n too greedy for land an' for money an' for th' power to make slaves out of his feller men! Man has cursed th' very land itself!" "Now you tell us somethin', Mister Fortune Teller!" "Hell yes, that's what we come here for! Tell us a vision `bout all of this stuff!" I walked out through the door past five or six big husky guys dressed in all kinds of work clothes, whittling, playing with warts on their hands, chewing tobacco, rolling smokes. Everybody in the room walked out in the yard. I stood there on an old rotten board step, and everybody hooted and laughed and cracked some kind of a joke. And then somebody else said, "Tell our fortune." I looked down at the ground and said, "Well sir, men, I ain't no fortune teller. No more than you are. But I'll tell ya what I see in my own head. Then ya can call it any name ya like." Everybody stood as still as a bunch of mice. "We gotta all git together an' find out some way ta build this country up. Make all of this here dust quit blowin'. We gotta find a job an' put ever' single livin' one of us ta work. Better houses 'stead of these here little old sickly shacks. Better carbon-black plants. Better oil refineries. Gotta build up more big oil fields. Pipe lines runnin' from here plumb ta Pittsburgh, Chicago, an' New York. Oil an' gas fer fact'ries ever'where. Gotta keep an' eye peeled on ever' single inch of this whole country an' see to it that none of Hitler's Goddam stooges don't lay a hand on it." "How we gonna do all of this? Just walk to John D. an' tell 'm we're ready to go to work?" The whole bunch laughed and started milling around again. "You ain't no prophet!" one big boy yelled. "Hell, any of us coulda say that same thing! You're a dam fake!" "An' you're a Goddam fool!" I hollered out at him. "I told ya I didn't claim ta be nothin' fancy! Yer own dam head's jist as good as mine! Hell, yes!" The mob of men snickered and fussed amongst their selves, and made motions with their hands like a baseball umpire saying "out." They shuffled around on their feet, and then broke up into little bunches and started to drift out of the yard. All talking. Above them, the big boy yelled back at me, "Look out who're you're callin' a fool, there, bud!" "Men! Hey! Listen! I know we all see this same thing--like news reels in our mind. Alla th' work that needs ta be done--better highways, better buildin's, better houses. Ever'-thing needs ta be fixed up better! But, Goddamit, I ain't no master mind! All I know is we gotta git together an' stick together! This country won't ever git much better as long as it's dog eat dog, ever' man fer his own self, an' ta hell with th' rest of th' world. We gotta all git together, dam it all, an' make somebody give us a job somewhere doin' somethin'!" But the whole crowd walked off down toward Main Street, laughing and talking and throwing their hands. I leaned back up against the side of the shack and watched the gravel and dust cutting down the last of the hollyhocks. "News reels in my head," I was looking and thinking to myself, and I was thinking of old Heavy gone. "News reels in my head. By God, mebbe we all gotta learn how ta see them there news reels in our heads. Mebbe so." Chapter èû OFF TO CALIFORNIA I rolled my sign-painting brushes up inside an old shirt and stuck them down in my rear pants pocket. On the floor of the shack I was reading a letter and thinking to myself. It said: ". . . when Texas is so dusty and bad, California is so green and pretty. You must be twenty-five by now, Woody. I know I can get you a job here in Sonora. Why don't you come? Your aunt Laura." Yes, I'll go, I was thinking. This is a right nice day for hittin' th' road. 'Bout three o'clock in th' afternoon. I pulled the crooked door shut as best I could, and walked one block south to the main highway leading west. I turned west and walked along a few blocks, across a railroad track, past a carbon-block warehouse. "Good old Pampa. I hit here in 1926. Worked my tail off 'round this here town. But it didn't give me anything. Town had growed up, strung itself all out across these plains. Just a little old low-built cattle town to start with; jumped up big when the oil boom hit. Now eleven years later it had up and died." A three- or four-ton beer truck blowed its air brakes and I heard the driver talking, "By God! I thought that looked like you, Woody! Where ya headin'? Amarilla? Hustlin' signs?" We got off to a jumpy start while he was spitting out his window. "Cal'fornia," I said. "Hustlin' outta this dam dust!" "Fer piece down th' road, ain't it?" "Enda this dam highway! Ain't a-lookin' back!" "Aww, ain'tcha gonna take one more good look at good ol' Pampa?" I looked out my window and seen it go by. It was just shacks all along this side of town, tired and lonesome-looking, and lots of us wasn't needed here no more. Oil derricks running up to the city limits on three sides; silvery refineries that first smelled good, then bad; and off along the rim of the horizon, the big carbon-black plants throwing smoke worse than ten volcanoes, the fine black powder covering the iron grass and the early green wheat that pushes up just in time to kiss this March wind. Oil cars and stock cars lined up like herds of cattle. Sun so clear and so bright that I felt like I was leaving one of the prettiest and ugliest spots I'd ever seen. "They tell me this town has fell down ta somethin' like sixteen thousan' people," I said. "She's really goin' with th' dust!" the driver told me. Then we hit another railroad crossing that jarred him into saying, "I seen th' day when there was more folks than that goin' to th' picture shows! She's really shrivelin' up!" "I ain't much a-likin' th' looks o' that bad-lookin' cloud a-hangin' off ta th' north yonder," I told him. "Bad time uv year fer them right blue northers! Come up awful fast sometimes. Any money on ya?" "Nope." "How ya aimin' ta eat?" "Signs." "How's it come ya ain't packin' yer music box with ÕÁ?" "Hocked it last week." "How ya gon'ta paint signs in a dam blue norther with th' temperture hangin' plumb out th' bottom? Here. Fer's I go.'' "This'll gimme a good start at least. Mucha 'blige!" I slammed the door and backed off onto the gravel and watched the track leave the main highway, bounce over a rough bridge, and head north across a cow pasture. The driver hadn't said good-bye or anything. I thought that was funny. That's a bad cloud. Five miles back to town, though. No use of me thinking about going back. What the hell's this thing stuck here in my shirt pocket? I be dam. Well, I be dam. A greenback dollar bill. No wonder he just chewed his gum. Truck drivers can do a hell of a lot of talking sometimes without even saying a word. I walked on down the highway bucking into the wind. It got so hard I had to really duck my head and push. Yes. I know this old flat country up here on the caprock plains. Gumbo mud. Hard crust sod. Iron grass for tough cattle and hard-hitting cowboys that work for the ranchers. These old houses that sweep with the country and look like they're crying in the dust. I know who's in there. I know. I've stuck my head in a million. Drove tractors, cleaned plows and harrows, greased discs and pulled the tumbleweeds out from under the machinery. That wind is getting harder. Whoooooo! The wind along the oily weeds sounded like a truck climbing a mountain in second gear. Every step I took to the west, the wind pushed me back harder from the north, like it was trying to tell me, for God's sake, boy, go to the south country, be smart, go where they sleep out every night. Don't split this blue blizzard west, because the country gets higher, and flatter, and windier, and dustier, and you'll get colder and colder. But I thought, somewhere west there's more room. Maybe the west country needs me out there. It's so big and I'm so little. It needs me to help fill it up and I need it to grow up in. I've got to keep bucking this wind, even if it gets colder. The storm poured in over the wheat country, and the powdery snow was like talcum, or dried paste, blowing along with the grinding bits of dust. The snow was dry. The dust was cold. The sky was dark and the wind was changing the whole world into an awful funny-looking, whistling and whining place. Flat fields and grazing lands got smothery and close. It was about three more miles on to the little town of Kings Mill. I walked about two of the miles in the blowing storm and got a ride with a truck load of worried cattle, and a bundled-up driver, smoking loose tobacco that blew as wild as the dust and the snow, and stung like acid when it lit in my eyes. We hollered the usual hollers back and forth at each other during the last mile that I rode with him. He said that he was turning north off of the main road at Kings Mill. I said, Let me out at the post office and I'll stand around in there by the stove and try to get another ride. In the general store, I bought a nickel's worth of postal cards and wrote all five of them back to the folks in Pampa, saying, "Greetings from the Land of Sunshine and just plenty of Good Fresh Air. Having wonderful tour. Yrs. trly. Wdy." Pretty soon another cattle man offered me a ride on to the next cattle town. He smoked a pipe which had took up more of his time in the last twenty years than wife, kids, or his cow ranching. He told me, "This old Panhandle country can be one mighty nice place when it's purty, but hell on wheels when she gits riled up!" His truck was governed down to fifteen or twenty miles an hour. It was a windy, brittle hour before we crept the fifteen miles from Kings Mill over to White Deer. I was so cold when we got there that I couldn't hardly get out of the truck. The flying heat from the engine had kept me a degree or two above freezing, but stepping out into that wind head-on was worse. I walked another mile or two on down the side of the road and, as long as I walked, kept fairly loose and limber. A time or two I stopped alongside the concrete, and stood and waited with my head ducked into the wind--and it seemed like none of the drivers could see me. When I started to walk some more, I noticed that the muscles in the upper part of my legs were drawn up, and hurt every time I took a step, and that it took me a few hundred yards' walking to get full control over them. This scared me so much that I decided to keep walking or else. After three or four miles had went under my feet, a big new model Lincoln Zephyr stopped, and I got in the back seat. I saw two people in the front seat. They asked me a few silly questions. I mean they were good questions, but I only gave them silly answers. Why was I out on the highways at any such a time as this? I was just there. Where was I going? I was going to California. What for? Oh, just to see if I couldn't do a little better. They let me out on the streets of Amarillo, sixty miles away from Pampa. I walked through town, and it got colder. Tumbleweeds, loose gravel, and dirt and beaten snow crawled along the streets and vacant lots, and the dust rolled in on a high wind, and fell on down across the upper plains. I got across town and waited on a bend for a ride. After an hour, I hadn't got one. I didn't want to walk any more down the road to keep warm, because it was getting dark, and nobody could see anything out there on a night like that. I walked twenty-five or thirty blocks back to the main part of Amarillo. A sign on a board said, Population, 50,000, Welcome. I went into a picture show to get warm and bought a hot sack of good, salty popcorn. I figured on staying in the cheap show all I could, but they didn't stay open after midnight in Amarillo, so I was back on the streets pretty soon, just sort of walking up and down, looking at the jewelry and duds in the windows. I got a nickel sack of smoking, and tried rolling a cigaret on every part of Polk Street, and the wind blew the sack away, a whiff at a time. I remember how funny it was. If I did succeed in getting one rolled and licked down and into my mouth, I'd strike up all of the matches in the country trying to get it lit; and as