this noise? Why don't they come and stop it? Why don't they call the police? Becker rushed me again. I missed a roundhouse right and then that was it for me . . . When I regained consciousness it was dark, it was night. I was under the bed, just my head was sticking out. I must have crawled under there. I was a coward. I had puked all over myself. I crawled out from under the bed. I looked at the smashed dresser mirror and the chair. The table was upside down. I walked over and tried to set it upright. It fell over. Two of the legs wouldn't hold. I tried to fix them as best I could. I set the table up. It stood a moment, then fell over again. The rug was wet with wine and puke. I found a wine bottle lying on its side. There was a bit left. I drank that down and then looked around for more. There was nothing. There was nothing to drink. I put the chain on the door. I found a cigarette, lit it and stood in the window, staring down at Temple Street. It was a nice night out. Then there was a knock on the door. "Mr. Chinaski?" It was Mrs. Kansas. She wasn't alone. I heard other voices whispering. She was with her little dark friends. "Mr. Chinaski?" "Yes?" "I want to come into your room." "What for?" "I want to change the sheets." "I'm sick now. I can't let you in." "I just want to change the sheets. I'll be just a few minutes." "No, I can't let you in. Come in the morning." I heard them whispering. Then I heard them walking down the hall. I went over and sat on the bed. I needed a drink, bad. It was a Saturday night, the whole town was drunk. Maybe I could sneak out? I walked to the door and opened it a crack, leaving the chain on, and I peeked out. At the top of the stairway there was a Filipino, one of Mrs. Kansas' friends. He had a hammer in his hand. He was down on his knees. He looked up at me, grinned, and then pounded a nail into the rug. He was pretending to fix the rug. I closed the door. I really needed a drink. I paced the floor. Why could everybody in the world have a drink but me? How long was I going to have to stay in that god- damned room? I opened the door again. It was the same. He looked up at me, grinned, then hammered another nail into the floor. I closed the door. I got out my suitcase and began throwing my few clothes in there. I still had quite a bit of money I had won gambling but I knew that I could never pay for the damages to that room. Nor did I want to. It really hadn't been my fault. They should have stopped the fight. And Becker had broken the mirror . . . I was packed. I had the suitcase in one hand and my portable typewriter in its case in the other. I stood in front of the door for some time. I looked out again. He was still there. I slipped the chain off the door. Then I pulled the door open and burst out. I ran toward the stairway. "HEY! Where you go?" the little guy asked. He was still down on one knee. He started to raise his hammer. I swung the portable typewriter hard against the side of his head. It made a horrible sound. I was down the steps and through the lobby and out the door. Maybe I had killed the guy. I started running down Temple Street. Then I saw a cab. He was empty. I leaped in. "Bunker Hill," I said, "fast!" 56 I saw a vacancy sign in the window in front of a rooming-house, had the cabby pull up. I paid him and walked up on the front porch, rang the bell. I had one black eye from the fight, another cut eye, a swollen nose, and my lips were puffed. My left ear was bright red and every time I touched it, an electric shock ran through my body. An old man came to the door. He was in his undershirt and it looked like he had spilled chili and beans across the front of it. His hair was grey and uncombed, he needed a shave and he was puffing on a wet cigarette that stank. "You the landlord?" I asked. "Yep." "I need a room." "You workin'?" "I'm a writer." "You don't look like a writer." "What do they look like?" He didn't answer. Then he said, "$2.50 a week." "Can I see it?" He belched, then said, "Foller me . . ." We walked down a long hall. There was no hall rug. The boards creaked and sank as we walked on them. I heard a man's voice from one of the rooms. "Suck me, you piece of shit!" "Three dollars," I heard a woman's voice. "Three dollars? I'll give you a bloody asshole!" He slapped her hard, she screamed. We walked on. "The place is in back," the guy said, "but you are allowed to use the house bathroom." There was a shack in back with four doors. He walked up to #3 and opened it. We walked in. There was a cot, a blanket, a small dresser and a little stand. On the stand was a hotplate. "You got a hotplate here," he said. "That's