Читать книгу Coastal Missouri: Driving On the Edge of Wild - John Drake Robinson - Страница 3
Not All Aboard
Оглавление“Just throw me off the train.”
Even as I spoke, I knew I’d just pushed my own self-destruct button. But the conductor left me no choice.
I was an innocent man. I had just boarded the train, and found an empty window seat. Seconds later, I watched out my big window as we inched away from the train station.
Amtrak was taking me home. I settled back into my seat and listened to the rhythm of the steel wheels on the rails as the train gained momentum. Behind me I could hear the conductor moving up the aisle.
“Tickets.” He had his own rhythm. “Tickets,” he said with authority as the click of his ticket puncher punched its way closer to my seat. But when he reached me, his rhythm stopped. He looked at my ticket, then he let out a sigh that could only be followed by bad news.
“You shoulda boarded one stop earlier, at Union Station, downtown,” he told me. “Now you’ll have to buy another ticket.”
“What?” I thought he was joking.
“You didn’t get on board where you were supposed to.”
“What does it matter?” I protested. “I paid for the whole ride. I just joined you one stop later.”
“It throws off our accounting. I’ll have to charge you for another ticket.”
“You gotta be kidding me. I don’t have the money to buy another ticket. Tell you what: If I’ve messed up your accounting, just throw me off the train. I’ll get off right here.”
“You don’t have a credit card?”
“Not for this.” I said, looking him squarely in his name badge. “Throw me off the train, Brian.”
I knew I’d lost my cool. Brian the Conductor had unleashed my deep resentment of the railroad’s attitude. When the railroad barons first blazed their trails through here, they hired ruffians called tie hackers to chop whole forests into railroad ties. The railroads laid the tracks on the backs of dime-a-day labor. Then they murdered all the buffalo. Along the way they managed to piss off Jesse James. And now, me.
“I don’t normally do this,” Brian the Conductor said. “But I’ll call Union Station, and get you added on.”
“You don’t normally do this? How often does this happen?”
“A lot. People are always trying to get on in Kirkwood, instead of where they bought the ticket for: downtown.”
“Then why don’t you figure out a way to fix it?”
The conductor sighed and walked up the aisle to the next passenger. “Tickets.”
* * *
I was secretly thankful that Brian the Conductor didn’t throw me off the train. Even as we hurtled through the middle of America, I knew there was wilderness on the other side of this big window. It’s the kind of wilderness that offers good places to hide.
The train rolled across a trestle. I looked down at the Gasconade River, and saw the telltale signs of a manhunt. Posted on each bank beside the trestle were men carrying 12-gauge shotguns. Their green uniforms told me they were prison guards, looking for an escapee from one of the four prisons that hug this area’s riverbanks. Around here, when inmates go over the wall and make a run for it, they sneak along the easiest paths to freedom: riverbanks and railroad tracks. It’s the fastest way to make it through the thick underbrush in these wooded hills. So the cops post sentries on the bridges, and wait for escapees to show up, tired, cold, hungry. Ready to give up, usually.
The train crossed another river. More green-clad guards with shotguns.
I settled back in my seat and watched the scenery pass by the big window, farms and fields framed by second-growth forests and speckled with wild hemp that grows as high as an elephant’s eye. But mostly, I saw wilderness.
I snagged a newspaper from a vacant seat and scanned the first few pages. Within minutes the newspaper crumpled into my lap, and I fell asleep.
It wasn’t long before a recurrent nightmare hijacked my dream sequence, as it always does. The nightmare is vivid and real, because the events truly happened to me. Now look, I’m not superstitious, and I’m not prone to interacting with ghosts, holy or unholy. But I do know this: I shook hands with the Devil.
The handshake happened three decades ago. I’d joined a band to play a wedding reception in old Rosati Hall, a sweet relic in the vineyards that drape the rolling Ozark hills on the outskirts of St. James. The wedding reception was like a thousand others, at least from the view of a band. Joyous occasion. Happy crowd.