quick as I got it lit, the wind would blow so hard on the lighted end that it would burn up like a Roman candle, too fast to get a good draw off, and in the meantime throwing flaked-off red-hot ashes all over my coat. I went down to the railroad yards, and asked about the freights. The boys were hanging out in two or three all-night coffee joints, and there was no lead as to where you could get a free flop. I spent my last four-bit piece on a little two-by-four room, and slept in a good warm bed. If it had cockroaches, alligators or snapping turtles in it, I was too sleepy to stay awake and argue with them. I hit the streets next morning in a bluster of gray, smoky-looking snow that had managed to get a toehold during the night. It covered the whole country, and the highway was there somewhere--if you could only find it. This side of Clovis, fifteen or twenty miles, I met an A Model Ford with three young boys in it. They stopped and let me in. I rode with them toward New Mexico all day long. When they came to the state line, they acted funny, talking and whispering among themselves, and wondering if the cops at the port of entry would notice anything odd about us. I heard them say that the car was borrowed, no ownership papers, bill of sale, driver's license--just borrowed off of the streets. We talked it over. Decided just to act as blank as possible, and trust to our luck that we could get across. We drove over the line. The cops waved us past. The sign read: Trucks and Busses Stop For Inspection. Tourists Welcome to New Mexico. The three boys were wearing old patched overhalls and khaki work pants and shirts that looked like they'd stand a couple or three good washings without coming any too clean. I looked at their hair, and it was dry, wind-blown, gritty, and full of the dust out of the storm, and not any certain wave or color--just the color of the whole country. I had seen thousands of men that looked just the same way, and could usually tell by the color of the dirt where they were from. I guessed these boys to be from the oil-field country back up around Borger, and asked them if that was a good guess. They said that we could ride together better if we asked each other less questions. We rolled along, slow, boiling up the higher country, and cooling off coasting down--until we hit the mountains on this side of Alamagordo. We stopped once or twice to let the engine cool off. Finally we hit the top of the mountain ridge, and traveled along a high, straight road that stuck to the middle part of a flat, covered on both sides by evergreen pine, tall, thin-bodied, and straight as an arrow, branching out, about thirty or forty feet up the trunk; and the undergrowth was mostly a mixture of brown scrubby oak, and here and yonder, bunches of green, tough cedar. The air was so light that it made our heads feel funny. We laughed and joked about how it felt. I noticed that the driver was speeding up and then throwing the clutch in, letting the car slip into neutral, and coasting as far as he could. I mentioned this to the driver, and he said that he was running on his last teacupful of gas, and it was twenty-five miles to the next town. I kept quiet from then on, doing just what the other three were, just gulping and thinking. For five or six miles we held our breath. We were four guys out, trying to get somewhere in the world, and the roar of that little engine, rattly, knocky and fumy as it was, had a good sound to our ears. It was the only motor we had. We wanted more than anything else in the world to hear it purr along, and we didn't care how people laughed as they went around us, and throwed their clouds of red dust back into our faces. Just take us into town, little motor, and we'll get you some more gas. A mile or two of up-grade, and the tank was empty. The driver throwed the clutch in, shifted her into neutral, and kept wheeling. The speed read, thirty, twenty, fifteen--and then fell down to five, three, four, three, four, five, seven, ten, fifteen, twenty-five, and we all yelled and hollered as loud and as long as our guts could pump air. Hooopeee! Made 'er! Over the Goddam hump! Yippeee! It's all down hill from here to Alamagordo! To hell with the oil companies! For the next half an hour we won't be needing you, John D.! We laughed and told all kinds of good jokes going down the piny-covered mountain--some of the best, wildest, prettiest fresh-smelling country you could ever hope to find. And it was a free ride for us. Twenty miles of coasting. At the bottom we found Alamagordo, a nice little town scattered along a trickling creek or two that chases down from out of the mountains around. There you see the tall, gray-looking cottonwood sticking along the watered places. Brown adobe shacks and houses of sun-dried brick, covered over with plaster and homemade stucco of every color. The adobe houses of the Mexican workers have stood there, some of them, for sixty, seventy-five, and over a hundred years, flat. And the workers, a lot of them, the same way. On the north side of town we coasted into a homey-looking service station. The man finally got around to coming out. One of the boys said, "We want to swap you a good wrench for five gallons of gas, worth twice that much. Good shape. Runs true, holds tight, good teeth, never been broke." The service man took a long, interested, hungry look at the wrench. Good tool. No junky wrench. He was really wanting to make the swap. "Got as much as fifty cents cash money?" he asked. "No ..." the boy answered him. Both forgot all about everything, keeping quiet for a whole minute or more, and turning the wrench over and over. One boy slid out of the door and walked through the shop toward the men's rest room. "Two bits cash ... ?" the mechanic asked without looking up. "No ... no cash ..." the boy told him. "Okay ... get your gas cap off; I'll swap with you boys just to show you that my heart is in the right place." The gas cap was turned, laid up on a fender, and the gas man held the long brass nozzle down in the empty hole, and listened to the five gallons flow into the tank; and the five gallons sounded lonesome and sad, and the trade was made. "Okay, Mister, you got the best of this deal. But that's what you're in business for, I reckon; thanks," a boy said, and the old starter turned over a few wheels that were gradually getting toothless, and the motor went over quick, slow, and then a blue cloud of engine smoke puffed up under the floorboards, and the good smell of burning oil told you that you weren't quite walking--yet. Everybody heaved a sigh of relief. The man stood with his good costly wrench in his hands, pitching it up and down, and smiling a little-- nodding as we drove away. My eyes fell for a short minute away from the healthy countryside, and my gaze came upon an old tire tool on the floor of the car, a flat rusty tire iron, an old pump--and a nice wrench, almost exactly like the one that we'd just traded for gas; and I remembered the boy that went to the rest room. Uptown in Alamagordo, we stopped at the high, west end of the main street. It was dinner time, but no money. Everybody was hungry and that went without asking. I told the boys that I'd get out and hustle the town for some quick signs, signs to paint on windows which I could paint in thirty minutes or an hour, and we'd surely get enough to buy some day-old bakery goods and milk to take out on the side of the road and eat. I felt like I owed them something for my fare. I felt full of pep, rested and relieved, now that there were five gallons of gas splashing around inside of our tank. They agreed to let me hustle for a quick job, but it must not take too long. I jumped out in a big rush, and started off down the street. I heard one of them holler, "Meet you right here at this spot in an hour and no later." I yelled back, "Okie doke! Hour! No later." And I walked down through the town. I peeled my eyes for an old sign that needed repainting, or a new one to put on. I stuck my head into ten or fifteen places and got a job at a shoe store, putting a picture of a man's shoe, a lady's shoe, and: Shoe Repairing Guaranteed. Cowboy Boots a Specialty. I had left my brushes in the seat of the car, so I made a hard run up the main street. I got to the spot, puffing, grinning, and blowing like a little horse, and looked around-- but no boys, and no car. I trotted up and down the main street again, thinking that they might have decided to come on down to where I was. But there wasn't the old Model A that I'd learned to know and admire, not for being a champion at anything but as a car that really tried. It was gone. So were my pardners. So were all of my paint brushes. Just a little rag wound around some old brushes, but they were Russian Red Sable, the best that money could buy, and about twenty bucks of hard-earned money to me. They were my meal ticket. Pulling from Alamagordo over to Las Cruces was one of the hardest times I'd ever had. The valley highway turned into a dry, bare stretch of low-lying foothills, too little to be mountains, and too hilly to be flat desert. The hills fooled me completely. Running out from the high mountains, they looked small and easy to walk over, but the highway bent and curled around and got lost a half a dozen times on each little hill. You could see the road ahead shining like a string of tinfoil flattened out, and then you'd lose sight of it again and walk for hours and hours, and more hours, and without ever coming to the part that you'd been looking at ahead for so long. I was always a big hand to walk along and look at the things along the side of the road. Too curious to stand and wait for a ride. Too nervous to set down and rest. Too struck with the traveling fever to wait. While the other long strings of hitch-hikers was taking it easy in the shade back in the town, I'd be tugging and walking myself to death over the curves, wondering what was just around the next bend; walking to see some distant object, which turned out to be just a big rock, or knoll, from which you could see and wonder about other distant objects. Blisters on your feet, shoes hot as a horse's hide. Still tearing along. I covered about fifteen miles of country, and finally got so tired that I walked out to one side of the road, laid down in the sun, and went off to sleep. I woke up every time a car slid down the highway, and listened to the hot tires sing off a song, and wondered if I didn't miss a good, easy, cool ride all of the way into California. I couldn't rest. Back on the road, I hung a ride to Las Cruces and was told that you couldn't catch a freight there till the next day. I didn't want to lay over, so I lit out walking toward Deming. Deming was the only town within a hundred miles where you could catch one of them fast ones setting long enough to get on it. I walked a long stretch on the way to Deming. It must have been close to twenty miles. I walked until past midnight. A farmer drove up and stopped and said that he would carry me ten miles. I took him up, and that put me within about fifteen miles of Deming. Next morning I was walking a couple of hours before sunup, and along about ten o'clock, got a ride with a whole truckload of hitch-hikers. Most every man on the truck was going to catch a freight at Deming. We found a whole bunch walking around the yards and streets in Deming waiting to snag out. Deming is a good town and a going town, but it's a good town to keep quiet in. Us free riders said it was best not to go around spouting off at your mouth too much, or the cops would pull you in just to show the taxpayers that they are earning their salaries. The train out of Deming was a fast one. I got to Tucson without doing anything much, without even eating for a couple of days. In the yards at Tucson, I didn't know where to go or what to do. The train rolled in with us after midnight. The cars all banged, and the brake shoes set down tight, and everything wheeled to a standstill. I was hanging onto her, because she was a red-hot one, and had been fast so far, and other trains had given