nice." "$2.50 in advance." I paid him. "I'll give you your receipt in the morning." "Fine." "What's your name?" "Chinaski." "I'm Connors." He slipped a key off his key ring and gave it to me. "We run a nice quiet place here. I want to keep it that way." "Sure." I closed the door behind him. There was a single light overhead, unshaded. Actually the place was fairly clean. Not bad. I got up, went outside and locked the door behind me, walked through the back yard to an alley. I shouldn't have given that guy my real name, I thought. I might have killed my little dark friend over on Temple Street. There was a long wooden stairway which went down the side of a cliff and led to the street below. Quite romantic. I walked along until I saw a liquor store. I was going to get my drink. I bought two bottles of wine and I felt hungry too so I purchased a large bag of potato chips. Back at my place, I undressed, climbed onto my cot, leaned against the wall, lit a cigarette and poured a wine. I felt good. It was quiet back there. I couldn't hear anybody in any of the other rooms in my shack. I had to take a piss, so I put on my shorts, went around the back of the shack and let go. From up there I could see the lights of the city. Los Angeles was a good place, there were many poor people, it would be easy to get lost among them. I went back inside, climbed back on the cot. As long as a man had wine and cigarettes he could make it. I finished off my glass and poured another. Maybe I could live by my wits. The eight-hour day was impossible, yet almost everybody submitted to it. And the war, everybody was talking about the war in Europe. I wasn't interested in world history, only my own. What crap. Your parents controlled your growing-up period, they pissed all over you. Then when you got ready to go out on your own, the others wanted to stick you into a uniform so you could get your ass shot off. The wine tasted great. I had another. The war. Here I was a virgin. Could you imagine getting your ass blown off for the sake of history before you even knew what a woman was? Or owned an automobile? What would I be protecting? Somebody else. Somebody else who didn't give a shit about me. Dying in a war never stopped wars from happening. I could make it. I could win drinking contests, I could gamble. Maybe I could pull a few holdups. I didn't ask much, just to be left alone. I finished the first bottle of wine and started in on the second. Halfway through the second bottle, I stopped, stretched out. My first night in my new place. It was all right. I slept. I was awakened by the sound of a key in the door. Then the door pushed open. I sat up on the cot. A man started to step in. "GET THE FUCK OUT OF HERE!" I screamed. He left fast. I heard him running off. I got up and slammed the door. People did that. They rented a place, stopped paying rent and kept the key, sneaking back to sleep there if it was vacant or robbing the place if the occupant was out. Well, he wouldn't be back. He knew if he tried it again that I'd bust his sack. I went back to my cot and had another drink. I was a little nervous. I was going to have to pick up a knife. I finished my drink, poured another, drank that and went back to sleep. 57 After English class one day Mrs. Curtis asked me to stay. She had great legs and a lisp and there was something about the legs and the lisp together that heated me up. She was about 32, had culture and style, but like everybody else, she was a goddamned liberal and that didn't take much originality or fight, it was just more Franky Roosevelt worship. I liked Franky because of his programs for the poor during the Depression. He had style too. I didn't think he really gave a damn about the poor but he was a great actor, great voice, and he had a great speech writer. But he wanted us in the war. It would put him into the history books. War presidents got more power and, later, more pages. Mrs. Curtis was just a chip off old Franky only she had much better legs. Poor Franky didn't have any legs but he had a wonderful brain. In some other country he would have made a powerful dictator. When the last student left I walked up to Mrs. Curtis' desk. She smiled up at me. I had watched her legs for many hours and she knew it. She knew what I wanted, that she had nothing to teach me. She had only said one thing which I remembered. It wasn't her own idea, obviously, but I liked it: "You can't overestimate the stupidity of the general public." "Mr. Chinaski," she looked up at me, "we have certain students in this class who think they are very smart." "Yeh?" "Mr. Felton is our smartest student." "O.K." "What