What ho! Bet you thought I'd forgotten all about this. ("He had," - ed.) Well, it's high-time for the next instalment and here it is, the biggest yet! Join us now as we enter into a day of high adventure in Virginia City...
Virginia CityPart Three: There's Gold in Them Thar Hills.The road into town curves up to the left and then snakes to the right like a cracking whip, lashing the steeply sloped hillside. It’s dirt county, hard-packed dust, yellow rock and wiry scrub. Along the left hand side there’s a small rail depot. Once in a while a steam train from who knows where brings in tourist dollar, and perhaps its the need of a good first impression that keeps this little station looking trim. But this is off-season, Virginia City is stripped of its parades and side-shows and the echo of the steam-whistle does not sound in these lonely hills. Beside it a rail crossing and a memorial to firemen, and a hefty looking wooden bear called Smokey, resplendant with helmet and shovel. Either side of the road sit pretty wooden houses, painted white and blue, looking frail in this weathered, sun beaten valley. Looking to the right the fenced yard of a shack contains a row of four gas pumps, planted and rusting in the grass. It’s early morning and the air has a pleasantly refreshing chill as we crest the slope and turn into the long straight that brings us into town.
"Remember kids, drop that match and I'll eat your face." The Rail DepotNow that's Americana!Half eight and it’s blissfully quiet. Nothing but the tread of feet, the rustle of tumbleweed, the lonesome sound of the wind and the bandying forth of quotes from Tremors. We get into town, every thing is shut. I want a coffee. We walk to the end of the long street. Just past a wooden shack with a circular saw nailed to the front sits a white board house with yellow trim and a balcony. Painted on the front are the words, 'Mocha’ and 'Latte’. The windows are dusty. We can discern no life inside. Yet there is an Open sign upon the door. We weigh up the dangers. It might be a trap set for effeminate Frenchmen. But I really want a coffee, and the dust kicked up by the sudden mountain gusts stings my nostrils and smarts my eyes. I drag Hardy inside.
Rusted Saw, Curious Coffee House
A legend is born. The serving area we find ourselves in is akin to a bare concrete rec-room with a washing machine with a thermos atop. Rich Hall in Otis Lee Crenshaw mode lurches over. Behind him is we see through open door a colourful mural that could only have been painted by a hippy, with a lake and a rainbow. There seems to be a sofa beyond, in that other room inhabited by an old couple who I assume to be his parents.
“Hi, just wondering if you serve coffee here.”
“Yeah, morning. We got coffee.”
“A cup of black coffee would be great.”
He nods and reaches over the thermos, pours me a mug. It’s hot and bears a sort of passing resemblance to coffee. “You from England?”
“Yeah. We’re staying in Oregon but came down for the weekend.”
“Crazy weather in Oregon.”
Excellent! A conversational path opens itself, straight and true and clear of the awkward pause shown as visual punctuation in metaphor by the traditional tumbleweed. I’m a Brit, we love talking about the weather! Let’s talk about the weather!
And we do. And you know, it’s not a bad chat. We talk about the seasons and the droughts and the blizzards and what-not. He’s a good talker, with an easy slow drawl. Of course, it’s at this point in the mutual bonding that my eyes drift across and catch the KKK calling card pinned to his notice board.
No joke. It really is there. What the hell? Is it for real? Is it some excellent ironic joke? Perhaps it popped through his letter-box one day and he figured, ‘hey, makes a good talking point’. But staring at this man, my mouth still yapping away good-naturedly, I can see his red sun-ravaged features disappearing under a pointed sheet of white. It must be a tough gig around here, I haven’t seen a single black.
Holy shit, maybe he’s lynched 'em all!
But rather peversely I’m quite enjoying the coffee and the chat now, and refuse to acknowledge Hardy’s frantic eye flicks directed at the board and to me, stood as he is behind the man’s shoulder with a 'Let’s get the fuck out of here!’ expression. But you know, fuck it. I’m drinking coffee. He’s not going to lynch us is he? No way, man. We’re talking weather. Like what the white men do.
He waves goodbye as we leave. Hardy clutches me by the arm. “Did you see that?!”
“Goddammitt yes, Hardy. Let’s not judge 'till all the facts are in, okay.”
“A calling card.”