her the right-of-way. I didn't want to get off now, just for a cup of coffee or something. Besides, I didn't have the nickel. I crawled down in a reefer hole--a hole in the top of a fruit car where ice is packed--and smoked the makings with two men whose faces I hadn't seen. It was cold there in Tucson that night. We laid low for about a couple of hours. After a while, a dark head and shoulders could be seen in the square hole, set against the bright, icy moonlight night. Whoever it was, said, "Boys, you c'n come on out--we're ditched on a siding. She ain't gonna take these cars on no further." "Ya mean we lost our train?" "Yeah, we just missed 'er, that's all.'' And as the head and shoulders went out of sight above us, you could hear men scrambling down the sides, hanging onto the shiny iron ladders, and falling out by the tens and dozens all up and down the cinder track. "Ditched. ..." "Shore'n hell. ..." "Coulda got'er if we'd of knowed it in time. I had this happen to me before, right here in Tucson." "Tucson's a bitch, boys, Tucson's a bitch." "Why?" "Oh--just is. Hell, I don't know why!" "Just another town, ain't it?" " Tain't no town, 'tain't no city. Not fer guys like you an' me. You'll find out soon enough...." "What's funny about Tucson?" Men ganged around the black cars, and talked in low, grumbling voices that seemed to be as rough as they sounded honest. Cigarets flared in the dark. A little lantern started coming down the tracks toward where we were ganged around talking. Flashlights flittered along the ground, and you could see the funny shadows of the walking feet and legs of men, and the underparts of the brake drums, air hoses, and couplings of the big, fast cars. "Checkers." "Car knockers." "Boys--scatter out!" "Beat it!" "And--remember--take an old 'bo's word for it, and stay th' hell out of the city limits of Tucson." "What kind of a dam town is this, anyhow?" 'Tucson--she's a rich man's bitch, that's what she is, and nothin' else but." Morning. Men are scattered and gone. A hundred men and more, rolled in on that train last night, and it was cold. Now it's come morning, and men seem to be gone. They've learned how to keep out of the way. They've learned how to meet and talk about their hard traveling, and smoke each other's snipes in the moonlight, or boil a pot of coffee among the weeds like rabbits--hundreds of them, and when the sun comes out bright, they seem to be gone. Looking out across a low place, growing with the first sprigs of something green and good to eat, I saw the men, and I knew who they were, and what they were doing. They were knocking on doors, talking to housewives, offering to work to earn a little piece of bread and meat, or some cold biscuits, or potatoes and bread and a slice of strong onion; something to stick to your ribs till you could get on down the line to where you knew people, where you had friends who would put you up till you could try to find some work. I felt a funny feeling come over me standing there. I had always played music, painted signs, and managed to do some kind of work to get a hold of a piece of money, with which I could walk in to town legal, and buy anything I wanted to eat or drink. I'd always felt that satisfied feeling of hearing a coin jingle across the counter, or at least, doing some kind of work to pay for my meals. I'd missed whole days without a meal. But I'd been pretty proud about bumming. I still hoped that I could find some kind of short job to earn me something to eat. This was the longest I had ever gone without anything to eat. More than two whole days and nights. This was a strange town, with a funny feeling hanging over it, a feeling like there were lots of people in it--the Mexican workers, and the white workers, and the travelers of all skins and colors of eyes, caught hungry, hunting for some kind of work to do. I was too proud to go out like the other men and knock at the doors. I kept getting weaker and emptier. I got so nervous that I commenced shaking, and couldn't hold myself still. I could smell a piece of bacon or corncake frying at a half a mile away. The very thought of fruit made me lick my hot lips. I kept shaking and looking blanker and blanker. My brain didn't work as good as usual. I couldn't think. Just got into a stupor of some kind, and sat there on the main line of the fast railroad, forgetting about even being there... and thinking of homes, with ice boxes, cook stoves, tables, hot meals, cold lunches, with hot coffee, ice-cold beer, homemade wine--and friends and relatives. And I swore to pay more attention to the hungry people that I would meet from there on down the line. Pretty soon, a wiry-looking man came walking up across the low green patch, with a brown paper sack wadded mp under his arm. He walked in my direction until he was about fifteen feet away, and I could see the brown stain of good tasting grease soaking through his sack. I even sniffed, and stuck my nose up in the air, and swung my head in his direction as he got closer; and I could smell, by real instinct, the good homemade bread, onion, and salty pork that was in the sack. He sat down not more than fifty feet away, under the heavy squared timbers of the under-rigging of a water tank, and opened his sack and ate his meal, with me looking on. He finished it slowly, taking his good easy time. He licked the ends of his fingers, and turned his head sideways to keep from spilling any of the drippings. After he'd cleaned the sack out, he wadded it up properly and threw it over his shoulder. I wondered if there was any crumbs in it. When he left, I says to myself, I'll go and open it up and eat the crumbs. They'll put me on to the next town. The man walked over to where I sat and said, "What the hell are you doing settin' here on the main line ... ?" "Waitin' fer a train," I said. "You don't want one on top of you, do you?" he asked me. "Nope,'' I says, "but I don't see none coming... .'' "How could you with your back to it?" "Back?" "Hell, yes, I seen guys end up like 'burger meat for just sueh carelessness as that...." "Pretty mornin'," I said to him. "You hungry?" he asked me. "Mister, I'm just as empty as one of them automobile cars there, headed back East to Detroit." "How long you been this way?" "More than two days." "You're a dam fool-----Hit any houses for grub?" "No--don't know which a way to strike out." "Hell, you are a dam fool, for sure." "I guess so." "Guess, hell, I know so." He turned his eyes toward the better section of town. "Don't go up in the fine part of town to try to work for a meal. You'll starve to death, and they'll throw you in jail just for dying on the streets. But see them little shacks and houses over yonder? That's where the railroad workers live. You'll get a feed at the first house you go to, that is, if you're honest, willing to work for it, and ain't afraid to tell it just like it is." I nodded my head up and down, but I was listening. Before he quit talking, one of the last things that he said, was, "I been on the bum like this for a long time. I could have split my sack of eats with you right here, but you wouldn't have got any good out of it that way. Wouldn't learn you a dam thing. I had to learn it the hard way. I went to the rich part of town, and I learnt what it was like; and then I went to the working folks' end of town and seen what it was like. And now it's up to you to go out for yourself and get you some grub when your belly's empty." I thanked him two or three times, and we sat for a minute or two not saying much. Just looking around. And then he got up sort of slow and easy, and wishing me good luck, he walked away down the side of the rails. I don't quite know what was going on inside my head. I got up in a little while and looked around. First, to the north of me, then to the south of me; and, if I'd been using what you call horse sense, I would have gone to the north toward the shacks that belong to the railroad and farm workers. But a curious feeling was fermenting in me, and my brain wasn't operating on what you'd call pure sanity. I looked in the direction that my good sense told me to go, and started walking in the direction that would lead me to even less to eat, drink, less of a job of work, less friends and more hard walking and sweating, that is, in the direction of the so-called "good" part of town, where the "moneyed" folks live. The time of day must have been pretty close to nine o'clock. There were signs of people rustling around, moving and working, over around the shack town; but, in the part of town that I was going toward, there was a dead lull of heavy sleep and morning dreams. You could look ahead and see a steeple sticking up out of the trees. It comes up from a quiet little church house, A badly painted sign, crackling from the desert heat and crisp nights, says something about the Brethren, and so, feeling like a Brethren, you walk over and size the place up. There in the morning sun so early, the yellow and brown leaves are wiggling on the splattered sidewalk, like humping worms measuring off their humps, and the sun is speckling the driveway that takes you to the minister's door. Under the trees it gets colder and shadier till you come to the back door, and climbing three rotted steps, knock a little knock. Nothing happens. While you're listening through all of the rooms and floors and halls of the old house, everything gets so quiet that the soft Whoo Whoo of a switch engine back down in the yards seems to jar you. Finally, after a minute or two of waiting, threatening to walk off, thinking of the noise that your feet would make smashing the beans and seeds that had fallen from the locust trees on to the driveway, you decide to stick at the door, and knock again. You hear somebody walking inside the house. It sounds padded, and quiet, and far away. Like a leather-footed mountain lion walking in a cave. And then it swishes through the kitchen, across the cold linoleum, and a door clicks open, and a maid walks out onto the back porch, scooting along in a blue-checkered house dress and tan apron, with a big pocket poked full of dust rags of various kinds, a little tam jerked down over her ear, and her hair jumping out into the morning breeze. She walks up to the screen door, but doesn't open it. "Ah--er--good morning, lady," you say to her. She says to you, "What do you want?" You say back to her, "Why, you see, I'm hunting for a job of work." "Yeah?" "Yes, I'm wondering if you've got a job of work that I could do to earn a bite to eat, little snack of some kind. Grass cut. Scrape leaves. Trim some hedge. Anything like that." "Listen, young man," she tells you, straining her words through the minister's screen, "there's a dozen of you people that come around here every day knocking on this door. I don't want to make you feel bad, or anything like that, but if the minister starts out to feed one of you, you'll go off and tell a dozen others about it, and then they'll all be down here wanting something to eat. You better get on out away from here, before you wake him up, or he'll tell you worst than I'm telling you." "Yes'm. Thank you, ma'am." And you're off down the driveway and on the scent of another steeple. I walked past another church. This one is made out of sandy-looking rocks, slowly but surely wearing away, and going out of style. There are two houses, one on each side, so I stood there for a minute wondering which one belongs to the minister. It was a tough choice. But, on closer looks, I saw that one house was sleepier than the other one, and I went to the sleepy one. I was right. It belonged to the minister. I knocked at the back door. A mean-tempered cat ran out from under the back porch and scampered through a naked hedge. Here nothing happened. For five minutes I knocked; still nobody woke up. So feeling ashamed of myself for even being there, I tiptoed out on to the swaying sidewalk and sneaked off across town. Then I come to a business street. Stores just stretching and yawning, but not wide awake. I moseyed along looking in at the glass windows, warm duds