is it that troubles you?" "What?" "There's something . . . troubling you." "Maybe." "This is your last semester, isn't it?" "How did you know?" I'd been giving those legs a goodbye look. I'd decided the campus was just a place to hide. There were some campus freaks who stayed on forever. The whole college scene was soft. They never told you what to expect out there in the real world. They just crammed you with theory and never told you how hard the pavements were. A college education could destroy an individual for life. Books could make you soft. When you put them down, and really went out there, then you needed to know what they never told you. I had decided to quit after that semester, hang around Stinky and the gang, maybe meet somebody who had guts enough to hold up a liquor store or better yet, a bank. "I knew you were going to quit," she said softly. '"Begin' is a better word." "There's going to be a war. Did you read 'Sailor Off The Bremen'?" "That New Yorker stuff doesn't work for me." "You've got to read things like that if you want to understand what is happening today." "I don't think so." "You just rebel against everything. How are you going to survive?" "I don't know. I'm already tired." Mrs. Curtis looked down at her desk for a long time. Then she looked up at me. "We're going to get drawn into the war, one way or the other. Are you going to go?" "That doesn't matter. I might, I might not." "You'd make a good sailor." I smiled, thought about being a sailor, then discarded that idea. "If you stay another term," she said, "you can have anything you want." She looked up at me and I knew exactly what she meant and she knew that I knew exactly what she meant. "No," I said, "I'm leaving." I walked toward the door. I stopped there, turned, gave her a little nod goodbye, a slight and quick goodbye. Outside I walked along under the campus trees. Everywhere, it seemed, there was a boy and a girl together. Mrs. Curtis was sitting alone at her desk as I walked alone. What a great triumph it would have been. Kissing that lisp, working those fine legs open, as Hitler swallowed up Europe and peered toward London. After a while I walked over toward the gym. I was going to clean out my locker. No more exercising for me. People always talked about the good clean smell of fresh sweat. They had to make excuses for it. They never talked about the good clean smell of fresh shit. There was nothing really as glorious as a good beer shit -- 1 mean after drinking twenty or twenty-five beers the night before. The odor of a beer shit like that spread all around and stayed for a good hour-and-a-half. It made you realize that you were really alive. I found the locker, opened it and dumped my gym suit and shoes into the trash. Also two empty wine bottles. Good luck to the next one who got my locker. Maybe he'd end up mayor of Boise, Idaho. I threw the combo lock into the trash too. I'd never liked that combination: 1,2, 1, 1,2. Not very mental. The address of my parents' house had been 2122. Everything was minimal. In the R.O.T.C. it had been 1, 2, 3,4; 1, 2, 3, 4. Maybe some day I'd move up to 5. I walked out of the gym and took a shortcut through the playing field. There was a game of touch football going on, a pick-up game. I cut to one side to avoid it. Then I heard Baldy: "Hey, Hank!" I looked up and he was sitting in the stands with Monty Ballard. There wasn't much to Ballard. The nice thing about him was that he never talked unless you asked him a question. I never asked him any questions. He just looked at life out from underneath his dirty yellow hair and yearned to be a biologist. I waved to them and kept walking. "Come on up here. Hank!" Baldy yelled. "It's important." I walked over. "What is it?" "Sit down and watch that stocky guy in the gym suit." I sat down. There was only one guy in a gym suit. He had on track shoes with spikes. He was short but wide, very wide. He had amazing biceps, shoulders, a thick neck, heavy short legs. His hair was black; the front of his face almost flat; small mouth, not much nose, and the eyes, the eyes were there somewhere. "Hey, I heard about this guy," I said. "Watch him," said Baldy. There were four guys on each team. The ball was snapped. The quarterback faded to pass. King Kong, Jr. was on defense. He played about halfway back. One of the guys on the offensive team ran deep, the other ran short. The center blocked. King Kong, Jr. lowered his shoulders and sped toward the guy playing short. He smashed into him, burying a shoulder into his side and gut and dumped him hard. Then he turned and trotted away. The pass was completed to the