I’m guessing this is from a few weeks after my futile trip to Montana and Utah.
The pages open with some Pips at Quaker Lake details, opening with Sunday, “the most beautiful day since I’ve been here.” I arrived to find her in the water, playing with children who were climbing all over her. “The water was refreshing and clear and black. I could see my toes on the flat stones four feet under water. … Swimming together to come out somewhere beyond the weeds.” Reading the Sunday New York Times while she worked the crossword, “I felt like a lord.”
Pips, do note, was a courier at the office, fun to be with but interested in me only as a buddy. For me, she was much better than being alone.
“That night,” on the phone, “Nicki told me she’s going to Salt Lake for three weeks … and I decided to quit” the pursuit. “I feel so free, albatross from my neck.”
Yeah, right. Like a kick in the gut.
A few days later, after a big breakfast with Thor and Vivienne, I went to check out the Hawley Street apartment building, came home to throw the I Ching, and asked Vivenne to accompany me in seeing the unit. She had a coughing problem the whole time I was around her.
The coughing had in fact awakened her; she came out in Thor’s blue robe, its waist hitting her below the ass, pockets at her knees.
“Jesus, you’re short,” I giggled.
My day off, I stopped at the office to get my paycheck. It came out on Wednesdays? Also, got a new tie.
We went back to the apartment, I put $250 down – two week’ pay – and returned to Susquehanna Street, where I removed my tie, changed shoes, and put on a headband.
Then we were off to Scranton, where she would get the bus to Manhattan.
She whipped out some joints (from Thor’s stash) for a joyous ride. We picked up hitchhikers.

Back in Binghamton, though, the loneliness whammy.
Within the next week, Nikki was in Syracuse with her parents. Seeing her in the hotel suite, “our first glance, a terrified emotional rush, afraid to touch … but I put my arm around her. Her voice has changed … mellower, like feather down. She wants me to respect her.”
She’s off to Binghamton with me. We make love, it’s incredible (she’s learned new tricks), until she remembers my confession about Peter’s letter. And I cry too much, too often (like Monday night with Polly).
“In bed, lying next to me: who is this stranger? I’ve never seen her before. She’s so porcelain, such transparent skin, so fragile. And I never knew her mind, it’s so strange.
“We argued over trivia, viz., why did I get a post office mailbox?” She screamed and cried, thinking me paranoid. And I’m scared you’ll lose my other notebook.”
The weekend with Nicki in Syracuse and Binghamton. Apparently, she tore into me over many small decisions.
Why do I defend others, like clerks or waitresses? Am I trying to identify with them, like I’m OK, not freaky like you?
We hit the zoo on the hill and then the Roberson.
“Every time I leave you, it’s death. Will I see you again?”
[In revisiting this, I recast it: “Every time you leave me, it’s death. Will you see me again?” I may have been dropping her off at the hotel, but the fact was that she was the one departing.]
“I know I must avoid your father’s spell: it tears me from your mind.
“What a prison marriage can be: but what misery is this!”
What hurts most about her being with others was my fear of being second-best. Or was it of being alone, alienated?
I even admitted that she loved Bruce. The one in Utah?
“I promised you I would hide you, if necessary.” [Something that would haunt me.]
~*~
From Spiralbound Hippies, with commentary from now.