Ask the Dust
Good evening.
The following are
the lowest temperature estimates
for California citrus areas.
Lowest temperatures tomorrow night
will be somewhat higher than tonight
and only light scattered firing late
in the morning should be necessary.
Corona District:
Corona 29,Arlington 28, Riverside 27,
Highgrove 27, Elsinore 26, Marino 26.
Clear and calm, firing for lemons will be
necessary beginning about 2:00 a.m.
And for oranges, about 4:00 a.m.
High ceiling. Dew point 31.
Redlands District: Hemet 28,
Redlands 26,
Highlands 26, Rialto 25,
Bloomington 25,
Colton 25, Fontana 25. Ukipa 26...
Well, the night before I met her,
I was in my hotel room on Bunker Hill
down in the very middle of Los Angeles.
It was called the Alta Loma.
It was built on a hillside in reverse
so that the main floor
was on a level with the street.
My room was down on the fifth floor
so that my window was on a level
with the green hillside,
and there was no need for a key.
I'd been going over the plans I'd made,
since I'd come here like everyone else
in search of fortune, fame, good health
and glamorous women.
Only I was going to be different.
Only I was going to be different.
I wasn't here to search for my future.
I was here to create it.
I'd write the first great novel
about this place
and everybody who came here
from somewhere else.
The Road to Los Angeles
by Arturo Bandini.
It would bring me everything
I ever wanted.
Now, after five months, I was trying
to make a very important decision.
What to do with my last nickel.
"Mr. Bandini, it has now been six weeks
since you've paid the rent.
"Four dollars per is mounting
like the national debt.
"Either you pay $24, every penny,
or pack up and leave."
It was her sixth note in six weeks.
Pretty humiliating.
My landlady was getting
more writing done than I was.
She was the kind of woman
who increased her height
by rising on tiptoe
and peering at me over her glasses.
- I'd like a room.
- Do you have a job?
I'm a Writer.
I'll be with you in a moment, Mr. Archer.
wrote that.
Here. What's your name?
Mrs. Hargraves, why?
"For Mrs. Hargraves.
"With lovely blue eyes
and a generous smile.
"From the author, Arturo Bandini."
"The Little Dog Laughed."
I hate dog stories.
Bandini. Young man,
are you a Mexican?
Me, a Mexican?
I'm an American, Mrs. Hargraves.
And that isn't a dog story, either.
We don't alloW Mexicans in this hotel.
I'm not a Mexican,
and there isn't a dog in the whole story.
We don't alloW Jews, either.
I got that title after the fable, you know,
"And the little dog laughed
To see such sport"
So you're an author. How nice.
Here we are, Mr. Bandini.
This is one of my very favorite rooms.
There are windows on two sides,
which makes it extremely airy.
It's $4 a week,
and I expect to be paid in advance.
Now that includes cleaning
but no laundry. we never do...
Through that window,
I saw my first palm tree
not six feet away,
but the palm was blackish
at its branches.
- And no girls in the room.
- I'll take it.
Stained by carbon monoxide
coming out of the Third Street Tunnel,
with dust and sand
that blew in from the Mojave
and Santa Ana deserts.
what jerk's gonna believe
I made it all the way
from Colorado to downtown L.A.
without seeing one goddamn palm tree?
Kid?
Kid?
Kid.
Do you like milk?
Yes, Hellfrick. I like milk.
Okay, then.
Here's the plan.
The Adohr man's a friend of mine.
Rvery morning at 4:00,
he parks his truck behind the hotel
and comes up to my room for a while.
- That's not much of a plan, Hellfrick.
- No, kid, no.
while he's having one with me,
you get 10 minutes
to help yourself to the milk.
So what do you think?
If he's your friend,
why not just ask him for it?
Kid, come on. who's kidding who?
I'm doing this for you.
No, thanks, Hellfrick.
I like to consider myself an honest man.
It certainly makes me wonder
about your ideas of friendship.
Okay.
Only trying to do you a favor.
You wanna do me a favor?
Pay me the money I loaned you.
- How much was that?
- Fifteen cents.
- Don't have it.
- Well, how about 10 cents? A nickel?
Can't give you any hard cash, kid,
but I'll see you get all the milk you need.
Mencken. Editor of the greatest
magazine in the country.
Do you wanna let him down?
Good evening,
Mr. And Mrs. North and South America
and all the ships and clippers at sea.
Akron, Ohio.
A big strike in the Goodrich
rubber plant here was called off today
when workers agreed
on a six cent raise in pay per hour.
Boston, Massachusetts.
The condition
of Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr.,
who was hurt today in a motorcar crash
near Walpole, Massachusetts,
is not serious.
Think of something
besides stealing a bottle of milk.
You're an author, not a thief.
The streets are full of them,
blondes and brunettes.
One in a red fox fur just getting out
of a fancy foreign car.
Girls in the plaza.
They're everywhere,
and none of them mine.
One glance and they know
I'm an inexperienced jerk,
ignorant of women and life,
and afraid of both.
You have nice hands.
I do?
Very.
Bandini?
You're Italian.
That'll be two cents a day
every day it's overdue.
St. Teresa, when I was little,
I prayed to you for a fountain pen.
You answered my prayer.
Anyway, I got a fountain pen.
Now please, sweet and lovely Saint,
inspire me. Give me an idea,
so I can write a story,
a great story,
so I can be rich and famous
and not be ashamed of my name.
Door is open.
To you, Mencken. To the future.
I headed down Third Street looking
for a place to spend my last nickel.
And there it was.
Come on.
Learn to dance if you can't walk!
The perfect place to end up flat broke.
- Can I get you something?
- Coffee with cream.
Just five months ago,
I had $150 in my pocket
and big plans in my head.
In those days, I was Arturo Bandini,
lover of man and beast alike.
All I needed was to meet one
of those beautiful golden-haired girls
that seemed to grow like oranges
out here,
and I'd write a story, a love story,
one of the greatest of all time.
Who brought this here?
There you go, Tony.
Thank you.
Are you done with that coffee?
You call this stuff coffee?
Maybe it isn't coffee at all.
Maybe it's just water after they boiled
your filthy shoes in it.
Maybe you don't know any better.
Maybe you're just naturally careless.
But if I were you,
I wouldn't be seen in a Main Street alley
Wearing those haraches.
It's huaraches, not haraches.
I hope you die of heart failure right there
on that chair.
Camilla.
It's not my fault. I didn't do nothing.
I swear to God, I just asked him
if he wanted some coffee!
Take care of it.
If he's sick, get him out of here.
Hey.
Young fellow, are you all right?
You there? Oh, say something, please.
You can dish it out, but you can't take it,
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"Ask the Dust" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/ask_the_dust_3167>.
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