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It was taking place in the heart of the choking gra.s.s. What brought death and disaster to the country's 3rd city offered hope and bliss to followers of Brother Paul. 'Sell all you have,' advised the radiopreacher, 'fly to your Savior who is gathering His true disciples at this moment in the very center of the gra.s.s. Do not fear, for He will sustain and comfort you in the thicket through which the unsaved cannot pa.s.s.' At last report countless followers had been forcibly restrained from self-immolation in the _Cynodon dactylon_, unnumbered others gone joyfully to their beatification. Not yet reported as joining his Savior: Brother Paul."
Under People: "Admitted to the Relief rolls of San Diego County this week were Adam d.i.n.kman & wife, whose front lawn (TIME Aug. 3) was the starting point of the plaguing gra.s.s. Said Mrs. d.i.n.kman, 'The government ought to pay....' Said Adam d.i.n.kman, '... it's a terrible thing....'"
I resolved to send the d.i.n.kmans some money as soon as I could possibly afford it. I made a note to this effect in a pocket memorandumbook, feeling the glow of worthy sacrifice, and then went out and got in my car. It was all right to digest facts and figures about the weed from the printed page, but it was necessary to see again its physical presence before writing anything for so critical an editor as W R Le ffacase.
I drove through the Second Street tunnel and out Beverly Boulevard.
There, several miles from the most advanced runners of the gra.s.s, the certainty of its coming lay like a smothering blanket upon the unnaturally silent district. There was no traffic on my side of the street and only a few lastminute straggling jalopies, loaded down with shameless bedding and bundles, coughed their way frantically eastward.
Those few shops still unaccountably open were bare of goods and the idle proprietors walked periodically to the front to scan the western sky to a.s.sure themselves the gra.s.s was not yet in sight. But most of the stores were closed, their windows broken, their signs already tarnished and decrepit with the age which seems to come so swiftly upon a defunct business. The sidewalks were littered with rubbish, diagonally flattened papers, broken boxes, odd shoes. Garbagecans, instead of standing decorously in alleys or shamefacedly along the curb, sprawled in lascivious abandon over the pavements, their contents strewn widely.
Dogs and cats, deserted by fond owners, snarled and fought over choicer tidbits. I had not realized how many people in the city kept pets until the time came to leave them behind.
At Vermont Avenue I came upon what I was sure was a new nucleus, a lawn green and tall set between others withered and yellow, but I did not even bother reporting this to the police for I knew that before long the main body would take it to its bosom. And now, looking westward, I could see the gra.s.s itself, a half mile away at Normandie. It rose high in the air, dwarfing the buildings in its path, blotting out the mountains behind, and giving the illusion of rus.h.i.+ng straight at me.
I turned the car north, not with the idea of further observation, but because standing still in the face of that towering palisade seemed somehow to invite immediate destruction. I drove slowly and thoughtfully and then at Melrose the gra.s.s came in sight again, creeping down from Los Feliz. I turned back toward the Civic Center. It would not be more than a couple of days at most, now, before even downtown was gone.
_26._ During my drive several walkers loaded with awkward bundles raised imploring thumbs for a ride, but knowing to what lengths desperation will drive people and not wis.h.i.+ng to be robbed of my car, I had pressed my foot down and driven on. But now as I went along Temple near Rampart a beautiful woman, incongruously--for it was in the middle of a hot October--dressed in a fur coat, and with each gloved hand grasping the handle of a suitcase, stepped in front of me and I had to jam on the brakes to avoid running over her.
The car stopped, radiator almost touching her, but she made no attempt to move. A small hat with a tiny fringe of veil concealed her eyes, but her sullen mouth looked furiously at me as rigidly clutching her luggage she barred my path. Fearing some trap, I turned off the ignition and un.o.btrusively slid the keys into a sidepocket before getting out and going to her.
"Excuse me, miss. Can I help you?"
She threw her head back and her eyes, brown and glistening, appraised me through heavily painted lashes. I stood there stiffly, uncomfortable under her gaze till I suddenly remembered my hat and lifted it with an awkward bow. This seemed to satisfy her, for still without speaking she nodded and thrust the two suitcases at me. Not knowing what else to do, I took them from her and she promptly, after smoothing her gloves, walked toward the pa.s.senger's side of the car.
"You want me to take you somewhere, miss?" I inquired quite superfluously.
She bent her head the merest fraction and then rested her fingers on the doorhandle, waiting for me to open it for her. I ran as fast as I could with the bags--they were beautifully matched expensive luggage--to put them in the turtle and then had to make myself still more ridiculous by running back for the forgotten key resting in the sidepocket. When I had finally stowed away the baggage and opened the door for her she got in with the barest of condescending nods for my efforts and sat staring ahead.
I drove very slowly, nipping off little glances of her profile as we moved along. Her cheeks were smooth as a chinadoll's, her nose the chiseled replica of some lovely antique marble, her mouth a living study of rounded lines; never had I been so close to such an alluring woman.
We reached the Civic Center and I automatically headed for the _Intelligencer_ building. But I could not bear to part company so quickly and so I turned left instead, out Macy Street.
