THE
DO-RE-MI
1
Pop wanted me to practice
law. USC admitted me to their Juris Doctorate program.
So I asked Pop, ÒAre
lawyers crooks to begin with or does being a lawyer make them crooks?Ó
The sun was
falling fast toward the Rubicons across Lake Tahoe from our cottage. Pop stood
over the steaks he was grilling. Mama had gone inside for mosquito repellent.
For the past half
hour, Pop and I had discussed the San Francisco ChronicleÕs latest revelations
about President NixonÕs Watergate blunder.
Pop used the
Chronicle to fan smoke out of his face. ÒNobodyÕs anything to begin with,Ó he
said. ÒLawyers can go bad, but youÕre not that kind of man.Ó
Pop was usually
right. That time, he was dead wrong.
Later that summer,
on the last Wednesday in August, 1972, I drove north on Highway 101, into the
redwoods. The two lane highway was cluttered with hippie vans, sputtering VWs,
and family wagons descending upon the town of Evergreen.
Hippies claimed
Evergreen was the closest place on earth to Eden. I wouldnÕt have disputed
their claim. The air was crisp with a mild salty tang and the seductive
fragrance of redwoods. Because of the mountains that horseshoed around the
valley, leaving one side open to the breezes off the Pacific, twenty miles
west, Evergreen was an ecosystem apart, with balmy winters and summers cooled
by mists and night rains that blew away at dawn, over the Trinity
Wilderness.
Most of us
crowding the highway had come for Big Dan MillsÕ Jamboree. I believed that weekend
would change my life. I only hoped it would change for the better.
The jamboree was a
folk festival. Over the past three years, it had become a major event, even
while half the people who used to talk politics in coffee houses had turned to
dropping LSD and spacing out on electric guitars.
My brother Alvaro
had convinced Big Dan to invite me to perform. I would be on stage Sunday, just
before the finale. In my daydreams, it was my chance to turn pro, to meet
record producers and earn a shot at playing clubs like the Troubadour in
Hollywood. At least, I might land a booking agent and give myself a solid
reason to forget USC, where I was supposed to start law school in twenty
days.
As I passed a sign
marking twelve miles to Evergreen, I was trying to decide what to play. I
wished to God I had written even two good songs. But so far, the only tunes or lyrics
that came to mind when I picked up my guitar were those I had heard. Besides, I didnÕt feel wise enough
about the world to write honest yet meaningful words. Pop said the songs would
come after I had experienced more.
Most of the people
whose songs I played were coming to the jamboree. LightninÕ Hopkins, my
favorite living bluesman, was coming. RamblinÕ Jack Elliot, who had been pals with
Woody Guthrie, would be talking about Woody and playing WoodyÕs songs. Tom
Paxton was coming, and Dino Valenti. Richard Fari–a was dead, but his wife Mimi
was on the bill. I wouldnÕt risk her displeasure by doing any of Fari–aÕs
songs. Buffy St. Marie was coming, which meant I wouldnÕt play the Peter Le
Farge numbers I knew. They were about Indians, which was her territory, not
mine.
Rumors had
circulated that Bob Dylan meant to show up, forsake his rock and roll ways,
turn back to standing alone with his acoustic guitar and harmonica, and rekindle
the folk scene.
Maybe a Steven
Foster number would work, I thought. Maybe ÒBeautiful Dreamer,Ó one of MamaÕs
favorites.
Alvaro could help
me choose. I hoped to find my brother tonight. I hadnÕt seen him much in the
past few years, since he left for Vietnam. And I was anxious to show him my new
guitar, a Gibson Hummingbird, my twenty-second birthday present from Pop. I had
lusted after a Hummingbird since Alvaro taught me to play.
I believed our
family was blessed. Mama appeared to be healing. And as far as we knew, Alvaro
had stayed out of trouble for months now.
*
Ten miles south of
Evergreen, I slowed to observe three kids who could pass for cupids. They and a
man stood with bowed heads around a simple cross of redwood branches in a ditch
beside the highway. Grieving for a Mexican friend, I thought. Along the roads
of Mexico, people marked the site of each fatal crash with a cross or shrine.
The man slouched
beside the cross. He had strawberry blond hair, long, wavy and braided. The
kids' white ringlets hung to their shoulders. They all were tan, and shirtless
though the sun had disappeared behind the redwood forest a half hour ago.
I raced through an
S curve and into a cacophony of sputters and rumbles. I stood on the brakes when
a platoon of outlaw bikers fishtailed onto the highway from the dirt parking
lot of a tavern called the Crossroads.
In the dusk, I
couldn't read their colors. Cossacks, I thought. Alvaro had confessed to
brawling in an Evergreen saloon. He had argued about the Vietnam issue with a biker.
The biker ran with a gang called Cossacks.
