Ham On Rye - Charles Bukowski [25]
“You baptized a dog?”
I was finished. A Mortal Sin. No use going on. I got up to leave. I didn’t know if the voice recommended my saying some Hail Marys or if the voice didn’t say anything at all. I pulled the curtain back and there was Frank waiting. We walked out of the church and were back on the street.
“I feel cleansed,” said Frank, “don’t you?”
“No.”
I never went to confession again. It was worse than ten o’clock mass.
18
Frank liked airplanes. He lent me all his pulp magazines about World War I. The best was Flying Aces. The dog-fights were great, the Spads and the Fokkers mixing it. I read all the stories. I didn’t like the way the Germans always lost but outside of that it was great.
I liked going over to Frank’s place to borrow and return the magazines. His mother wore high heels and had great legs. She sat in a chair with her legs crossed and her skirt pulled high. And Frank’s father sat in another chair. His mother and father were always drinking. His father had been a flyer in World War I and had crashed. He had a wire running down inside one of his arms instead of a bone. He got a pension. But he was all right. When we came in he always talked to us.
“How are you doing, boys? How’s it going?”
Then we found out about the air show. It was going to be a big one. Frank got hold of a map and we decided to get there by hitch-hiking. I thought we’d probably never make it to the air show but Frank said we would. His father gave us the money.
We went down to the boulevard with our map and we got a ride right away. It was an old guy and his lips were very wet, he kept licking his lips with his tongue and he had on an old checkered shirt which he had buttoned to the throat. He wasn’t wearing a necktie. He had strange eyebrows which curled down into his eyes.
“My name’s Daniel,” he said.
Frank said, “This is Henry. And I’m Frank.”
Daniel drove along. Then he took out a Lucky Strike and lit it.
“You boys live at home?”
“Yes,” said Frank.
“Yes,” I said.
Daniel’s cigarette was already wet from his mouth. He stopped the car at a signal.
“I was at the beach yesterday and they caught a couple of guys under the pier. The cops caught them and threw them in jail. One guy was sucking the other guy off. Now what business is that of the cops? It made me mad.”
The signal changed and Daniel pulled away.
“Don’t you guys think that was stupid? The cops stopping those guys from sucking-off?”
We didn’t answer.
“Well,” said Daniel, “don’t you think a couple of guys have a right to a good blow job?”
“I guess so,” said Frank.
“Yeah,” I said.
“Where are you boys going?” asked Daniel.
“The air show,” said Frank.
“Ah, the air show! I like air shows! I’ll tell you what, you boys let me go with you and I’ll drive you all the way there.”
We didn’t answer.
“Well, how about it?”
“All right,” said Frank.
Frank’s father had given us admission and transportation money, but we had decided to save the transportation money by hitch-hiking.
“Maybe you boys would rather go swimming,” said Daniel.
“No,” said Frank, “we want to see the air show.”
“Swimming’s more fun. We can race each other. I know a place where we can be alone. I’d never go under the pier.”
“We want to go to the air show,” said Frank.
“All right,” said Daniel, “we’ll go to the air show.”
When we got to the air show parking lot we got out of the car and while Daniel was locking it Frank said, “RUN!”
We ran toward the admission gate and Daniel saw us running away.
“HEY, YOU LITTLE PERVERTS! COME BACK HERE! COME BACK!”
We kept running.
“Christ,” said Frank, “that son-of-a-bitch is crazy!”
We were almost at the admission gate.
“I’LL GET YOU BOYS!”
We paid and ran inside. The show hadn’t started yet but a large crowd was already there.
“Let’s hide under the grandstand so he can’t find us,” said Frank.
The grandstand was built of temporary planks for the people to sit on. We went underneath. We saw two guys standing under the center of the grandstand and looking up. They were about 13 or 14 years old, about two or three years