deep man for a TD. "You see?" said Baldy. "King Kong . . ." "King Kong isn't playing football at all. He just hits some guy as hard as he can, play after play." "You can't hit a pass receiver before he catches the ball," I said. "It's against the rules." "Who's going to tell him?" Baldy asked. "You going to tell him?" I asked Ballard. "No," said Ballard. King Kong's team took the kickoff. Now he could block legally. He came down and savaged the littlest guy on the field. He knocked the guy completely over, his head went between his legs as he flipped. The little guy was slow getting up. "That King Kong is a subnormal," I said. "How did he ever pass his entrance exam?" "They don't have them here." King Kong's team lined up. Joe Stapen was the best guy on the other team. He wanted to be a shrink. He was tall, six foot two, lean, and he had guts. Joe Stapen and King Kong charged each other. Stapen did pretty good. He didn't get dumped. The next play they charged each other again. This time Joe bounced off and gave a little ground. "Shit," said Baldy, "Joe's giving up." The next time Kong hit Joe even harder, spinning him around, then running him 5 or 6 yards back up the field, his shoulder buried in Joe's back. "This is really disgusting! That guy's nothing but a fucking sadist!" I said. "Is he a sadist?" Baldy asked Ballard. "He's a fucking sadist," said Ballard. The next play Kong shifted back to the smallest guy. He just ran over him and piled on top of him, dropping him hard. The little guy didn't move for a while. Then he sat up and held his head. It looked like he was finished. I stood up. "Well, here I go," I said. "Get that son-of-a-bitch!" said Baldy. "Sure," I said. I walked down to the field. "Hey, fellas. Need a player?" The little guy stood up, started to walk off the field. He stopped as he reached me. "Don't go in there. All that guy wants is to kill somebody." "It's just touch football," I said. It was our ball. I got into the huddle with Joe Stapen and the other two survivors. "What's the game plan?" I asked. "Just to stay the fuck alive," said Joe Stapen. "What's the score?" "I think they're winning," said Lenny Hill, the center. We broke out of the huddle. Joe Stapen stood back and waited for the ball. I stood looking at Kong. I'd never seen him around campus. He probably hung around the men's crapper in the gym. He looked like a shit-sniffer. He also looked like a fetus-eater. "Time!" I called. Lenny Hill straightened up over the ball. I looked at Kong. "My name's Hank. Hank Chinaski. Journalism." Kong didn't answer. He just stared at me. He had dead white skin. There was no glitter or life in his eyes. "What's your name?" I asked him. He just kept staring. "What's the matter? Got some placenta caught in your teeth?" Kong slowly raised his right arm. Then he straightened it out and pointed a finger at me. Then he lowered his arm. "Well, suck my weenie," I said, "what's that mean?" "Come on, let's play ball," one of Kong's mates said. Lenny bent over the ball and snapped it. Kong came at me. I couldn't seem to focus on him. I saw the grandstand and some trees and part of the Chemistry Building shake as he crashed into me. He knocked me over backwards and then circled around me, flapping his arms like wings. I got up, feeling dizzy. First Becker K.O.'s me, then this sadistic ape. He smelled; he stank; a real evil son-of- a-bitch. Stapen had thrown an incomplete pass. We huddled. "I got an idea," I said. "What's that?" asked Joe. "I'll throw the ball. You block." "Let's leave it the way it is," said Joe. We broke out of the huddle. Lenny bent over the ball, snapped it back to Stapen. Kong came at me. I lowered a shoulder and rushed at him. He had too much strength. I bounced off him, straightened up, and as I did Kong came again, knifing his shoulder into my belly. I fell. I leaped up right away but I didn't feel like getting up. I was having breathing problems. Stapen had thrown a short complete pass. Third down. No huddle. When the ball snapped Kong and I ran at each other. At the last moment I left my feet and hurled myself at him. The weight of my body hit his neck and his head, knocking him off balance. As he fell I kicked him as hard as I could and caught him right on the chin. We were both on the ground. I got up first. As Kong rose there was a red blotch on the side of his face and blood at the corner of his mouth. We trotted back to our positions. Stapen had thrown an incomplete pass. Fourth down. Stapen dropped back to punt. Kong dropped back to protect his safety man. The safety man caught the punt and they came pounding up the field, Kong leading