We fall silent. Hardy seems slightly upset.
“Hey Hardy. We should have stayed for breakfast. Reckon they do cereal?”
“Probably not.”
“Shame, I could really go in for some Special KKK.”
This is easily the funniest thing I have ever said.
We head back onto the high street. The stores and saloons are opening up shop now. We enjoy the freedom of gawping like rubes at dusty trinkets in dimly lit dime stores. There’s a book shop that’s chock-a-block with Mark Twain books. I pick up a Zane Gray western. It’s good readin’. We wander into a hat shop, a monumentally huge affair stuffed with literaly hundreds of hats. Hardy quickly settles upon a sleek black leather cowboy hat that only a villain could wear, perhaps whilst spitting tobacco on the church floor with a sneer. I dither for an hour, completely unable to make up my mind between a stetson and a derby hat mighty similar to Firefly Badger’s apparel. In the end, derby wins out. Much as the stetson was cool, I can’t help but think that I’d look slightly gay and risk mockery back in Cardiff. Those crusty old Cardiffians, like to take some of the starch out of their shirts!
I hand over the coin to the urbane bearded old man, and enjoy the fit. He nods approvingly at my new found dapperness. We talk a bit about exchange rates and the economy, about how the banks are screwing us. I find it delightfully easy to talk to American strangers, if you’re stuck for a subject just mention how Uncle Tony (now Unkie Cameron and Auntie Clegg) stiff us for our hard-earned shillings, and then complain about the banks and the general lack of work ethic nowadays. It’s their equivilent of talking about the weather. I pass an amicable while talking guvmint with the fellow and find his opinions on fixing the economy are well observed. However, I cannot remember point one that he offered, so you will have to take my word for it that the owner of The Old Red Garter Western Wear is a real deep dude.
They sell old cowboy dusters. Like what Mal Reynolds wears! If only I had more money!
"Hot Diggerty-Dang! We're the Bee's Knees!"Sporting our new hats and tipping them to the ladies, we feel like we’re walking tall as we tread the boards of the saloon sidewalks. It is a shame then that the effect is spoiled as we suddenly freeze, beads of sweat form prickle our foreheads, bowls loosen and low moans and prayers are uttered as the unearthly doom-laden wail of a collossally loud air raid siren fills the air. It races up and down the scale with its banshee wail, and we crane our necks to look at the sky, expecting to see the trails of ICBM minutemen missiles criss-crossing the sky as megatonnage death direct from the Mid-West to Mother Russia speeds its way.
Fortunately before we could humiliate ourselves by treating the locals to an exercise in 'duck and cover’ reason slowly returns. Why is everyone walking around, enjoying their sandwiches instead of racing for the deepest mine shafts? I ask a local what gives. He chuckles and tells us its the traditional ‘lunch time siren’. Of course.
Moments later we bump into Lyryn and Joel, having finally awoken and hauled ass up the hill. Myself and Hardy spend a moment spouting the infuriating, “You’ve missed the best part of the day!” guff and we then all decide to go and get lunch. Back into the Palace Saloon. They have indeed a good menu. More variations on the burger than you could shake a T-bone at. We trough and chat and then at dinner’s close Lyryn shows us the entrance to a mine shaft at the rear of the saloon. A man not unlike John Ratzenberger of Cheers fame offers us a tour, and next thing we know we’re wearing helmets as we follow him and his lantern deep into the mine-workings. The tunnel stretches deep into the hillside, and I’m almost beside myself with how cool this is - a pub that has a big mine shaft at the back to explore! He explains that at the time searing hot temperatures forced miners to duck into small rooms filled with ice blocks to keep cool, otherwise they’d slowly cook. He spoke of the boiling hot waters that claimed lives as holes opened up in the ground - fatal par-boiling wells to fall into. He explained the luminescent qualities of certain ores, and turned out the lantern to show us the glow in the dark nature of the (thankfully non-radioactive) rare ores contained in certain rocks. At the end of the tunnel is a series of ladders reaching up a shaft towards a faint glimmering of light. The shaft exits upon a lane higher up on the hillside, a hundred feet above. The ladders criss-cross crazily, hammered into the beams bracing the walls. It’s like a Half-Life mine shaft level. I almost want to climb up it, but its the Pale Ale thinking.