Highball Trail
began just south of the Crossroads and went east along the bank of Whiskey
River. In a letter, Alvaro had mentioned the river's name, and added, ÒTell
Mama itÕs only water.Ó
I drove into the
forest while dusk turned to dark so fast the road seemed to dip and carry me
underground. Along the trail, second growth redwoods made way for ancient trees
as wide as logging trucks and tall as Jack's beanstalk. Their fragrance was
like a potion. It left me giddy and able to imagine the world had become a safe
and wondrous place, where evil could no longer reside.
Since I had failed
to replace a burnt out dashboard light, I bounded over ruts and fallen branches
trying to sense the passing miles. The road narrowed into a trail more suitable
for horses than cars. I stopped, crawled into the back and found my flashlight
in the crate of camping gear. According to the odometer and Alvaro's
directions, the Mexican flag would greet me 1.3 miles ahead.
Night had come.
Only drips of moon or starlight leaked through the trees. As I drove on, redwood
branches scratched like fingernails along both sides of my wagon. I swerved and
dodged, but ruts grabbed the wheels and yanked them sideways. The muffler
scraped granite and showered the forest with sparks. I imagined a forest fire
beginning here and consuming the face of the earth. Then I wondered why dread
had possessed me.
Two miles ahead, I
found a clearing and parked. I shut down the motor, sat still and listened for
a human sound. I heard the river whoosh over rocks, and what sounded like a
pair of baritone cuckoos. Jays squawked ornery lullabies. I shouted for Alvaro.
The birds flew off.
Whiskey River and
its flood plain allowed enough break from the redwoods to let starlight fall on
the water, which frothed along the banks and churned in mid-stream. Fallen
limbs and gnarly stumps flashed past. Across the river was a grove of trees
like aspens except flowers grew from their branches. The flowers a shaft of
moonlight exposed were red, yellow, and blue, like a vision of heaven that came
to me when I got beaned by a wild pitcherÕs fastball. Even through the redwood
fragrance, in the upriver breeze, I caught whiffs of jasmine and of somebodyÕs
marijuana garden. Not AlvaroÕs, I hoped.
Most
of the ground between the trail and the bank was too soft to walk without
sinking to my knees, but it made a good bed. I threw down a tarp and sleeping
bag upon which I lay and dispelled dread with happy thoughts. I imagined myself
on a stage packed with my favorite performers. I scrunched up against Mimi Fari–a
while I watched the booking agent who had just signed me up wave a high sign. And
I wondered how disappointed Pop would be when I told him I was going on the
coffee house circuit instead of to USC.
I
didnÕt hate the idea of practicing law. But it was PopÕs dream for me, not my
own. Pop had left USC during the 1920s when his sister came down with rheumatic
fever. To pay the bills, he worked days as a bank guard. Nights he played his
clarinet in a dance band, which folded when the Great Depression struck. Then
Pop joined the L.A.P.D.
Life
had taught him to admire good lawyers. And he said I had the right stuff, courage
and a passion for justice. But I had no passion for a life of courts and
criminals. I wanted to sing, play guitar, and someday write songs that would
encourage people to act more loving, kind and faithful. Like Mama, I was a
dreamer. Not a fighter like Pop or Alvaro.
When
I had told Pop about the jamboree, he gazed at me over his pipe and pondered. ÒYouÕre
a little rough,Ó he said, Òbut thatÕs your charm. The gravelly voice and your
size gives you authority. People listen to you.Ó I swelled with pride to think
that Pop, who was no flatterer, thought of me that way. Then he added, ÒBut the
music business will break your heart.Ó
*
The first gunshot
woke me. The next report could've been a thunderclap. The last four sounded
like maracas. For minutes I sat and listened, but the forest had gone mute.
I worried about Alvaro.
In our family, if the phone rang at 3:00 a.m, we feared for Alvaro. If a police
car drove up the street, we wondered what he had done. Alvaro was wild. Besides,
amongst the tools he had brought on what he called Operation Clean was a rifle.
He told us he meant to feed himself with the rifle and his fishing gear.
I worried myself
to sleep. In the morning, I stumbled to the river and splashed my face with
crystalline water.
I was tossing my
gear in the Chevy when I peered down the road and spotted my brothersÕ marker. The
Mexican flag waved from a branch that overhung the road, twenty feet up. Last
night, I hadn't looked that high, though I should have remembered Alvaro's
monkey-like skill at climbing trees.
I parked just past
the flag on a rocky patch between two redwoods and started along a single-file
path. Walking toward the twang of guitar strings, I wondered what disturbance
or nightmare had woke Alvaro before six. At home, we needed to use bribery or
threats to lure him out of bed.
His camp was a
quarter mile up the path. As I neared, he started playing and singing a corrido ballad he had made up while in Vietnam. It told of when
he got wounded and missed his rotation on point and so his best amigo took over and died that day.
