of it, anyway, and say, itâs got the best race courses in the world. Seems as though that were the thing that keeps it all going and about the only thing you can figure on is that every day the buses will be going out to whatever track theyâre running at, going right out through everything to the track. I never really got to know Paris well, because I just came in about once or twice a week with the old man from Maisons and he always sat at the Café de la Paix on the Opera side with the rest of the gang from Maisons and I guess thatâs one of the busiest parts of the town. But, say, it is funny that a big town like Paris wouldnât have a Galleria, isnât it?
Well, we went out to live at Maisons-Lafitte, where just about everybody lives except the gang at Chantilly, with a Mrs. Meyers that runs a boarding house. Maisons is about the swellest place to live Iâve ever seen in all my life. The town ainât so much, but thereâs a lake and a swell forest that we used to go off bumming in all day, a couple of us kids, and my old man made me a sling shot and we got a lot of things with it but the best one was a magpie. Young Dick Atkinson shot a rabbit with it one day and we put it under a tree and were all sitting around and Dick had some cigarettes and all of a sudden the rabbit jumped up and beat it into the brush and we chased it but we couldnât find it. Gee, we had fun at Maisons. Mrs. Meyers used to give me lunch in the morning and Iâd be gone all day. I learned to talk French quick. Itâs an easy language.
As soon as we got to Maisons, my old man wrote to Milan for his license and he was pretty worried till it came. He used to sit around the Café de Paris in Maisons with the gang, there were lots of guys heâd known when he rode up at Paris, before the war, lived at Maisons, and thereâs a lot of time to sit around because the work around a racing stable, for the jocks, that is, is all cleaned up by nine oâclock in the morning. They take the first bunch of skins out to gallop them at 5.30 in the morning and they work the second lot at 8 oâclock. That means getting up early all right and going to bed early, too. If a jockâs riding for somebody too, he canât go boozing around because the trainer always has an eye on him if heâs a kid and if he ainât a kid heâs always got an eye on himself. So mostly if a jock ainât working he sits around the Café de Paris with the gang and they can all sit around about two or three hours in front of some drink like a vermouth and seltz and they talk and tell stories and shoot pool and itâs sort of like a club or the Galleria in Milan. Only it ainât really like the Galleria because there everybody is going by all the time and thereâs everybody around at the tables.
Well, my old man got his license all right. They sent it through to him without a word and he rode a couple of times. Amiens, up country and that sort of thing, but he didnât seem to get any engagement. Everybody liked him and whenever Iâd come into the Café in the forenoon Iâd find somebody drinking with him because my old man wasnât tight like most of these jockeys that have got the first dollar they made riding at the Worldâs Fair in St. Louis in nineteen ought four. Thatâs what my old man would say when heâd kid George Burns. But it seemed like everybody steered clear of giving my old man any mounts.
We went out to wherever they were running every day with the car from Maisons and that was the most fun of all. I was glad when the horses came back from Deauville and the summer. Even though it meant no more bumming in the woods, âcause then weâd ride to Enghien or Tremblay or St. Cloud and watch them from the trainersâ and jockeysâ stand. I sure learned about racing from going out with that gang and the fun of it was going every day.
I remember once out
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