March 7 1991 – Palu – Journal


Listening to the BBC this morning I heard General Schwartzkopf say, “Saddam promised us the mother of all battles. What he got was the mother of all defeats.”

The Muslims called The Prayer woke me this morning. The roosters helped open my eyes. The overhead fan called the room slightly and I pulled back to the mosquito netting to go to the window. Palu was still asleep. There seems to be no sense of urgency in this town, the largest in the North. My bus to Lake Poso leaves midday

Later

The bus left an hour late. Basically on time. I had a window seat. The scenery was thick jungle. The Villages small. The people few. The passengers stood i took up enough room for two people. I smoke kretek cigarettes to help me staring out the window. This morning I cashed to Travelers checks there’s no place to cash and further up and I’m crossing over the mountains across the lake and then down to the to the Eastern Plains of Sulawezi before heading up to Tana Torajah land. It’s a long ride, but I have, a thriller about LA lowlifes, The Cross Killer by Marcel Montecino.

There are no English newspapers in this part of the world or even the Jakarta Post. The BBC is my only source of information. I love hearing the Chimes of Big Ben bang out the hour “This is the BBC Greenwich Mean Time.” it certainly is comforting to hear that this far away from everything.

The Saddam regime is showing cracks in the Shiite country in the south. Insurgents took advantage of the route in Kuwait. Saddam has gained Nothing by that invasion and even less but not agreeing to terms.. This defeat is good for the Iranians and Syrians, who can now focus on National problems rather than the threat from Saddam. Saddam’s first son supposedly was killed. Whatever this war will prove, there was no Vietnam. There’s no Hanoi Jane no MIAs, no Mayday demos, there’s a plane shoot him up in the Gulf moving that air powers isn’t everything, but no air power is nothing

I’m about halfway through writing THE BEST IS YET to COME. I’ll stay in Rantepao to finish the screenplay and then head down to udon for Don to catch a flight to Bali and meet Corinne coming in from Paris.

End Of Summer – Truro – 2024

Sunrise over the Coast Guard Beach
East on Truro
The dawn bouncing off the Atlantic
To fill the morning sky
O’er Cape Cod Bay___
A couple stand on the porch.
The last hours of vacation
For AP and his loving wife and daughter___
The Audi packed
With what is theirs
Leaving behind nothing
And leaving with memories
Of the past present and dreams of future
Vacations
On Knowles Heights Road___
The salt air, the bluff, the stairs to the beach, laughter, fishing___
Bass on the grill,
Steamers on the boil,
Wine
In vino
Felix
Friends next door
AP guitar in hand
His wife
A gather of wild flowers in her arms
Paradise
The Cape___
The Nauset’s name
Meeshan___
To go today
Not north to P-town
East on Route 6
Bourne Bridge bound
Across the Cape Cod Canal
Back home to Brooklyn
Schadenfreude
But Happy
To know
Next August
Again
On Knowles Heights Road___
Truro___

Bobby B BADD

Gather round my friends
To hear a tale.
About a young man__
No one knew so well.
A drifter dropping off a southbound train.
Happy to be anywhere
But Laredo___
Bobby B BADD
A beat-up black suit on a scarecrow body.
A hundred and fifty-four pounds soaking wet
He bent over to a trickling hose
And slicked back crow black hair
The drifter stretched his bones
A smile
No pain
A miracle___
Across the tracks
The Neon Bar gleamed in the Texas sun.
He strode across the steel rails.
Two things on his mind.
One of them a couple of Lone Star beers___
The door of the Neon Bar swung inward.
The few morning drinkers turned to the silhouette
In the doorway.
Strangers rare this far from the Interstate
Bobby B BADD slapped a twenty on the zinc bar___
“Drinks for all my friends.”
“You got friends here?”
Bobby pulled open his jacket.
“No gun, no knives, only a thirst to wash off the taste of train diesel.
And,
Darling four quarters, please.”

The bartender liked strangers too.
Sheila liked being called Darling even better___
The Neon Bar had a real jukebox.
Real 45s
Scratchy too
Dolly Parton JOLEEN
Sly’s EVERYONE IS A STAR
Merle’s MAMA TRIED
The Stones’ RUBY TUESDAY___
And like that the town was his
Every women in town knew his name
Every man laughed at his jokes
They loved his tales of freedom.
Travels from coast to coast,
As he rode the wind___
Bobby shot pool like Minnesota Fats
But never gambled a game.
Bobby BeBadd hated trouble
But man, that drifter could dance___
Every teenage boys wanted to be like Bobby.
Old men too.
A drifter owing nothing
To no one
Not even himself
All the young townie girls came to the Neon Bar
A quick trip to the alley with Bobby B BADD
He was kind to them
Never went all the way
Kind to divorcees and cougars too
Bobby B BADD hated trouble___
After two weeks he packed his bag
He had almost stayed too long
People wanted to know more
And he had no more to give
Just tales of the wind
A long train headed to west___
Girls cry
The men at the Neon Bar beg him to stay.
He trotted to the tracks.
“I don’t know when I’ll be back this way.”
He didn’t even know
Where here was___
Everyone knew the truth
Never
He waved from a freight car
Nobody waved back
And soon as Bobby B Badd was gone
He was gone.
But the town ain’t been the same
The boys in black
With hair slicked back
Playing Bobby B BADD.
But no on could play that part as well
As Bobby B BADD

