The Tokyo-Montana Express

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The Tokyo-Montana Express Page 16

by Richard Brautigan


  That kind of dawn began to occur halfway through his second year of nothing happening.

  By the time the third year was barely in progress he realized fully that nothing was happening. Then he started to think about it.

  He didn’t know if it was a good thing or a bad thing.

  That took another eleven months which brought him to the end of the third year of nothing happening. By that time he wondered if he really missed things happening or was he suffering from a simple case of nostalgia, another victim of the past.

  He decided to wait one more year to see how he felt.

  No reason to jump into anything, he thought. You don’t want to get into water over your head.

  My Tokyo Friend

  Groucho:

  Harpo and Chico said that after they died they’d send out a message if they could.

  George Jessel:

  Have you heard anything from them?

  Groucho:

  Not a goddamn word.

  My friend here in Tokyo has been Groucho Marx in his eighties. I brought with me from America a 586-page book about Groucho as an old man and I’ve been reading it whenever I want to have some company.

  The book is called Hello, I Must Be Going written by Charlotte Chandler who was a friend of his. She approaches Groucho from every angle. There are personal recollections of him plus conversations between him and people that he knew and liked; Woody Allen, George Jessel, Bill Cosby, Jack Nicholson, etc. There are also interviews with his living brothers Gummo and Zeppo.

  Harpo and Chico are of course… not a goddamn word.

  For six weeks I have had an old Groucho Marx for a friend. I am sorry that it has had to be a one-way friendship. I’ve read hundreds of anecdotes about him and laughed and been amazed by his wit and imagination.

  When not spending time with him mirrored by the book high above Tokyo in my little hotel room, I think about him wherever I go. I’ll be on a train staring out the window and instead of seeing Tokyo, I’ll be looking at a photograph of Groucho Marx in his eighties.

  It looks like Tokyo to everybody else but it’s Groucho to me.

  Halfway through dinner by myself Groucho will sit down beside me and say something funny and I will smile.

  Or I’ll be talking with some very serious Japanese intellectuals and Groucho will sneak up behind us as only Groucho can sneak up. And he will say something like, “Either this man is dead or my watch has stopped.” I’II laugh and the Japanese people will wonder why I am laughing. They will look quizzically at me and I will apologize by saying, “Excuse me, I just thought about something funny.” They will try to understand this American of uneven strangeness but they really won’t be able to.

  Having made me laugh Groucho silently leaves, disappears into the shadows of the room, the shadows that go on forever, taking you away into death.

  Sayonara, Groucho.

  Chicken Fable

  I almost think of them as people. Yesterday it was windy here in Montana and they were Italians because I fed them some spaghetti. They did a comedy imitation of a banquet in Rome, celebrating some kind of obscure fraternal organization anniversary. The 51st anniversary of the death of the mother of the founding father of The Sons of Italian Eyeglass, Train and Bicycle Lovers.

  As the chickens ate spaghetti for the very first time, their brown feathery bodies were wind-driven like grass and a part of the early morning sun patterns.

  The chickens were all talking about the spaghetti.

  Maybe that is why I think of them as sort of people, because they never stop talking. They always have something to say.

  While seventeen chickens were dining in Rome, the eighteenth chicken was in the chicken house laying an egg. She had her head turned sideways toward the spaghetti benefactor. The wind glistened off one bright eye, staring at me.

  Today the chickens were Orientals because I fed them some leftover rice. They very carefully very carefully examined first bites of rice, using their beaks as chopsticks and soon were enjoying a good time in China.

  Moral: It is difficult to go any place in this world without being close to the grave of a chicken.

  The Fence

  It is just another block-sized vacant lot filled with the oblivion of urban memories. There used to be houses there filled with people in disappeared-ago ages. The houses are gone and the people are gone. They all, more or less, wore out at the same time. Now the vacant lot waits for new houses and new people to fill them.

  In another hundred years or so, it will be a vacant lot again.

  The lot is guarded by a Cyclone fence as if anyone wanted to steal the emptiness held prisoner inside. The dry yellow grass of summer passing covers the lot which has rolling contours to it like small hills. I think a series of partially filled in basements have created the illusion of hills. It is the miniature of a larger landscape.

  An old man with a cane stares intently or maybe it’s only abstractly through the fence at the vacant lot. I wonder what he sees in there that demands so much of his remaining attention. Perhaps, he lived there when houses still bloomed. Somehow, for no reason at all, I doubt that, but often I’m wrong these days. I’ve been so wrong recently that because I don’t think the old man lived there ensures the fact that he did.

  Staring at the vacant lot causes him to almost miss his bus. I sit down next to him. I look at the back of his hands that hold the cane between the isolation of his thin, worn-out legs. His hands are covered with death freckles that are so thick they almost look like an aerial photograph of some Mayan ruins abandoned in the jungle.

  The old man opens his mouth to yawn. He still has his own teeth. God, they’re old. They look as if a slice of fresh white bread would be an almost insurmountable challenge.

  Then I smile to myself.

  They put a six-foot-high fence around a vacant lot to keep this old man out. What did they think he was going to do? Climb over that fence and rebuild the past, put all the houses and the people back just the way they were?

  Subscribers to the Sun

  It’s morning and soon the Teletype will start and this hotel in Tokyo will he connected like a bridge directly with the events of the world as they happen.

