STORY "Forrest Gump" - Chapter Seven
Meeting
Jenny Again
Soon after that, I heard that I
was leaving the army early, and they gave me some money for a train ticket to
go home.
But all this time, I was thinking
about Jenny Curran. Just before I left the hospital in Danang, I had a letter
from her. She was now playing in a group called The Broken Eggs, and they played
two nights each week at a place called the Hodaddy Club near Harvard
University.
Now that I was free from the
army, I just wanted to go and see her. So I got a ticket for Boston, instead of
Mobile.
I tried to walk to the Hodaddy
Club from the train station, but I lost my way, so I took a taxi. It was in the
afternoon, and the man behind the bar said, Jenny’ll be here about nine
o’clock.
“Can I wait?” I asked.
“Ok,” he said.
So I sat down and waited for five
or six hours.
Students began to come in, most
of them wearing dirty jeans. The men had beards, and the women had long, untidy
hair. Later, the group _The Broken Eggs_ arrived, but I didn’t see Jenny.
Then they began to play and they
were loud. The music sounded like a plane that was taking off! But the students
loved it.
And then Jenny came on!
She was different. Her hair was
all the way down her back, and she was wearing sun-glasses-at night! She was
wearing blue jeans and a shirt with lots of colours on it. The group started
playing again and Jenny began to sing.
Later, I went outside and walked
round for about half an hour, then went back. There were a lot of people
waiting to go in, so I went round to the back of the place and sat on the
ground. I had my harmonica in my pocket, so I took it out and started to play.
I could hear the music that was
playing inside and, after a minute or two, I began playing with it. Suddenly, a
door behind me opened and there was Jenny!
“Who is that playing the
harmonica?” she said. And then she saw me. “Forrest Gump!” And she ran out of
the door and threw her arms round me.
***
We talked together until it was
time for her to sing again.
“I didn’t leave school,” said
Jenny. “They threw me out after they found a boy in my room one night. I went
to California and stayed there for some time.” She laughed. “I wore flowers in
my hair, and talked about love. But the people that I was with were strange.
Then I met a man, and we came to
Boston. But he was dangerous. He was against the war, like me, but he blew up
buildings and things. I couldn’t stay with him. Next, I met a teacher from
Harvard University, but he was married. Then I began to sing with The Broken
Eggs.”
“Where do you live?” I asked.
“With my boyfriend,” she said.
“He’s a student. You can come back and stay with us tonight.”
The boyfriend’s name was Rudolph.
He was a little man, and was sitting on the floor with his eyes shut when we
got to Jenny’s flat.
“Rudolph, this is Forrest,” Jenny
said. “He’s friend of mine from home, and he’s going to stay with us for a few
days.”
Rudolph didn’t speak or open his
eyes, but put up his hand and smiled.
Next morning, when I got up,
Rudolph was still sitting on the floor with his eyes shut.
That afternoon, Jenny took me to
meet the other people in the group, and that night I began playing my harmonica
with them at the Hodaddy Club. It went well, and I played with them every night
after that.
Then one day I came back to the
flat and Jenny was sitting on the floor.
“Where’s Rudolph?” I asked.
“Gone,” she said, “walked out,
like all the others.” And then she started to cry.
“Don’t cry, Jenny,” I said. And I
put my arm round her.
Well, it started like that. But
the next minute we were kissing and making love! And when we finished, Jenny
said, “Forest, where have you been all this time?”
_to be continued