How we cite our quotes: Citations follow this format: (Part.Chapter.Paragraph)
Quote #40
"All that again, good buddy. Gotta get back to my life. Wish I could stay with you. Pray I can come back." I grabbed the cramps in my belly and groaned. When I looked up again bold noble Dean was standing with his old broken trunk and looking down at me. I didn’t know who he was any more, and he knew this, and sympathized, and pulled the blanket over my shoulders. "Yes, yes, yes, I’ve got to go now.
"Old fever Sal, good-by." And he was gone. Twelve hours later in my sorrowful fever I finally came to understand that he was gone. By that time he was driving back alone through those banana mountains, this time at night.
When I got better I realized what a rat he was, but then I had to understand the impossible complexity of his life, how he had to leave me there, sick, to get on with his wives and woes. "Okay, old Dean, I’ll say nothing." (IV.6.30-IV.6.32)
Sal is incredibly lenient in his view of Dean, forgiving his friend a second time for abandoning him.
Quote #41
"D’you think I can ride to Fortieth Street with you?" he whispered. "Want to be with you as much as possible, m’boy, and besides it’s so durned cold in this here New Yawk ..." I whispered to Remi. No, he wouldn’t have it, he liked me but he didn’t like my idiot friends. I wasn’t going to start all over again ruining his planned evenings as I had done at Alfred’s in San Francisco in 1947 with Roland Major. (V.1.15)
Sal and Dean’s friendship ends on this note of sadness, with Sal’s inability – or perhaps unwillingness – to help Dean in New York.