March 6 1991 – Palu, Sulawesi – Journal

After a week’s diving on Bunaken I was lucky enough to catch the KM Karuna from Bitung, the port for Manado, at the top of Sulawesi. The liner cruised the jungled shore heading east to Borneo. The German-built ship is spacious and only one other Mistah is aboard. A Dutchman. Even after fourhundred years of harsh rule, the Indonesian don’t seem to hold a grudge against this Netherlander. Hans and I drink beer with his friend. They are traveling deck class and sleeping outside. Heading to Borneo.

The Gulf War has scared away all the tourists even backpackers from this Muslim country. NO one has bothered me since Ternate. Saddam is losing the war. People have accept the defeat.

I have a four-bed stateroom to myself on the portside. I stand at the railing with my Nell’s map picking out the small settlements. I stare through my binoculars. All the bigger villages seem the same. A mosque, a police station, and people going about their day. None of them pay attention to the KM Karuna. Only the minarets are taller than the palms. Inland the mountains are covered with thick forests. Most of the houses are on stilts.

I’m traveling second-class. Comfortable. Around sunset the ship veers west from land into the sunset and we cross the sea heading to Kalimantan or eastern Borneo. Night falls and I stand at the stern watching the stars. I wish I had a book of constellation.

A little past midnight the liner pulls into Balikpapan, an old Bugis village transformed by the oil book. About 200 passengers came off until bright lights. The Dutchman got off. I am the only Westerner here. No storms unlike the crossing from Ternate to Bitung. Smooth sailing. Drinking beer, listening to the music from the Muslim passengers, their prayers at dawn. That night the only lights at sea was a of this line passing of this liner.

Landfall was in Tawaeli the next morning. A few hundred passengers got off and I shared a taxi heading south to Palu, where I would catch a bus up to Lake Poso. The Rough Guide has been a good travel companion and my Indonesian has been improving with every twon and city. We drove down the coast. Across the bay small mountains ran north to south. I got a small room clean and quiet. Nobody bothered to say hey mister. This is not really one of the top tourist destinations in Sulawesi.

Being on the equator it was hot and swampy. I bought a ticket for the lake and walked to the beach. The mountains behind the town were thick jungles. Palu is right on the equator. The sun fell at 6:00 and I went to eat at a Chinese restaurant. Food was sweet and salty. A Chinese woman took the stage and sang a love song in Cantonese. Looking back at the video of Hong Kong, she cried wishing she was in China or even Jakarta instead of in a backwater town of Sulawesi. The staff asked, if I wanted to sing a song. Big Bad Leroy Brown. It was on the list. Everyone laughed. I was the only silly Western in here and I felt good.

Welcome To the 20th Century – LIRR – MONTAUK

Tuesday afternoon the 2:45 PM train from Montauk to Jamaica was late. The EMD DE30AC locomotive crawls into the station of the dual standard gauge tracks stopping on Gate 1, as it does every day, although rarely on time. The locomotive was built between 1997–1999 by Electro-Motive Division in the Super Steel Plant in Schenectady, New York. No trains have been purchased since then and the locomotives are serviced by Progress Rail, a division of Caterpillar. The 2:45 departed at 3:15 and slogged across the pine barrens westward towards Jamaica. The locomotive broke down east of Easthampton. Add another hour to the three hour trip plus the thirty-minute delay. It was daytime. I had nowhere to go and the train was not in a hurry.

There was been no track improvements on the LIRR other than basic maintenance for ages and I felt like I was in the age of Steam, although I suspect the the journey was faster in the 19th Century.

China invested nearly a trillion dollars to upgrade the national rail line. It is losing billions. America has to do with a decrepit system and as explained by Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner to Fortune magazine, “It’s not because we lack the technical know-how to build high-speed rail, but because politicians lack the will to fund it. It’s a financial conversation, not a technical one,”

America

Ever looking backward.

I finally arrived at Atlantic Terminal in Brooklyn at 6:30PM.

At least it wasn’t the Jitney.

ps – the conductor never asked for a ticket.

Most excellent.