too high in price, and hot, sugary-smelling bakery goods piled up for the delivery man. A big cop, walking along behind me for half a block, looking over my shoulder, finding out what I was up to. When I turned around, he was smiling at me. He said, "Good morning." I said the same back to him. He asked me, "Going to work?" "Naw, just looking for work. Like to find a job, and hang around this town for a while." He looked over my head, and down the street as an early morning driver ran a stop sign, and told me, "No work around here this time of the year." "I'm generally pretty lucky at gittin' me a job. I'm a good clerk, grocery store, drug store--paint signs to boot." He talked out into thin air, and says, "You'll starve to death around here. Or make the can." "Can?" "That's what I said, can." "You mean, git in trouble?" He nodded his head, yes. He meant trouble. "What kinda trouble? I'm a good hand ta keep outta trouble," I went on to say. "Listen, boy, when you're not working in this town, you're already in trouble, see? And there ain't no work for you, see? So you're in trouble already." He nodded at a barber jingling his keys at a door. I decided that the best play I could make was to cut loose from the copper, and go on about my door knocking. So I acted like I was going somewhere. I asked him, "Say, what time of the day is it, by the way?" I tried to crowd a serious look onto my face. He blowed some foggy breath out past a cigaret hanging limber on his lip, and looked everywhere, except at me and said, "Time for you to get going. Get off of these streets." I kept quiet. "Merchants gonna be coming down to open up their stores in about a minute, and they don't want to think that I let a bird like you hang around on the streets all night. Get going. Don't even look back." And he watched me walk away, each of us knowing just about why the other one acted like he did. Rounding a warm corner, I met a man, that, to all looks, was a traveler suffering from lack of funds. His clothes had been riding the freights, and I was pretty certain that he was riding with them. Floppy hat, greasy through the headband. A crop of whiskers just about right for getting into jail. He was on his way out of town. I said, "Howdy. Good-morning." "What'd the dick say to you?" He got right to the main subject. "He was telling me how to clear Tucson of myself in five minutes flat," I told the man. "Tough sonsaguns here, them flatfeet. Rich place. Big tourists get sick and come here for to lay around," he said, spitting off of the sidewalk, out into the street. "Mighty tough town." He talked slow and friendly, and looked at me most of the time, ducking his head, a little bit ashamed of the way he looked. "I was doing all right till I hung a high ball. Engine pulled out and left my car settin' here." Then he nodded a quick nod and ran his eyes over his dirty clothes, two shirts, wadded down inside a tough pair of whipcord cotton pants, and said, "That's how come me to be so dam filthy. Couldn't find a clean hole to ride in." "Hell," I said, "man, you ain't half as bad off as I am as far as dirt goes. Look at me." And I looked down at my own clothes. For the first time I stood there and thought to myself just what a funny-looking thing I was--that is, to other people walking along the streets. He turned around, took off his hat and ran his hand through his straight hair, making it lay down on his head; he moved over a foot or two, and looked at his reflection in the big plate-glass window of a store. Then he said, "They got a County Garden here that's a dude." His voice was sandy and broken up in little pieces. Lots of things went through your mind when he talked-- wheat stems and empty cotton stalks, burnt corn, and eroded farm land. The sound was as quiet as a change in the weather, and yet, it was as strong as he needed. If I was a soldier, I would fight quicker for his talking to me, than for the cop. As I followed his talk, he added, "I been out on that pea patch a couple of shots; I know." I told him that I'd been hitting the preachers up for a meal. He said, "That ain't a very smart trick; quickest way to jail's by messing around the nice parts. Qughtta get out on the edge of town. That's best." The sun was warm on the corner, and Tucson's nice houses jumped up pretty and clean, pale colors of pink and yellow. "Mighty purty sight to see. Make anybody want to come out here to live, wouldn't it?" he asked me. "Looks like it would," I told him. We both stood and soaked our systems full of the whole thing. Yes, it is a sight to see the early morning sun get warm in Tucson. " Tain't fer fellers like me'n you, though," he said. "Just something pretty to look at," I said to him. "At least, we know it's here, towns like this to live in, and the only thing we got to do is to learn how to do some kind of work, you know, to make a living here," I said, watching the blue shadows chase around the buildings, under the trees, and fall over the adobe fences that were like regular walls around some of the buildings. "Hot sun's good for sick folks. Lungers. ô÷. Consumptives come here all shot to hell, half dead from no sunshine 'er fresh air; hang around here for a few months, takin' it easy, an', by God, leave out of here as sound and well as the day they crippled in," he told me. I cut in on him and said, "You mean, as well as they ever was. You don't mean they go out as well as the day they come in sick." He shuffled his feet and laughed at his mistake. " 'At's right, I meant to say that. I meant to say, too, that you can come in here with a little piece of money that you saved up, 'er sold your farm or place of business to get a holt of, an' it don't last till the sun can get up good," He was smiling and moving his head. I asked him how about the broke people that was lungers. He said that they hung around on the outsides of the town, and lived as cheap as they could, and worked around in the crops, panned gold, or any old thing to make a living, in order to hang around the place till they could get healed up. Thousands of folks with their lungs shot to the devil. Every other person, he told me, was a case of some kind of ô÷. "Lots of different brands of lungers, huh?" I asked him. "Hell's bells, thousand different kinds of it. Mostly 'cording to where 'bouts you ketch it, like in a mine, or a cement factory, or saw mill. Dust ô÷, chemical ô÷ from paint factories, rosin ô÷ from the saw mills." "Boy howdy, that's hell, ain't it?" I asked him. "If they is a hell," he told me, "I reckon that's it. To be down with some kind of a trouble, disease, that you get while you're workin', an' it fixes you to where you cain't work no more." He looked down at the ground, ran his hands down into his pockets, and I guessed that he, hisself, was a lunger. "Yeah, I can see just how it is. Kinda messes a person up all th' way around. But, hell, you don't look so bad off to me; you can still put out plenty of work, I bet; that is, if you could find some to do." I tried to make him feel a little better. He cleared his throat as quiet as he could, but there was the old give-away, the little dry rattle, like the ticking of a worn-out clock. He rolled himself a smoke, and from his sack I rolled one. We both lit up from the same match, and blew smoke in the air. He thought to himself for a minute, and didn't say a word. I didn't know whether to talk any more about it or not. There is something in most men that don't like petting or pity. What he said to me next took care of the whole thing, " 'Tain't so terr'ble a thing. I keep quiet about it mostly on account of I don't want nobody looking at me, or treating me like I was a dying calf, or an old wore-out horse with a broke leg. All I aim to do is to stay out here in this high, dry country--stay out of doors all I can, and get all the work I can. I'll come out from under it." I could have stood there and talked to this man for a half a day, but my stomach just wasn't willing to wait much longer; and the two of us being in Tucson together would have been a matter of explaining more things to more cops. We wished each other good luck, and shook hands, and he said, "Well, maybe we'll both be millionaires' sons next time that we run onto each other. Hope so, anyhow." The last glimpse I got of him was when I turned around for a minute, and looked back down his direction. He was walking along with his hands in his pockets, head ducked a little, and kicking in the dust with the toe of his shoe. I couldn't help but think, how friendly most people are that have all of the hard luck. There was one more church that I had to make, the biggest one in town. A big mission, cathedral, or something. It was a great big, pretty building, with a tower, and lots of fancy rock carving on the high places. Heavy vines clumb around, holding onto the rough face of the rocks, and since it was a fairly new church, everything was just getting off to a good start. Not familiar with the rules, I didn't know just how to go about things. I seen a young lady dressed in a sad, black robe, so I walked down a mis-matched stone walk and asked her if there was any kind of work around the place that a man could do to earn a meal. She brushed the robe back out of her face and seemed to be a very polite and friendly person. She talked quiet and seemed to feel very sorry for me since I was so hungry. "I just sort of heard people talkin' up in town there, an' they said that you folks would always give a stranger a chance to work fer a meal, you know, just sorta on th' road to California. ..." I was too hungry to quit talking. Then she took a few steps and walked up onto a low rock porch. "Sit down here where it is cooler," she told me, "and I'll go and find the Sister. She'll be able to help you, I'm sure." She was a nice-looking lady. Before she could walk away, I felt like I'd ought to say something else, so I said, "Mighty cool porch ya got here." She turned around, just touching her hand to a doorknob that led somewhere through a garden. We both smiled without making any noise. She stayed gone about ten minutes. The ten minutes went pretty slow and hungry. Sister Rosa (I will call her that for a name) appeared, to my surprise, not through the door where the first lady had gone, but through a cluster of tough vines that swung close to a little arched gate cutting through a stone wall. She was a little bit older. She was just as nice, and she listened to me while I told her why I was there. "I tried lots of other places, and this is sort of a last chance." "I see! Well, I know that, on certain days, we have made it a practice to fix hot meals for the transient workers. Now, unless I am badly mistaken, we are not prepared to give meals out today; and I'm not just exactly certain when it will be free-ration day again. I know that you are sincere in your coming here, and I can plainly see that you are not one of the kind that travels through the country eating free meals when you can get work. I will take the responsibility onto my shoulders, and go and find Father Francisco for you, tell him your whole predicament, and let the judgment of the matter be up to him. As far as all of the sisters and nuns are concerned, we love to prepare the meals when the proper authority is given to us. I, personally, pray that Father Francisco will understand the great faith shown by your presence here, and that he will be led to extend to you the very fullest courtesy and helping hand." And Sister Rosa walked in through the same door that the first lady had walked in at. I set there and waited ten more minutes, getting a good bit more anxious to get a meal inside of me, and I counted the leaves on a couple of waving vines. Then counted them over again according to dark green or pale green. I was just getting ready to count them according to light green, dark yellow green, and dark green, when the first young lady stepped around through a door at my back, and tapped me on the shoulder and said that if I would go around to the front door, main entrance, Father Francisco would meet me there, and