Upon emerging and paying the excellent guide his well-deserved monies we formulate a plan for the afternoon. Lyryn wants do a little slot machine gambling first off. Me, Joel and Hardy collectively grumble in a murmuring manner.
Hold on, better insert a disclaimer here. Lyryn’s a fantastically amusing and witty companion, with brilliant taste and has a determined core that has allowed her to surmount the rather shitty tragedies big and small that life has flung at her with the speed and frequency of a barrell wielding Donkey Kong. She’s a great producer of musicals, has a fine singing voice and a perfect host. But put her in the same room as a dime slot machine and that’s another hour you’ve lost her for, right there. And Nevada has a hell of a lot of these sinister machines. So don’t kill me Lyryn, you’re most excellent. But this travelogue demands an ongoing gag, and the average American woman’s gambling fix presents itself as an ample opportunity.
So she hastily defines it as just a wee whim, and that mainly she wants at the book and curiosity shops. Me and Hardy want to go see the graveyard, because as any fule kno cowboy graveyards are awesome. Lyryn and Joel explain that they’ve seen the graveyard three times now, and that it holds interest for them no longer.
“Fair so. While you wander the shops and stuff me and Hardy will walk over and take a gander at this graveyard then, we can be back in an hour and a half.”
“It’s quite a walk,” warns Joel. “You’d need an hour just to get there and back.”
“We like walking. Call it two hours. When we get back we’ll hit one of the Saloons on the high street. You can find us there.”
The plan meets approval, me and Hardy head off.
Love ShacksWe follow a track along the foot of the town that passes old abandoned shacks and a giant cinder cone of dirt surrounded by JCB diggers. Up through a narrow gorge and we scrabble up the loosely packed dirt of a small hill, boots sending the parched earth and stones cascading and rattling down as we claw our way up and through a thicket. After entering the graveyard in the most inconvenient manner possible, eschewing the finely wrought open iron gates of the entrance, we begin our exploration.
The GraveyardBoot HillThe Golden LightIt’s a photographers paradise. Broken wooden frames border most graves, with dessicated wooden crosses. for the poor miners who died paupers, astonishingly fine and imposing statues and marble crosses for the rich burghers of the town, who mainly consist of Irish masons. You can read the history of a town in a graveyard. Men shot in duels. Children dying of polio. Syphalis from the brothels. Tuberculosis for the long-term miners. It strips a little of the golden age nostalgia from the town. Those were damn hard times.
The wind really whips it up now. My city-slicker derby hat stays planted firmly atop my head, but hilariously Hardy’s rugged bandit hat keeps flying off, and every five minutes he’s forced to run off and catch it and return, dusting it off, swearing. This is doubly amusing as Hardy had previously criticised my choice as being inappropriate for the elements of frontier life, citing his tough bandito choice as better suited for the harsh climes.
We spy a hill beyond the graveyard, a gently climb that would afford a fine view of the valley beyond. “We got time?” “Plenty.”
And so we ascend. The wind is settling down a while, as the sun comes out and beats down hard. Mopping our brows of sweat we reach the crest. Beyond we see a ranch of horses, and that single cone shaped hill jutting out of the mouth of the valley. It looks reachable, and for a while we seriously consider walking off that way and seeing what’s beyond. But time forbids, so we poke around the ridge around us. This is time well spent, as like children we crowd around and marvel at what appears to be a human bone and a bullet complete with cartridge on a stone besides. It is with great reluctance that we leave the bullet behind, and exit Reaver territory. The newly resurgent wind makes further game of Hardy hat on the way. Ha.
Wanderlust Reavers Did It!We walk back the proper way, and blunder catastrophically into the myopic vision of a withered old crone who calls us over. Within moments - I’m not entire sure how but she must have used terrifying old voodoo witch powers to achieve this - she’s got poor Hardy holding a hoe and hacking away at a great big root in a pothole on the pavement on the corner of her yard. Over the course of ten sweat-soaked minutes Hardy manages to chip a bit of it away, and I contribute a far feebler effort, before she sighs and rasps, “That’s enough boys.” She’s determined we have a reward. Thoughts of sour candy and iodine surface. She points at the house across the road. Apparently there are trinkets to be bought inside, but more importantly, famously good bramble jam. “Just say my name!” she squarks triumphantly, “Just say my name!”
