it, ââand you can deal with that or you can kill âem, skin âem and eat âem, but then youâll have bad snake karma your whole life and maybe into the next one, and do you really want that?â
From the main house, the sounds of laughter, conversation, music, all blended in a murmur that was like some sort of undercurrent, as if that was where the real life was, the only life, and this out here, this nature and this crepitating dark, was for losersâlosers and snakes. Lydia was in there, and Merry, Verbie and the rest of them. Maybe heâd get up and go inside, just for the human warmth and companionship, because thatâs what Drop City was all about, companionship, a game of cards maybe, or Monopolyâbut then the image of Alfredo clawed its way into the forefront of his brain, and he thought maybe he wouldnât.
Alfredo was one of the founding members of the commune, one of Norm Senderâs inner circle, one of those sour-faced ascetic types, twenty-eight, twenty-nine, Rebaâs old man. He was always going on about natural childbirth and how Reba had cooked up the afterbirth and everybody shared a piece of it and how Che and Sunshine had been born outside under the moon and the stars, but he was an uptight, tight-assed jerk nonetheless, and two days ago Ronnie had gotten into it with him over some very pointed criticism about volunteering to do wash-up or haul trash or dig a new septic field because all these people were clogging up the communeâs only two working toilets until they were rivers of shit, and he wouldnât mind, would he? Hell, yeah. He minded. He didnât come all the way out here to California to dig sewers. Jesus Fucking Christ.
That was what he was thinking, sitting there on the warm snake-loving pavement with the night festering around him, just a little shaky, but pissed off too, royally pissed off, when Lester and one of the other spade catsâFranklin, his name was Franklinâappeared out of nowhere with a jug of wine. âHey, brother,â Lester breathed,easing himself down beside him, ââwhat you doing out here, swimming?â
âI donât know. Yeah. I guess. I was swimming beforeâearlier, you know?â The words seemed to be stuck in his mouth, like the crust at the bottom of a pan. âKind of cold now, I guess. But whatâs happening with you?â
Franklin was just standing there, the jug of wineâCribari redâdangling from his fingertips like a big glass bomb. Lester grinned. âSame old shit,â he said. âWeâre having a party in the back house, brother, and youâre welcome to join usâweâd be real pleased about that, in fact; I would, at leastâhow about you, Franklin?â
Franklin said heâd be pleased too.
âBy the way,â Lester said, and they were already gathering themselves up, âyou wouldnât happen to have a couple of hits of that mescaline I heard you got left, would you?â
Well, he did. And two minutes later he was in the back house and there were six or seven cats sitting around listening to Marvin Gaye out of a battery-powered portable stereo with a blown bass, thump, thump, blat, thump, thump, blat. Sky Dog was there, cradling his guitar, somebody had lit a couple of scented candles because there was no electricity in the back house, and there was a new girl thereâa chickâand she couldnât have been more than fourteen or fifteen. A runaway. What was her name? Sally. Where was she from? Santa Clara. And what was her father like? He was a son of a bitch. They probably got twenty a week just like her, and none of them stayed more than a night or two, as if this whole thingâNorm Sender, Alfredo, Reba, Drop City itselfâwas no more than a kind of extended slumber party.
Ronnie introduced himself as Pan, gave her a little brotherly and sisterly squeeze, and then settled in on the floor