we would discuss the matter until we arrived at some definite conclusion. I got up shaking like the leaves and held onto the wall like the vines till I got myself under way, and then I walked pretty straight to the main gate. I knocked on the door, and in about three minutes the door swung open, and there was an old man with white hair, a keen shaved face, and a clean, stiff white collar that fit him right up around his neck. He was friendly and warm. He wore a black suit of clothes which was made out of good material. He said, "How do you do?" I stuck out my hand to shake, grabbed his and squeezed as friendly as I knew how and said, "Mister Sanfrancisco, Frizsansco, Frisco, I'm glad to know you! Guthrie's my name. Texas. Panhandle country. Cattle. You know. Oil boom. That's what--fine day." In a deep, quiet-sounding voice that somehow matched in with the halls of the church, he said that it was a fine day, and that he was very glad to meet me. I assured him again that I was glad to meet him, but would be somewhat gladder if I could also work for a meal. "Two days. No eats," I told him. And then, soft and friendly as ever, his eyes shining out from the dark hall, his voice spoke up again and said, "Son, I have been in this service all my life. I have seen to it that thousands of men just like you got to work for a meal. But, right at this moment, there is no kind of work to do here, no kind of work at all; and therefore, it would be just a case of pure charity. Charity here is like charity everywhere; it helps for a moment, and then it helps no more. It is part of our policy to be charitable, for to give is better than to receive. You seem still to retain a good measure of your pride and dignity. You do not beg outright for food, but you offer to do hard labor in order to earn your meal. That is the best spirit in this world. To work for yourself is to help others, and to help others is to help yourself. But you have asked a certain question; and I must answer that question in your own words to satisfy your own thinking. You asked if there is work that you can do to earn a meal. My answer is this: There is no work around here that you can do, and therefore, you cannot earn a meal. And, as for charity, God knows, we live on charity ourselves." The big, heavy door closed without making even a slight sound. I walked a half a mile trembling past the yards, down to the shacks of the railroad workers, the Mexicanos, the Negroes, and the whites, and knocked on the first door. It was a little brown wooden house, costing, alltogether, less than one single rock in the church. A lady opened the door. She said that she didn't have anything for me to do; she acted crabby and fussy, chewing the rag, and talking sour to herself. She went back in the house again, still talking. "Young men, old men, all kinds of men; walking, walking, all of the time walking, piling off of the freights, making a run across my tomato garden, and knocking on my door; men out gallivantin' around over the country; be better off if you'd of stayed at home; young boys taking all kinds of crazy chances, going hungry, thirsty, getting all dirty and ugly, ruining your clothes, maybe getting run over and killed by a truck or a train--who knows? Yes. Yes. Yes. Don't you dare run away, young nitwit. I'm a fixing you a plate of the best I got. Which is all I got. Blame fools." (Mumbling) "Ought to be at home with your family; that's where you'd ought to be. Here." (Opening the door again, coming out on the porch.) "Here, eat this. It'll at least stick to your ribs. You look like an old hungry hound dog. I'd be ashamed to ever let the world beat me down any such a way. Here. Eat every bite of this. I'll go and fix you a glass of good milk. Crazy world these days. Everybody's cutting loose and hitting the road." Down the street, I stopped at another house. I walked up to the front door, and knocked. I could hear somebody moving around on the inside, but nobody come to the door. After a few more knocks, and five minutes of waiting, a little woman opened the door back a ways, took a peek out, but wouldn't open up all of the way. She looked me over good. It was so dark in her house that I couldn't tell much about her. Just some messed-up hair, and her hand on the door. It was clean, and reddish, like she'd been in the dishwater, or putting out some clothes. Mexican or white, you couldn't tell which. She asked me in a whisper, "What, what do you want?" "Lady, I'm headin' ta California lookin' fer work. I just wondered if you had a job of work of some kind that a man could do to earn a lunch. Sack with somethin' in it ta carry along." She gave me the feeling that she was afraid of something. "No, I haven't any kind of work. Sshhh. Don't talk so loud. And I haven't got anything in the house--that is--anything fit to pack for you to eat." "I just got a meal off of th' lady down th street here, an' just thought maybe--you know, thought maybe a little sack of somethin' might come in purty handy after a day or two out on the desert--any old thing. Not very hard ta please," I told her. "My husband is sleeping. Don't talk so loud. I'm a little ashamed of what I've got left over here. Pretty poor when you need a good meal. But, if you're not too particular about it, you're welcome to take it with you. Wait here a minute." I stood there looking back up across the tomato patch to the railroad yards. A switch engine was trotting loose cars up and down the track and I knew that our freight was making up. She stuck her hand out through an old green screen door, and said, "Sshhh," and I tried to whisper "thank you," but she just kept motioning, nodding her head. I was wearing a black slip-over sweater and I pulled the loose neck open, and pushed the sack down into the bosom. She'd put something good and warm from the warming-oven into the sack, because already I could feel the good hot feeling against my belly. Trains were limbering up their big whistles, and there was a long string of cars made up and raring to step. A hundred and ten cars meant pretty certain that she was a hot one with the right-of-way to the next division. A tired-looking Negro boy trotted down the cinders, looking at the new train to spot him a reefer car to crawl into. He seen that he had a spare second or two, and he stopped alongside of me. "Ketchin' 'er out?" I asked him. "Yeah. I'm switchin' ovah pretty fas'. Jes' got in. Didn' even have no time ta hustle me up a feed. I guess I c'n eat when I gets to wheah I'm headed." His pale khaki work clothes were soaked with salty sweat. Loose coal soot, oil smoke, and colored dust was smeared all over him. He made a quick trip over to a clear puddle of water and laid flat of his belly to suck up all of the water he could hold. He blowed out his breath, and came back wiping his face with a bandana handkerchief as dirty as the railroad itself, and then the handkerchief being cool and wet, he tied it around his forehead, with a hard knot on the back of his head. He looked up at me, and shook his head sideways and said, "Keeps th' sweat from runnin' down so bad." It was an old hobo trick. I knew it, but didn't have any kind of a handkerchief. The heat of the day was getting to be pretty hard to take. I asked him, "When's th' last time ya had anything to eat?" "El Paso," he told me. "Coupl'a days back." My hand didn't ask me anything about it, but it was okay with me anyhow, and I slid the sack out of my sweater and banded it over to him. Still warm. I knew just about how good it felt when he got his hands on that warm greasy sack. He bit into a peanut-butter sandwich together with a hunk of salty pork between two slices of bread. He looked toward the water hole again, but the train jarred the cars a few feet, and we both made for the side of the high yellow cars. We got split up a few yards, and had to hang separate cars, and I thought maybe he wouldn't make it. I looked down from the top of mine, and saw him trotting easy along the ground, jumping an iron switchpost or two, and holding his sandwich and sack in both hands. He crammed the sandwich down into the sack, rolled the top edge of the sack over a couple of twists, and stuck the sack into his teeth, letting both of his hands free to use to climb up the side of the car. On the top, he crawled along the blistered tin roof until he set facing me, me on the end of my car, and him on the end of his. It was getting windier as the train got her speed up, and we waved our hats "good-bye and good luck and Lord bless you" to the old town of Tucson. I looked at the lids of my two reefer holes, and both was down so tight that you couldn't budge them with a team of horses. I looked over at my partner again, and seen that he'd got his lid open. He braced the heavy lid open, using the lock-bar for a wedge, so that it couldn't fly shut in the high wind. I seen him crawl down inside, examine the ice hole, and then he stuck his head out, and motioned for me to come on over and ride. I got up and jumped the space between the two cars, and clumb down out of the hot winds; and he finished his lunch without saying a word in the wind. Our car was an easy rider. No flat wheels to speak of. This is not true of many cars on an empty train, because loaded, a train rides smoother than when empty. Before long, a couple of other riders stuck their heads down into the hole and hollered, "Anybody down in this hole?" We yelled back, 'Two! Room fer two more! Throw yer stuff down! C'mon down!" A bundle hit the floor, and with it come an old blue serge coat, from a good suit of clothes, no doubt, during one of the earlier wars. Then one man clumb through each of the holes, and grabbed the coarse net of wire that lined the ice compartment. They settled down into a good position for riding and looked around. "Howdy. I'm Jack." The Negro boy nodded his head, "Wheeler." He put the last bite into his mouth, swallowed it down, and said, "Plenty dry." The second stranger struck a match to relight a spitty cigaret, and mumbled, "Schwartz, my name. Goddam this bull tobaccer!" The country outside, I knew, was pretty, sunny, and clear, with patches of green farming country sticking like moss along the sandy banks of the little dry desert creeks. Yes, and I would like to climb out on top and take a look at it. I told the other three men, "Believe I'll roll me one of them fags, if ya don't mind, an' then git out on top an' watch th' tourists go past." The owner of the tobacco handed me the sweaty little sack, and I licked one together. Lighting it up, I thanked him, and then I dumb up on top, and soaked up the scenery by ten million square miles. The fast whistling train put up a pretty stiff wind. It caused my cigaret to burn up like a flare of some kind, and then a wide current tore the paper from around the tobacco, and it flew in a million directions, including my own face. Fighting with the cigaret, I tilted my head in the wrong direction, and my hat sailed fifty feet up into the air, rolled out across the sand, and hung on a sticker bush. That was the last I seen of it. One of the men down on the hole hollered out, "Havin' quite a time up there, ain't you, mister?" "Quite a blow, quite a blow!" I yelled back into the hole. "Seein' much up there?" another one asked me. "Yeah, I see enuff sunshine an' fresh air ta cure all th' trouble in th' world!" I told them. "How fast we travelin'?" "I'd jedge about forty or forty-five.'' The land changed from a farming country into a weather-beaten, crumbling, and wasted stretch, with gully washes traveling in every way, brownish, hot rocks piled into canyons, and low humps topped with irony weeds and long-eared rabbits loping like army mules to get away from the red-hot train. The hills were deep bright colors, reddish sand, yellow clays, and always, to the distance, there stood up the high, flat-top cliffs, breaking again into the washing, drifting, windy face of the desert. We followed a highway, and once in a while a car coasted past, full of people going somewhere, and we'd wave and yell at one another. "Must be th' first