You Better Dig Boy!We don’t feel like bramble jam. But she’s staring at us as we cross the road, and her piercing glare makes sure we damned well go in. If we don’t emerge with a carrier bag, no doubt we’ll be slain by the gaze of a gorgon. We potter about a bit, rooting through old badges and yearbooks. Now and then we glance through the window to see if she’s gone back inside. Nope, she’s still there. Sigh.
“How much is the blackcurrent jam?” I ask the middle-aged woman with her hair up in a scarf, Dutch style.
“Blackcurrent jelly? Five dollars.”
It does look quite nice actually. Thick and dark and pure. I mention that the lady across has sent us, raising my eyebrows in the universal sign language of the discount.
“Yeah, I saw you trying and failing out there. Anyway, all the jelly’s are five dollars. Homemade,” she adds proudly.
Discount my ass. Still, looks like good jam. I buy some. Later upon my return to Cardiff I give the jam to the beautiful music library assistant Ellie, enamoured with her Americana ways, excellent song-writing ability and gypsy rose good looks. She likes the jam. Success.
Back at the Old Washoe Club. We’re propping up the bar. Now there’s nothing quite like propping up an American bar. In the UK sitting at the bar watching the world go by nets you faintly disgusted stares from some staff, weary sighs from others. In this golden land you can happily sit and drink and not say much of anything. There’s a sort of easy feeling that frees you to ponder big thoughts over a pint or a shot. The old grizzled prospector serves us drinks with curt nods, offering no chit-chat. He looks a mean, ornery old bastard. Excellent. A tubby stubbled guy sits next to me, resting his saxophone case against his stool. His eyes are lost under the bill of a baseball cap and he’s dressed entirely in blue demin. He’s a friendly duffer, and we get chatting.
“You know one of you guys I really admired. That Lady Thatcher. Primeminister,” he says in his gravelly drawl. “She stood by us firm.”
Emboldened I shake my head. “I’m afraid she’s not popular where I’m from. We’re not fans.”
“Really?” he ask, surprised at the possibility that the Iron Lady could be unpopular, nay despised. “Why?”
“You see how there used to be a lot of mines and industry around here?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Well there used to be a lot of that where I come from in the North of England, and where I live now, in Wales. There were mines and factories all over once. By the time she left office, it’d all gone. Didn’t do nothing to help those thrown out of work either, she was all about the big city business.”
The man grunted sadly. “I liked her for her foreign policy. Never heard of her for domestic. I can understand.”
This expression of empathy moved me greatly, and I tinged my glass with his in a comradely manner. We talked of his life moving around America before settling in Virginia City, of the Vietnam war and of mining. Until eventually beer in hand he slid off his stool and picked up his saxophone.
“Well,” he said, “better get to it, nice talking with you son.” He walked over to the little stage in the corner, joined by another man with a guitar, and played country-folk - original or no I have no idea. I popped six bucks in the bucket. The music had earned them a beer apiece.
Saxo-mo-phone, Saxo-mo-phoneWe drank a good two hours in that place, and stumbled out pleasantly mid-afternoon with Lyryn and Joel. Lyryn suggested the Julia C Bullette Red Light Museum - the Museum of Prostitution - and who was I to argue with this excellent suggestion? The Red Light Museum inhabits the basement of a saloon, where a brothel used to be. Julia Bullette used to be a favoured soiled dove of Virginia City. Her history is worth recounting...
When Julia arrived at Virginia City in 1859, she found herself the only non-married white woman in town. Consequently she was greatly sought after by the miners, and so she capitalised on the oldest game - charging an incredible $1000 for her services a night. This probably goes to show just how desperate teh miners were, and just how flush with the money they were from the greatest silver lode in history. Julia was slim, tall and dark of hair and quite the looker apparently, and rather the wit. As her looks faded she invested her money in setting up a brothel, tastefully done in the best style. She amassed a workforce of young girls imported from San Francisco and dressed them and herself in the Parisian style. Her French ancestry compelled her to serve fine French cuisine also. She quickly became adored by the miners, not least because of her strong character that led her to convert the brothel into a hospital in times of disaster. She also refused to leave and stayed by the miners when the threat of Indian raids had caused most of the women to seek shelter in Carson City. She lived in style, and walked the streets wearing sable furs and jewells, and travelled in a luxurious carriage. She was made an honoury member of the Virigina Fire Engine No. 1, and was elected Queen of the Independence Parade, riding the engine in a fireman’s hat with a brass trumpet full of roses. In return she donated much to the local fire service, and even took a turn at the water pump from time to time.