Now we found ourselves caught in the traffic snailing eastward. In low gear I drove a block, then stopped and waited till a clear ten feet ahead permitted another painfully slow forward motion. Still my pa.s.senger had no word to say but kept staring ahead though she could see nothing before her except the trunkladen rearend of a tottery ford long past its majority.
"You," I stumbled, "I--that is, I mean wasnt there somewhere in particular you wanted to go?"
She nodded, still without looking at me, and for the first time spoke.
Her voice was deep and had the timbre of some old bronze bell. "Yuma,"
she said.
"Yuma, Arizona?" I asked stupidly.
Again she nodded faintly. In a panic I reckoned the contents of my wallet. About forty dollars, I thought--no, thirty. Would that take us to Yuma? Barely, perhaps, and I should have to wire the _Intelligencer_ for money to return. Besides, in the present condition of the roads the journey would be a matter of days and I knew she would accept nothing but the very best. How could I do it? Should I return to the _Intelligencer_ office and try to get an advance on next week's salary?
I had heard from more than one disgruntled reporter that it was an impossibility. Good heavens, I thought, I shall lose her.
Whatever happened I must take her as far as I could; I must not let her go before I was absolutely forced to. This resolution made, my first thought was to cut the time, for poking along in this packed ma.s.s I was burning gasoline without getting anywhere. Taking advantage of my knowledge of the sideroads, I turned off at the first chance and was able to resume a normal speed as I avoided towns and main highways.
Still she continued silent, until at length, pa.s.sing orangegroves heavy with coppery fruit, I ventured to speak myself. "My name is Albert Weener. Bert."
The right rear tire kicked up some dust as I nervously edged off the road. Somewhere overhead a plane ripped through the hot silk of the sky.
"Uh ... what ... uh ... won't you tell me yours?"
Still facing ahead, she replied, "It isnt necessary."
After a few more miles I ventured again. "You live--were living in Los Angeles?"
She shook her head impatiently.
Well, I thought, really...! Then: poor thing, she's probably terribly upset. Home and family lost perhaps. Money gone. Dest.i.tute. Going East, swallowing pride, make a new start with the help of unsympathetic relatives. She has only me to depend on--I must not fail her. Break the ice, whatever att.i.tude her natural pride dictates, offer your services.
"I'm on the _Daily Intelligencer_," I said. "I'm the man who first walked on top of the gra.s.s."
Ten miles later I inquired, "Wouldnt you be more comfortable with that heavy fur coat off? I can put it in the back with your luggage and it won't be crushed."
She shook her head more impatiently.
Suddenly I remembered the car radio installed a few days before. A little cheerful music calms the soul. I turned it on and got a band playing a brandnew hit, "Green as Gra.s.s."
"Oh, no. No noise."
Of course. How thoughtless of me. The very word "gra.s.s" reminded her of her tragic situation. I kicked myself for my tactlessness.
We skirted Riverside and joined the highway again at Beaumont where we were unavoidably packed into the slowmoving ma.s.s. "I'm sorry," I apologized, "but I can take a chance again at Banning and drive up into the mountains to get away from this."
An hour later I suggested stopping for something to eat. She shook her head. "But it's getting late," I said. "Pretty soon we shall have to think about stopping for the night."
She raised her left hand imperatively. "Drive all night."
This would certainly solve part of my financial problem, but I was hungry and unreasonably more irritated by her refusal of food than her unsociability. "I have to eat, even if you don't," I told her rudely.
"I'm going to stop at the next place I see." With the same left hand she made a gesture of resignation.
I pulled up before the roadside cafe. "Won't you change your mind and come in? At least for a cup of coffee?"
"No."
I went in angrily and ate. Who was she, to treat me like a hired chauffeur? A mere pickup, I raged, a stray woman found on a street. By G.o.d, she would have the courtesy at least to address me, her benefactor, civilly or else I'd abandon her here on the highway and return to Los Angeles. I finished my meal full of determination and strode back purposefully toward the car. She was still sitting rigid, staring through the winds.h.i.+eld. I got in.
"You know--" I began.
She did not hear me. I turned on the ignition, pressed the starterb.u.t.ton, and drove ahead.
Soddeneyed with lack of sleep and outraged at her taciturnity, I breakfasted alone on the soggiest wheatcakes and the muddiest coffee I have ever demeaned my stomach with. The absence of my customary morning paper added the final touch to my wretchedness. But one would have thought to look at my companion that she had been refreshed by a lengthy repose, had bathed at leisure, and eaten the most delicate of continental breakfasts. There was not a smudge on her suede gloves nor a speck upon her small hat and the mascara on her eyelashes might have been renewed but a moment before.
The road curved through vast hummocks of sand, which for no good reason reminded me of the gra.s.s in its early stages. Reminded, I wanted to know what the latest news was, how far the weed had progressed in the night.
Thoughtlessly, without remembering her interdiction, I turned the k.n.o.b.
"Kfkfkk," squeaked the radio.
"Please," she said, in anything but a pleading tone, and turned it off.