time you ever crossed this country," the colored boy hollered up at me. "Yeah it is." I blinked my eyes to try to wash the powdery dust out of them. "First time." "I been over this road so many times I ought to tell the conductor how to go," he said. "We'll be headin' down through the low country before very long. You'll run a hundred miles below sea level and look up all at once, and see snow on the mountains and then you'll start over the hump right up to the snow. And you'll freeze yourself coming up out of all of this heat." "Mighty funny thing." "You can stay down in this hole and keep pretty warm. If all of us huddle up and cuddle up and put our hand in each others' pockets, our heat'll keep us from freezing." The coal dust and the heat finally got too tough for me, so I clumb down. The low pounding of the wheels under us, and the swaying and quivering of the train, got so tiresome that we drifted right off to sleep, and covered the miles that would put us across the California line. Night got dark, and we got closer together to keep warm. There is a little railroad station just east of Yuma where you stop to take on water. It is still at desert altitude, so you climb down and start walking around to limber up a little. The moon here is the fullest and brightest that you ever saw. The medium-size palm plants and fern-looking trees are waving real easy in the moonlight, and the brush on the face of the desert throws black shapes and shadows out across the sand. The sand looks as smooth as a slick pool of crude oil, and shines up yellow and white all around. The clear-cut cactus shapes, the brush, and the silky sand makes one of the prettiest pictures that you ever hope to see. All of the riders, seeing how pretty the night was, walked, trotted, stretched their legs and arms around, moved their shoulders, and took exercise to get their blood to running right again. Matches flare up as the boys light their smokes, and I could get a quick look at their sunburnt, windburnt faces. Flop hats, caps, or just bareheaded, they looked like the pioneers that got to knowing the feel and the smell of the roots and leaves across the early days of the desert, and it makes me want to sort of hang around there. Voices talked and said everything. "Hello." "Match on yuh?" "Yeah--shorts on that smoke." "Headin'?" " 'Frisco--ship out if I can." "How's crops in South California?" "Crops--or cops?" "Crops. Celery. Fruit. Avacados." "Work's easy ta git a holt of, but money's hard as hell.'' "Hell, Nelly, I wuz borned a-workin', an' I ain't quit yit!" "Workin', er lookin' fer work?" There was a big mixture of people here. I could hear the fast accents of men from the big Eastern joints. You heard the slow, easy-going voices of Southern swamp dwellers, and the people from the Southern hills and mountains. Then another one would talk up, and it would be the dry, nosy twang of the folks from the flat wheat plains; or the dialect of people that come from other countries, whose parents talked another tongue. Then you would hear the slow, outdoor voices of the men from Arizona, riding a short hop to get a job, see a girl, or to throw a little celebration. There was the deep, thick voices of two or three Negroes,. It sounded mighty good to my ears. All at once the men hushed up. Somebody nudged somebody else, and said, "Quiet." Then everybody ducked their heads, turned around and whispered, "Scatter out. Lay low. Hey! You! Get rid of that cigaret! Bulls a-comin'!" Three men, dressed in hard-wearing railroad suits, walked up to us before we could get gone. Flashing bright lanterns and flashlights on us, we heard them holler, "Hey! What's goin' on here?" We didn't say anything back. "Where you birds headed for?" Still silence. "What's wrong? Buncha dam dumb-dumbs? Can't none of you men say nuthin'?" The three men carried guns where it was plain to see, and hard to overlook. Their hands resting on the butts, shuffling their lights around in their hands. They rounded us up. The desert is a good place to look at, but not so easy to hide on. One or two men ducked between cars. A dozen or so stepped out across the desert, and slid down out of sight behind little bushes. The cops herded the rest of us into a crowd. Men kept scattering, taking a chance of going against the cops' orders to "halt." The few that stood still were asked several questions. "Where yuh headed?" "Yuma." "That'll be th' price of a ticket to Yuma. Step right into the office there and buy your ticket--hurry up." "Hell, fellers, you know I ain't got th' price of no ticket; I wouldn't be ridin' this freight if I had th' money fer a ticket." "Search `im," Each man was shook down, jackets, jumpers, coats, britches and suspenders, pants legs, shoes. As the searching went on, most of us managed to make a quick run for it, and get away from the bulls. Trotting around the end of the train, thinking that we'd give them the dodge, we run head-on into their spotlights, and was face to face with them. We stopped and stood still. One by one, they went through our pockets looking for money. If they found any money, whatever it was, the man was herded into the little house to buy a ticket as far down the line as his money would carry him. Lots of the boys had a few bucks on them. They felt pretty silly, with nothing to eat on, being pushed into buying "tickets" to some town they said they were heading for. "Find anything on you?" a man asked me. "Huh uh." I didn't have any for them to find. "Listen, see that old boy right in front of you? Pinch 'im. Make 'im listen to what I'm tellin' him. Ppsssst!" I punched the man right in front of me. He waited a minute, and then looked around sideways. "Listen," I said to him. The other rider commenced to talk, "I just found out"-- then he went down into a whisper "that this train is gonna pull out. Gonna try ta ditch us. When I holler, we're all gonna make a break an' swing 'er. This is a hell of a place to get ditched." We shook our heads. We all kept extra still, and passed the word along. Then the train moved backwards a foot or two--and the racket roared all out across the desert--jarring itself into the notion of traveling again, and all at once the man at my side hollered as loud as the high-ball whistle itself, "Go, boy!" His voice rung out across the cactus. "Jack rabbit, run!" Men jumped out from everywhere, from between the cars they'd been hanging onto, and out from behind the clumps of cactus weeds, and the cops, nervous, and looking in every direction, stuttered, yelled, and cussed and snorted, but when the moon looked down at the train steaming out, it saw all of us sticking on the sides, and on the top, waving, cussing, and thumbing our noses back in the faces of the "ticket" sellers. Then it got morning. A cold draft of wind was sucking in around the sides of the reefer lid. I'd asked the boys during the night how about closing the lid all of the way down. They told me that you had to keep it wedged open a little with the handle of the lock, to keep from getting locked inside. We stuck close together, using each other for sofas and pillows, and hoped for the sun to get warmer. I asked them, "Wonder how heavy that big Ïl' lid is, anyhow?" "Weighs close to a hunderd pound," the Negro boy said. He was piled in the corner, stretched out, and his whole body was shaking with the movement of the train. "Be a hell of a note if a feller wuz ta git up there, an' start ta climb out, an' that big lid wuz ta fly down an' ketch his head," another fellow said. He screwed his face up just thinking about it. "I knew a boy that lost a arm that way." "I know a boy that used ta travel around on these dam freights," I said, "harvestin', an' ramblin' around; an' he was shipped back to his folks in about a hundred pieces. I seen his face. Wheel had run right across it, from his ear, across his mouth, over to his other ear. And I don't know, but every day, ridin' these rattlers, I ketch myself thinkin' about that boy." " 'Bout as bad a thing as I can think of, is th' two boys they found starved to death, locked up inside of one of these here ice cars. Figgered they'd been in there dead 'bout a week or two when they found 'em. One of 'em wasn't more'n twelve or thirteen years old. Jist a little squirt. They crawled in through the main door, an' pulled it to. First thing they knew, a brakeman come along, locked th' door, dropped a bolt in th' lock, an' there they was. Nobody even knew where they's from, or nuthin'. Just as well been one of your folks or mine." He shook his head, thinking. The heat got worse as the train sailed along. "Git out on top, an' you c'n see Old Mexico," somebody said. "Might as well ta git yer money's worth," I told him, and in a minute I'd scrambled up the wire net again, and pushed the heavy lid back. The wind was getting hotter. I could feel the dry, burning sting that let me know that I was getting a windburn. I peeled off my sweater, and shirt, and dropped them onto the hot sheet iron, and hooked my arm around an iron brace, and laid stretched out flat of my back, getting a good Mexican border sunburn along with my Uncle Sam windburn. I get dark awful quick in the sun and wind. My skin likes it, and so do I. The Negro boy clumb up and set down beside me. His greasy cap whipped in the wind, but he held the bill tight, and it didn't blow off. He turned the cap around backwards, bill down the back of his neck, and there was no more danger of losing it. "Some country!" he told me, rolling his eyes across the sand, cactus, and crooked little bushes, "I guess every part of th' country's good for somethin', if you c'n jist only find out what!" "Yeah," I said; "Wonder what this is good for?" "Rabbits, rattlesnakes, gila monsters, tarantulars, childs of the earth, scorpions, lizards, coyotes, wild cats, bob cats, grasshoppers, beetles, bugs, bears, bulls, buffaloes, beef," he said. "All of that out there?" I asked him. "No, I was jist runnin' off at th' mouth," he laughed. I knew that he had learned a lot about the country somewhere, and guessed that he'd beat this trail more times than one. He moved his shoulders and squared his self on top of the train. I saw big strong muscles and heavy blood vessels, and tough, calloused palms of his hands; and I knew that for the most part he was an honest working man. "Lookit that ol' rabbit go!" I poked him in the ribs, and pointed across a ditch. "Rascal really moves!" he said, keeping up with the jack. "Watch 'im pick up speed," I said. "Sonofa bitch. See him clear dat fence?" He shook his head, and smiled a little bit. Three or four more rabbits began showing their ears above the black weeds. Big grayish brown ears lolling along as loose and limber as could be. "Whole dam family's out!" he told me. "Looks like it! Ma an' pa an' th' whole fam damly!" I said. 