In the center of
the clearing, Alvaro squatted Indio-style, finger picking the guitar he had
bought in Paracho, Michoacan. He
was the musical genius in our family. His right hand danced on the strings
while the fingers of his left hand ran up and down the fret-board. He was
perched on a redwood stump so wide an orchestra could have joined him. The
clearing was bordered by ring of second growth redwood small enough to allow daylight
into the camp. Mexican string bags of groceries, clothes and utensils hung like
pi–atas from the branches. Behind Alvaro
stood an army surplus bivouac tent that could accommodate a dozen cots. The
Browning 30.06 hung by a strap from a notch in a flagpole beside the tent's
entrance.
Alvaro handled his
Paracho guitar like a relic. He laid it into a hard-shell case before he sprang
off the stump, his arms wide to greet me. His embrace felt as if he meant to weld
me there. When he let go, he jumped back and flashed the grin that was a
primary weapon in his arsenal of charms. He had used it to hustle turistas in Mazatlan after his widowed borracho papa got sentenced to eight years in a Sinaloa prison.
No doubt that grin had helped him hitch rides a thousand miles north and over
the mountains to Tijuana. He survived in Tijuana by stealing and hustling and
on the graces of putas he
charmed, until he made enemies of vicious older street kids and decided to jump
the border.
His charms helped
him win his place in our family, and later they boosted his career as lead
guitar and featured singer in a heartthrob Tijuana rock band. As the house band
at the Aloha Club on Avenida Revoluci—n, the district that drew MexicoÕs best
rockers, he was becoming a star. Then he got nabbed at the frontera with fifty bottles of the methamphetamine pills we
called blackbirds.
Today, though, he
looked clean and sober enough. His Indio
eyes with their long black lashes never blinked while he asked about Pop and
Mama. They closed for a minute when I told him Mama was still in danger of
slipping back into her catatonia.
I handed him the
$100 bill Pop had sent.
"Keep it, hermano," he said. "You the man just graduated
college. What'd I do to deserve Pop's money?"
I pressed the bill
into his T shirt pocket. "You're being good.Ó
His eyes flicked
away. He strode to the fire-pit, stirred coals, then stretched toward a
woodpile beside the pit. He grabbed a long branch and snapped it over his knee,
into three parts. He stacked them on the fire. "Huevos for breakfast. I got canned chiles but no chorizo. Quieres cafe?"
"In the
biggest mug youÕve got.Ó
I sat on the big
stump between his guitar and a cassette recorder. The lid was open. The tape
inside was by Phil Ochs, to whom Alvaro would introduce me in a day or two.
My brother had met
Phil Ochs at a peace rally. He got
introduced as a Vietnam hero turned against the war. Ochs asked him to tell his
combat stories, and afterward they kept in touch. It was Ochs who got Alvaro
the jamboree gig.
I considered
Reverend King wiser than Chairman Mao, whom Ochs admired. I didnÕt like Ochs
songs that praised armed revolution. But Alvaro was no pacifist. He called Ochs
gutsy for singing what he believed even though it could get him killed. And
once when I criticized Ochs, Alvaro said, ÒHey, youÕve got to like the guy who
wrote ÕThere But For Fortune,Õ no?Ó With that, I couldnÕt argue.
Still
I wondered about the fascination that made my brother lead off both letters heÕd
sent me from Evergreen with quotes from Phil Ochs songs.
The coffee pot
hung from a spit above the fire. Alvaro used a hot pad. He always took care of
his hands. He poured a mug full and passed it to me. "Yeah, you can tell
Pop IÕm being good. I did the cold turkey thing. One day I didn't get out of my
sleeping bag, just hung in there all scrunched and sweating, waiting for the
mole people to attack." He shot me a glance that meant, You just got all
you need to know, little brother. "How long you here for?"
"Only the
weekend.Ó
ÒThen itÕs off to
begin your climb to the Supreme Court, right? When do you play at the
festival?"
"We. YouÕre
going to back me. Sunday at four.Ó
Alvaro shrugged. ÒPop's
not coming, right?"
"He wonÕt
leave Mama yet.Ó
ÒI miss her,Ó he
said. ÒSo, soon as you get to USC, you're going to bury your nose in the books,
entiendes?" He fixed on me a gaze
that meant, ÒOr else.Ó
We laughed
together at the irony of the prodigal lecturing the dutiful son, and Alvaro
prophesied, "With a brother like me, we better get a lawyer in the family but
quick."
As his last words faded, he turned and
peered at the path I had walked. For a minute or more, he stood frozen, his
right hand raised as if to signal a platoon. We both heard a twig snap.
I whispered,
"What--"
Alvaro sprang past
me, leaped toward the tent and grabbed his rifle.