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CHAPTER NINE A Real Idiot
Of course, the first thing that I wanted to do when I got back to America was find Jenny. So I phoned Moses in Boston.
The Broken Eggs group has broken up, he told me. I don’t know what happened to Jenny. I heard that she went to Chicago, but that was five years ago.
Do you have a telephone number, or anything? I asked.
It’s an old number, he said, but perhaps she’s still there.
I phoned the number, and she wasn’t.
Jenny Curran? a man’s voice said. She went to Indianapolis. Got a job at the Temperer factory.
So I went to Indianapolis on the bus.
The Temperer factory was outside the town. I asked about Jenny at the office, and the woman said, Yes, she works in here. Why don’t you wait at the side of the factory? It’s almost lunch-time, and she’ll probably come out. So I did.
A lot of people came out at lunch-time. Then Jenny came out. She went and sat under a tree on the grass, and began eating an apple. I went up behind her and said, That looks like a nice apple. She didn’t look up. She just said, Forrest, it has to be you.
A minute later, I had my arms round her and we were both crying. People were watching us with strange looks on their faces, but it didn’t matter. Jenny and me were together again.
I finish work in three hours, Forrest, Jenny said. Why don’t you wait for me in that bar across the street? Then I’ll take you to my place.
So I waited in the bar.
And I got into the wrestling business. How? I’ll tell you.
It started when I arm-wrestled a man in the bar, and won some money on a bet. That gave me an idea. But at first I didn’t say anything to Jenny.
She came across to the bar after work, and we had a drink and talked.
I saw you on TV when you went up into space, Forrest, she said.
And I told her all about that, and about Sue, the ape.
What happened to him? she asked.
I don’t know, I said. But he was a good friend.
Later, we went back to Jenny’s flat, and she said, You can stay here.
Next day, when Jenny went to work, I went back to the bar. Several people wanted to try arm-wrestling with me again, and I said OK. None of them won because I was too strong, but plenty of people wanted to try their luck.
After about a month, I was winning nearly two hundred dollars a week, arm-wrestling. Then one day a man called Mike came into the bar.
You can make a lot more money, he told me.
How? I asked.
Wrestling. Real wrestling, he said. I can teach you.
To make a long story short he did.
Jenny wasn’t happy about the wrestling but I won a lot of money sometimes by winning fights, sometimes by losing them because Mike told me to lose them. Yes, that happens, too. But then I did something stupid again. I bet on myself winning a fight, after Mike told me to lose it.
Jenny got really angry. It isn’t honest, she said.
I didn’t listen. I bet all my money on myself to win and then I lost the fight.
But there was worse to come. When I got back to the flat, Jenny was gone, and there was a letter waiting for me. It said:
Dear Forrest
You’re doing something bad tonight.
It isn’t honest, and I cannot go on with you like this.
I think about having a house and a family and things like that now.
I watched you grow up big and strong and good.
And then, in Boston, I realized that I loved you, and I was the happiest girl in the world.
But then there was that girl outside the Hodaddy Club.
Then you went up into space and I lost you for four years, and I think you changed.
And I think perhaps I changed, too.
I just want to live in an ordinary way now.
So, I must go and find it.
I am crying while I write this, but please don’t try to find me.
Goodbye, my dear. love, Jenny
And for the first time ever, I knew that I was a real idiot.
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