'Purty outfits, ain't they? Rabbits." He eyed the herd and nodded his head. He was a deep-thinking man. I knew just about what he was thinking about, too. "How come you ta come out on top ta ride?" I asked my friend. "Why not?" "Oh, I dunno. Said somebody had ta go." "How'd it come up?" I asked him. "Well, I sort of asked him for a cigaret, and he said that he wasn't panhandlin' for nickels to get tobacco for boys like me. I don't want to have no trouble." "Boys like you?" "Yeah, I dunno. Difference 'tween you an' me. He'd let you have tobacco, 'cause you an' him's th' same color." "What in th' Goddam hell has that got ta do with ridin' together?" I asked him. "He said it was gettin' pretty hot down in th' hatch, you know, said ever'body was sweatin' a lot. He told me th' further away from each other that we stay th' better we're gonna get along, but I knew what he meant by if' "Wuz that all?" "Yeah." "This is one hell of a place ta go ta bringin' up that kinda dam talk," I said. The train drew into El Centre, and stooped and filled her belly, panting and sweating. The riders could be seen hitting the ground for a walk and a stretch. Schwartz, the man with the sack of smoking, come out of his hole, grumbling and cussing under his breath. "Worst Goddam hole on the train, and I had to get caught down in it all night!" he told me, climbing past me on his way to the ground. "Best ridin' car on th' rail," I said. I was right, too. "It's th' worst in my book, boy," Schwartz said. The fourth man from our end of the car crawled out and dropped down to the cinders. All during the ride, he hadn't mentioned his name. He was a smiling man, even walking along by his self. When he walked up behind us, he heard Schwartz say something else about how bad our riding hole was, and he said in a friendly way, " 'Bout th' easiest riding car I've hung in a many a day." "Like hell it is," Schwartz spoke up, stopping, and looking the fellow in the face. The man looked down mostly at Schwartz's feet and listened to see what Schwartz would say next. Then Schwartz went on talking at the mouth, "It might ride easy, but th' Goddam thing stinks--see?" "Stinks?" The man looked at him funny. "I said stink, didn't I?" Schwartz ran his hand down in his pocket. This is a pretty bad thing to do amongst strangers, talking in this tone of voice and running your hand in your pocket. "You don't have to be afraid, Stranger, I ain't got no barlow knife," Schwartz told him. And then the other man looked along the cinders and smiled and said, "Listen, mister, I wouldn't be the least bit afraid of a whole car load of fellows just like you, with a knife in each pocket and two in each hand." "Tough about it, huh?" Schwartz frowned the best he could. "Ain't nothing tough about me, sort of--but I don't make a practice of bein' afraid of you nor anybody else." He settled his self a little more solid on his feet. It looked like a good fist fight was coming off. Schwartz looked around, up and down the track. "I bet you a dollar that most of the fellows riding this train feel just about like I do about riding in a hole with a dam nigger!" The Negro boy made a walk toward Schwartz. The smiling man stepped in between them. The Negro said, "Nobody don't hafta take my part, I can take up for myself. Ain't nobody gonna call me--" "Take it easy, Wheeler, take it easy," the other man said. "This guy wants something to happen. Just likes to hear his guts crawl." I took the Negro boy by the arm, and we walked along talking it over. "Nobody else thinks like that goof. Hell, let 'im go an' find another car. Let 'im go. They'll run him out of every hole on th' train. Don't worry. Ya cain't help what ya cain't help." "You know, that's right," Wheeler told me. He pulled his arm away from me, and straightened his button-up sweater a little. We turned around and looked back at our friend and Schwartz. Just like you would shoo a fly or a chicken down the road, our friend was waving his arms, and shooing Schwartz along. We could hear him awful faint, yelling, "Go on, you old bastard! Get your gripey ass out of here! And if you so much as even open your trap to make trouble for anybody riding this train, I'll ram my fist down your throat!" It was a funny thing. I felt a little sorry for the old boy, but he needed somebody to teach him a lesson, and evidently he was in the hands of a pretty good teacher. We waited till the dust had settled again, and men our teacher friend trotted up to where we stood. He was waving at bunches of men, and laughing deep down in his lungs. 'That's that, I reckon," he was saying when he got up to us. The colored boy said, "I'm gonna run over across th' highway an' buy a package of smokes. Be back in a minute--" He left us and ran like a desert rabbit. There was a faucet dripping water beside a yellow railroad building. We stopped and drank all we could hold. Washed our hands and faces, and combed our heads. There was a long line of men waiting to use the water. While we walked away, holding our faces to the slight breath of air that was moving across the yards, he asked me, "Say your name was?" I said, "Woody." "Mine's Brown. Glad ta meet you, Woody. You know I've run onto this skin trouble before." He walked along on the cinders. "Skin trouble. That's a dam good name for it." I walked along beside him. "Hard to cure it after it gets started, too. I was born and raised in a country that's got all kinds of diseases, and this skin trouble is the worst one of the lot," he told me. "Bad," I answered him. "I got sick and tired of that kind of stuff when I was just a kid growing up at home. You know. God, I had hell with some of my folks about things like that. But, seems like, little at a time, I'd sort of convince them, you know; lots of folks I never could convince. They're kinda like the old bellyache fellow, they cause a lot of trouble to a hundred people, and then to a thousand people, all on account of just some silly, crazy notion. Like you can help what color you are. Goddam' it all. Goddamit all. Why don't they spend that same amount of time and trouble doing something good, like painting their Goddam barns, or building some new roads?" The four-time whistle blew, and the train bounced back a little. That was our sign. Guys walked and ran along the side of the cars, mumbling and talking, swinging onto their iron ladders, and mounting the top of the string. Wheeler hadn't come back with the cigarets. I went over the top, and when I got set down, I commenced yanking my shirt off again, being a big hand for sunshine. I felt it burning my hide. The train was going too fast now for anybody to catch it. If Wheeler was on the ground, he's just naturally going to have a little stay over in El Centre. I looked over the other edge of the car, and saw his head coming over the rim, and I saw that he was smiling. Smoke flew like a rain cloud from a new tailor-made cigaret in his mouth. He scooted over beside me, and flipped ashes into the breeze. "You get anything to eat?" he said. I said, "No," that I hadn't got anything. He reached under his sweater and under his belt and pulled out a brown paper sack, wet, dripping with ice water, and held it up to me and said, "Cold pop. I brung a couple. Wait. Here's something to gnaw on with it," and he handed me a milk candy bar. "Candy's meal," I told him. "Sure is; last you all day. That was my last four bits." "Four bits more'n I got," I joked. We chewed and drank and talked very little then for a long time. Wheeler said that he was turning the train back to the railroad company at Indio. That's the town coming up. "I know just where to go," Wheeler told me, when the train come to a quick stop. "Don't you worry 'bout me, boy." Then before I could talk, he went on saying, "Now listen, I know this track. See? Now, don't you hang on 'er till she gets to Los Angeles, but you leave 'er up here at Colton. You'll be just about fifty miles from L.A. If you stay on till you come to L.A., them big dicks'll throw you so far back in that Lincoln Heights jail, you never will see daylight again. So remember, get off at Colton, hitch on in to Pasadena, and head out north through Burbank, San Fernando, and stay right on that 99 to Turlock." Wheeler was climbing over the side. He stuck out his hand and we shook. I said, "Good luck, boy, take it easy, but take it." He said, "Same to you, boy, and I always take it easy, and I always take it!" Then be stood still for a few seconds, bending his body over the edge of the car, and looked at me and said, "Been good to know you!" Indio to Edom, rich farm lands. Edom to Banning, with the trees popping up everywhere. Banning to Beaumont, with the fruit hanging all over the trees, and groceries all over the ground, and people all over everything. Beaumont to Redlands, the world turned into such a thick green garden of fruits and vegetables that I didn't know if I was dreaming or not. Coming out of the dustbowl, the colors so bright and smells so thick all around, that it seemed almost too good to be true. Redlands to Colton, A railroad and farming town, full of people that are wheeling and dealing. Hitch-hikers are standing around thicker than citizens. The 99 looks friendly, heading west to the coast. I'll see the Pacific Ocean, go swimming, and flop on the beach. I'll go down to Chinatown and look around. I'll see the Mexican section. I'll see the whole works. But, no, I don't know. Los Angeles is too big for me. I'm too little for Los Angeles. I'll duck Los Angeles and go north by Pasadena, out through Burbank, like Wheeler told me. I'm against the law, they tell me. Sign says: "Fruit, see, but don't pick it." Another one reads: "Fruit--beat it." Another one: "Trespassers prosecuted. Keep Out. Get away from Here." Fruit is on the ground, and it looks like the trees have been just too glad to grow it, and give it to you. The tree likes to grow and you like to eat it; and there is a sign between you and the tree saying: "Beware The Mean Dog's Master." Fruit is rotting on the ground all around me. Just what in the hell has gone wrong here, anyhow? I'm not a very smart man. Maybe it ought to be this way, with the crops laying all around over the ground. Maybe they couldn't get no pickers just when they wanted them, and they just let the fruit go to the bad. There's enough here on the ground to feed every hungry kid from Maine to Florida, and from there to Seattle. A Twenty-nine Ford coupe stops and a Japanese boy gives me a ride. He is friendly, and tells me all about the country, the crops and vineyards. "All you have got to do out in this country is to just pour water around some roots, and yell, 'Grapes!' and next morning the leaves are full grown, and the grapes are hanging in big bunches, all nice and ready to pick!" The little car traveled right along. A haze was running around the trees, and the colors were different than any that I'd ever seen in my life. The knotty little oak and iron brush that I'd been used to seeing rolling with the Oklahoma hills and looking smoky in the hollers, had been home to my eyes for a long time. My eyes had got sort of used to Oklahoma's beat-up look, but here, with this sight of fertile, rich, damp, sweet soil that smelled like the dew of a jungle, I was learning to love another, greener, part of life. I've tried to keep loving it ever since I first seen it. The Japanese boy said, "Which way do you plan to go through Los Angeles?" "Pasadena? That how ya say if? Then north through Burbank, out that a-way!" "If you want to stay with me, you'll be right in the middle of Los Angeles, but you'll be on a big main highway full of trucks and cars out of town. Road forks here. Make up your mind quick." "Keep a-drivin'," I said, craning my neck back to watch the Pasadena road disappear under the palm trees to the north of us. We rounded a few hills and knolls, curving in our little jitney, and all at once, coming over a high place, the lights of Los Angeles jumped up, running from north to south as far as I could see, and hanging around on the hills and mountains just as if it was level ground. Red and green neon flickering for eats, sleeps, sprees, salvation, money made, lent, blowed, spent. There was an electric sign for dirty clothes, clean clothes, honky tonky tonks, no clothes, floor shows, gyp-joints, furniture in and out of homes. The fog was trying to get a headlock on the houses along the high places, Patches of damp clouds whiffed along the paving in crazy, disorganized little bunches, hunting some more clouds to work with. Los Angeles was lost in its own pretty lights and trying to hold out against the big fog that rolls in from that ocean, and the people that roll in just as reckless, and rambling, from the country as big as the ocean back East. It was about seven or eight o'clock when I shook hands with my Japanese friend, and we wished each other luck. I got out on the pavement at the Mission Plaza, a block from everything in the world, and listened to the rumbling of people and smoking of cars pouring fumes out across the streets and alleys. "Hungry?" the boy asked me. "Pretty empty. Just about like an old empty tub,'' I laughed at him. If he'd offered me a nickel or a dime, I would of took it, I'd of spent it on a bus to get the hell out of that town. I was empty. But not starved yet, and more than something to