  Now the teletype is still asleep, getting its last winks in before it’s awakened to bring us what historians centuries from now will remember as July 17, 1978.

  As the machine sleeps soundly here in the lobby of the Keio Plaza Hotel, history waits just a few moments away to be recorded by the machine which will be awakened by an alarm clock that instead of ringing, it will wake the machine up by printing the word TESTING followed by six apostrophes ’’’’’’ and then the letters:

  M

  MN

  MNN

  That is a different way to be awakened, followed by more letters and then the almost religious chant of the wire service machine:

  THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG.

  THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG.

  The first test pattern ends with:

  END HOW RCVD?’’’’’’

  The alarm continues to wake up the machine by typing out the first message five times for a total of ten wake-up foxes jumping over ten wake-up lazy dogs and five END HOW RCVD?’’’’’’

  Then the machine is totally awake, ready for the day and its first message comes out, connecting it with the third planet from the sun, Earth:

  :ATTENTION SUBSCRIBERS:

  GOOD MORNING

  Table of Contents

  The Overland Journey of Joseph Francl and the Eternal Sleep of His Wife Antonia in Crete, Nebraska

  All the People That I Didn’t Meet and the Places That I Didn’t Go

  The Japanese Squid Fishermen Are Asleep Now

  The Smallest Snowstorm on Record

  A San Francisco Snake Story

  Football

  Ice Age Cab Company

  Shrine of Carp

  Meat

  Umbrellas

  A Death
in Canada

  Autumn Trout Gathering

  Harmonica High

  Winter Vacation

  The Purpose

  The Irrevocable Sadness of Her Thank You

  No Hunting Without Permission

  OPEN

  Spiders Are in the House

  Very Good Dead Friends

  What Are You Going to Do with 390 Photographs of Christmas Trees?

  The Pacific Ocean

  Another Texas Ghost Story

  There Is No Dignity, Only the Windswept Plains of Ankona

  The Tomb of the Unknown Friend

  Cooking Spaghetti Dinner in japan

  The Beacon

  Blue Sky

  An Eye for Good Produce

  Gone Before We Open Our Eyes

  Harem

  Montana Love

  Cat Cantaloupe

  Al’s Rose Harbor

  Farewell to the First Grade and Hello to the National Enquirer

  The Wolf Is Dead

  The Closest I Have Been to the Sea Since Evolution

  Homage to Groucho Marx

  A Feeling of Helplessness

  One Arm Burning in Tokyo

  Rubber Bands

  Werewolf Raspberries

  Toothbrush Ghost Story

  Skylab at the Graves of Abbott and Costello

  The Bed Salesman

  Tire Chain Bridge

  White

  Montana Traffic Spell

  Hangover as Folk Art

  Marching in the Opposite Direction of a Pizza

  Dogs on the Roof

  California Mailman

  The Cobweb Toy

  Her Last Known Boyfriend a Canadian Airman

  The Butcher

  To the Yotsuya Station

  A Safe journey Like This River

  Parking Place Lost

  Studio 54

  Crows Eating a Truck Tire in the Dead of Winter

  Something Cooking

  Cold Kingdom Enterprise

  The Beautiful Oranges of Osaka

  Drowned Japanese Boy

  The Great Golden Telescope

  The Man Who Shot Jesse James

  Dancing Feet

  Seventeen Dead Cats

  Light on at the Tastee-Freez

  The Eyes of Japan

  The Magic of Peaches

  Times Square in Montana

  Wind in the Ground

  Tokyo Snow Story

  The Last of My Armstrong Spring Creek Mosquito Bites

  Clouds over Egypt

  Fantasy Ownership

  The Mill Creek Penguins

  A Reason for Living

  1953 Chevrolet

  My Fair Tokyo Lady

  The Menu / 1965

  The Convention

  In Pursuit of the Impossible Dream

  The Old Testament Book of the Telephone Company

  Breakfast in Beirut

  Another Montana School Gone to the Milky Way

  Four People in Their Eighties

  My Fault

  Florida

  Ghosts

  A Study in Thyme and Funeral Parlors

  Rabbits

  A Different Way of Looking at President Kennedy’s Assassination

  Portrait of a Marriage

  Self-Portrait as an Old Man

  Beer Story

  Homage to Rudi Gernreich / 1965

  Turkey and Dry Breakfast Cereal Sonata

  Old Man Working the Rain

  The Remarkable Dining Cars of the Northern Pacific Railroad

  Railroading in Tokyo

  Two Montana Humidifiers

  Contents for Good Luck

  Tod

  Five Ice-Cream Cones Running in Tokyo

  The Good Work of Chickens

  Castle of the Snow Bride

  The Instant Ghost Town

  The Mouse

  House of Carpets

  The 1977 Television Season

  The Window

  Painstaking Popcorn Label

  Imaginary Beginning to Japan

  Leaves

  Waking Up Again

  Poetry Will Come To Montana on March 24th

  Sunday

  Japanese Love Affair

  Tap Dancing Chickadee Slaves

  Pleasures of the Swamp

  Sky Blue Pants

  Kyoto, Montana

  A Different or the Same Drummer

  When 3 Made Sense for the First Time

  A One-Frame Movie about a Man Living in the 1970s

  My Tokyo Friend

  Chicken Fable

  The Fence

  Subscribers to the Sun

 

 

 


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