Alas, her end was not a happy one. One night after attending Piper’s Opera House she retired to her bedroom and was murdered by a French drifter named John Millain, who had strangled and bludgeoned her to death and made off with her jewells and furs. The funeral was a lavish one and the mines, mills and saloons closed as a mark of respect. The militia played her out and she was buried in the same cemetary myself and Hardy wandered. Had we known earlier that afternoon we would have undoubtably made a point of searching for her stone. As for Millain, he was caught within the year and hung. Mark Twain was present.
The museum is both gaudy and amusing, even in the tragic details. A window offers a view into a room where mannequins indulge in a back-room abortion, complete with barbaric looking instruments and plenty of blood. I check for Pro-Lifer sponsership. Glass cabinets adorn the walls with erotic instruments of old, such as the Sears and Roebuck ‘Arctic Vibrator’ and the rival company ‘Polar Cub Vibrator’. I have no idea why they are named that, I wish I had been a fly on the wall for those brain-storming marketing meetings. Everywhere, Victorian erotic art is resplendant upon the walls. It seems that prostitution can be a class act.
Ho ho, just joking folks! Of course as a man of the 21st century, I deplore such sleeze.
It was now coming up on evening. We headed back to camp to freshen up and then hit the town. First off was food at the Cafe Del Rio, a Mexican restaurant housed within an old adobe mud-brick building. Very nicely decorated with abstract wall art and with good food on offer. Leaving the place we were enchanted to find it snowing heavily, Hardy literally dancing happily amongst the snow-flakes. The sky was slate grey and the neon lights of the parking lot across from us glowed wetly in the cool night.
Wahey! Snow! God bless us everyone!We walked down the street and hit some saloon bars. The Silver Dollar is naturally loaded with gambling machines and the walls are covered in glass panels filled with (possibly fake) silver dollar pieces. The Bucket of Blood is a fine establishment, so called because every morning when they mopped the floor after a hard night’s drinking and brawling by the miners there’d be a good quart of blood in the bucket. Then there’s the Delta Saloon, home of...
The Suicide Table.
What? Yes. This is it. The Suicide Table. Der Table of Tot. The very one.
Monumentally disappointing. Sorry guys, but no whirling razor blades. No electricuting cables, no clouds of cyanida gass dispensing from hidden nozzles. It gained its name and its fame instead from bringing fatal bad luck to the three men who owned it. The first man named Black Jake lost $70,000 playing cards one evening and shot himself. The next lost a great deal and either killed himself or was killed by his creditors. Either way he checked out. The last seemed to be doing well for a while, until a drunken miner came in one night and in an astonishingly wild streak of luck won interest in a mine, a team of horses and $86,000 off the poor man. With obvious consequences. From then on no one wanted the table, but equally it was such a part of local legend nobody wanted to get rid of it. Instead it was preserved under a glass case, and now sits under a big plaque in the Delta Saloon, mastermind of the greatest marketing campaign in Nevada history.
So yes, me and Hardy were a bit non-plussed with the lack of killer instruments. But still, it’s a cool story. We don’t begrudge you nothing, Delta Saloon old boy.
Later, back at the Gold Hill Hotel the four of us sit in the hotel bar. It’s a cosy, timber walled place with foreign currency nailed all over the ceiling and a tiny TV showing baseball in the corner. It’s lively, and we’re having a great time, until me and Hardy reach for the Blue Moon beer. It tastes of orange, and for some reason it gives us both crashing depression. Possibly the bluest drink I’ve ever had, as far as depressants go.Time for bed I think.
It’s a bit chilly wrapped up in the thin blanket, and the coyotes howl outside, but once again I am truly happy in this rickety-rackety old miner’s cabin. Last day in town tomorrow and we hope to make our way after lunch to Lake Tahoe. Wonder if the snow will settle? Good night all.