eat, I felt like I wanted to get outside of the city limits. "Good luck! Sony I haven't any money on me!" he hollered as he circled and wheeled away into the big traffic. I walked along a rough, paved street. To my left, the shimmy old houses ran up a steep hill, and tried to pretend that they were keeping families of people in out of the wind and the weather. To my right there was the noise of the grinding, banging, clanging, and swishing of the dirty railroad yards. Behind me, south, the big middle of Los Angeles, chasing hamburgers. Ahead of me, north, the highway ached on, blinking its red and green eyes and groaning under the heavy load of traffic that it had to carry. Trains hooted in the low yards close under my right elbow, and scared me out of my wits. "How'd ya git outta this town?" I asked a copper. He looked me over good, and said, "Just follow your nose, boy. You can read signs. Just keep traveling!'' I walked along the east side of the yards. There was lots of little restaurants beside the road, where the tourists, truck drivers, and railroaders dropped in for a meal. Hot coffee steamed up from the cups along the counters, and the smell of meat frying leaked out through the doors. It was a cold night. Drops of steamy moisture formed on the windows, and it blurred out the sight of the people eating and drinking. I stopped into a little, sawed-off place, and the only person in sight, away back, was an old Chinaman. He looked up at me with his gray beard, but didn't say a single word. I stood there a minute, enjoying the warmth. Then I walked back to where he was, and asked him, "Have ya got anything left over that a man could do some work for?" He set right still, reading his paper, and then looked up and said, "I work. Hard all day. Every day. I got big bunch people to feed. We eat things left over. We do work." "No job?" I asked him. "No job. We do job. Self." I hit the breeze again and tried two or three other places along the road. Finally, I found an old gray-headed couple humped up in front of a loop-legged radio, listening to some of the hollering being done by a lady name Amy Semple Temple, or something like that. I woke the old pair up out of their sermon on hell fire and hot women, and asked them if they had some work to do for a meal. They told me to grab some scalding hot water and mop the place down. After three times over the floors, tables, kitchen, and dishes, I was wrapping myself around a big chicken dinner, with all of the trimmings. The old lady handed me a lunch and said, "Here's some-thing extra to take with you--don't let John know about it." And as I walked out the door again, listening to the whistle of the trains getting ready to whang out, John walked over and handed me a quarter and said, "Here's somethin' ta he'p ya on down th' road. Don't let th' Ïl' lady know." A man dressed in an engineer's cap and striped overhalls told me that a train was making up right at that point, and would pull out along about four in the morning. It was now about midnight, so I dropped into a coffee joint and took an hour sipping at a cup. I bought a pint of pretty fair red port wine with the change, and stayed behind a signboard, drinking wine to keep warm. A Mexican boy walked up on me and said, "Pretty cold iss it not? Do you want a smoke?" I lit up one of his cigarets, and slipped him the remains of the wine jug. He took about half of the leavings, and looked at me between gulps, "Ahhhh! Warms you up, no?" "Kill it. I done had my tankful," I told him, and heard the bubbles play a little song that quit when the wine was all downed. "Time's she gittin' ta be? Know?" I said to him. "Four o'clock or after," he said. "When does that Fresno freight run?" I asked him. ''Right now," he said. I ran out into the yards, jumping dark rails, heavy switches, and darting among the blind cars. A string of black ones were moving backwards in the wrong direction. I mounted the side and went over the top, and down the other side, and took a risk on scrambling between another string at the hitch. I could just barely see, it was so dark. The cars were so blended into the night. But, all at once, I looked up within about a foot of my face, and saw a blur, and a light, and a blur, and a light, and I knew that here was one going my way. I watched the light come along between the cars, and finally spotted an open top car, which was easier to see; and grabbed the ladder, and jumped over into a load of heavy cast-iron machinery. I laid down in the end of the car, and rested. The train pulled along slow for a while. I ducked as close up behind the head end of the car as I could to break the wind. Pretty soon the old string got the kinks jerked out of her, and whistled through a lot of little towns. Then we hit a good fifty for about an hour, and started up some pretty tough grade. It got colder higher up. The fog turned into a drizzle, and the drizzle into a slow rain. I imagined a million things bouncing along in the dark. A quick tap of the air brakes to slow the train down, and the hundred tons of heavy machinery would shift its weight all over me, I felt so soft and little. I had felt so tough and big just a few minutes ago. The lonesome whip of the wind sounded even more lonesome when the big engine joined in on the whistling. The wheels hummed a song, and the weather got colder. We started gaining altitude almost like an airplane. I pulled myself up into a little ball and shook till my bones ached all over. The weather didn't pay any more attention to my clothes than if I didn't have them on. My muscles drew up into hard, leathery strings that hurt. I kept a little warmer by remembering people I'd known, how they looked, faces and all, and all about the warm desert, and cactus and sunshine growing everywhere; picturing in my mind something friendly and free, something to sort of blot out the wind and the freezing train. On a big slope, that went direct into Bakersfield, we stopped on a siding to let the mail go by. I got off and walked ten or fifteen cars down the track, creaking like an eighty-year-old rocking chair. I had to walk slow along the steep cinder bank, gradually getting the use of myself back again. I was past the train when the engineer turned the brakes loose, give her the gun, and started off. I'd never seen a train start up this fast before. Most trains take a little time chugging, getting the load swung into motion. But, setting on this long straight slope, she just lit out. Running along the side, I just barely managed to catch it. I had to take a different car as mine was somewhere down the line. In a few minutes the train was making forty miles an hour, then fifty, then sixty, down across the strip of country where the mountains meet the desert south of Bakersfield. The wind blew and the morning was frosty and cold. Between the two cars, it was freezing. I managed to mount to the top, and pull a reefer lid open. I looked in, and saw the hole was filled with fine chips of new ice. I held on with all of my strength, and crawled over and opened up another lid. It was packed with chipped ice, too. I was too near froze to try the jump from one car to the next, so I crawled down the ladder between two cars--sort of a wind-break--and held on. My hands froze stiff around the handle of the ladder, but they were getting too cold and weak to hold on much longer. I listened below to five or six hundred railroad wheels, clipping the rails through the morning frost, and felt the windy ice from the refrigerator car that I was hanging onto. The fingers of one hand slipped from around the handle. I spent twenty minutes or so trying to fish an old rag out of my pocket Finally I got it wound around my hands and, by blowing my breath inside the cloth for a few minutes, seemed to be getting them a little warmer. The weather gained on me, though, and my breath turned into thick frosty ice all over my handkerchief, and my hands started freezing worse than ever. My finger slid loose again, and I remembered the tales of the railroaders, people found along the tracks, no way of telling who they were. If I missed my hold here, one thing was sure, I'd never know what hit me, and I'd never slide my feet under that good eating table full of hot square meals at the big marble house of my rich aunt. The sun looked warmer as it came up, but the desert is cold when it is clear early in the morning, and the train fanned such a breeze that the sun didn't make much difference. That was the closest to the 6x3 that I've ever been. My mind ran back to millions of things--my whole life was brought up to date, and all of the people I knew, and all that they meant to me. And, no doubt, my line of politics took on quite a change right then and there, even though I didn't know I was getting educated at the time. The last twenty miles into the Bakersfield yards was the hardest work, and worst pain, that I ever run onto; that is, of this particular brand. There are pains and work of different sorts, but this was a job that my life depended on, and I didn't have even one ounce to say about it. I was just a little animal of some kind swinging on for my life, and the pain was not being able to do anything about it. I left the train long before it stopped, and hit the ground running and stumbling. My legs worked more like toys than like my real ones. But the sun was warm in Bakersfield, and I drank all of the good water I could soak up from a faucet outside, and walked over to an old shack that was out of use in the yards, and keeled over on the cinders in the sun. I woke up several hours later, and my train had gone on without me. Two men said that another train was due out in a few minutes, so I kept an eye run along the tracks, and caught it when it pulled out. The sun was warm now, and there were fifty men lined up along the top of the train, smoking, talking, waving at the folks in cars on the highway, and keeping quiet. Bakersfield on into Fresno. Just this side of Fresno, the men piled off and walked through the yards, planning to meet the train again when it come out the north end. We took off by ones and twos and tried to get hold of something to eat. Some of the men had a few nickels, some a dollar or two hid on them, and others made the alleys knocking on the back doors of bakeries, greasy-spoon joints, vegetable stands. The meal added up to a couple or three bites apiece, after we'd all pitched ours in. It was something to fill your guts. I saw a sign tacked up in the Fresno yards that said: Free Meal & Nights Lodging. Rescue Mission. Men looked at the sign and asked us, "Anybody here need ta be rescued?" "From what?" somebody hollered. "All ya got ta do is ta go down there an' kneel down an' say yer prayers, an' ya git a free meal an' a flop!" somebody explained. "Yeah? Prayers? Which one o' youse boys knows any t'ing about any prayers?" an Eastern-sounding man yelled out. "I'd do it, if I wuz just hungery 'nuff! I'd say 'em some prayers!" "I don't hafta do no prayin' ta get fed!" a hard looker laughed out. He was poking a raw onion whole into his mouth, tears trickling down his jaws. "Oh, I don't know," a quieter man answered him, "I sometimes believe in prayin'. Lots of folks believes in prayin' before they go out to work, an' others pray before they go out to fight. An' even if you don't believe in a God up on a cloud, still, prayin's a pretty good way to get your mind cleared up, or to get the nerve that it takes to do anything. People pray because it makes them think serious about things, and, God or no God, it's all that most of them know how to do." He was a friendly man with whitish hair, and his easy temper sounded in his voice. It was a thinking voice. " 'Course," a big Swede told us, "we justa kid along. These monkeys dun't mean about halfa what they say. Now, like, you take me, Swede, I prayed long time ago. Usta believe in it strong. Then, whoof, an' a lot of other things happen that knock my prop out from under me, make me a railroad bum, an'--I just forget how to pray an' go church." A guy that talked more and faster said,