As we set up our instruments in this beautiful old wooden dance hall, a scuzzy man approached the bandstand and watched silently. He looked rough, the kind of rough that makes you wonder how he’d survived forty years, rough years that made him look sixty. His fingernails were tattooed an oil slick brown. His face was streaked where he’d wiped his brow. Among the other guests, he stuck out like a finger poking through toilet paper. But that’s OK, because this is the wild west, the wilderness. And people around here tolerate their neighbors who don’t clean up well, even when they come to funerals or weddings.
“What’s that hole for?” he asked, pointing to a foot-wide hole cut in the front skin of a big bass drum.
“So we can stick a microphone inside the drum,” I answered.
My friendly response prompted him to stick out his hand. “Bill’s my name,” he said as I gripped his handshake. “Bill Zebub,” I think I recall his name, at least in my dream. I could feel the dirty oil on his hand. “I work for Russell Bliss.”
Russell Bliss! The name smacked me. That’s the same guy who spread waste oil on the dirt roads and horse farms around here, to dampen and seal the thick summer dust. The waste oil was laced with deadly dioxin. I’d just been Tased by a handshake.
As I tell this story, Russell Bliss has been dead for many years. But on that warm summer night in a country dance hall wedding reception, if you shouted his name, everybody would know about Russell Bliss. He claimed he didn’t know the waste oil contained dioxin, and he was never convicted of knowingly spreading poison. But the waste oil he spread contaminated roads and fields and horse tracks, even shut down an entire town.
Meanwhile, Bill Zebub kept a strong grip on my hand, one of those grips that lasts while you exchange a few greetings back and forth. I tried not to show panic, looking at my hand when he released it, assuming I’d just accepted my death sentence.
“Excuse me,” I said to Bill the Infector, and dashed to the tiny bathroom in the corner of the hall. I scrubbed my hands vigorously for as long as my skin could stand the hot water, chanting my new death mantra, “parts per billion . . . parts per billion.”
We played the gig without further incident, I steered clear of Bill Zebub, and I’m still alive today, with only one minor side effect from that handshake. I tell a lot of lies.
But the nightmare recurs. It’s vivid because it really happened.
After the dance, the nightmare wasn’t over.
Oh, I made a clean getaway from the reception at Rosati Hall. But I knew I carried the time-bomb poison from Beelzebub’s handshake. So the next morning, death banged on my brain. I needed something to steady my nerves.
Johnnie’s Bar has been serving whiskey in downtown St. James since the Irish laborers built the railroad through here. Even from the outside, Johnnie’s looks foreboding, with its big neon Stag Beer sign over a doorway into cold, smoky darkness. It’s the kind of place that makes you hear your mother’s voice: “I better never catch you going in there.”
“Don’t worry, Mom, I’ll never go in there.”
But in life, a young boy’s perspective evolves. Moms just don’t understand that places like Johnnie’s have the elixir that can subdue frightful images of devils and demons, dioxin and death.
Or bring them out.
Soon I was immersed in the culture of the locals in the low light of this tavern, a delightful throwback to the days when the barroom was filled with rail passengers and conductors and brakemen and engineers laying over.
Hours later, having dipped liberally into John Barleycorn’s reserves, I paid my bill and threw down a liberal tip, and walked out the door.
I was walking to the edge of town, preparing to hitchhike home, when I saw a single car, a sleek silver hearse approaching. It was going my way, but in reverence to its passenger, I showed no thumb, instead placing my hand over my heart and bowing my head. As the hearse passed, it slowed to a stop. Its backup lights told me that the hearse was coming back for me. Even significant whiskey impairment couldn’t dull my panic. As the hearse drew nigh to my startled face, the passenger window rolled down and the voice from the driver’s seat called out.
“John Robinson!”
I swallowed hard and leaned into the hearse’s open window, expecting to meet the Grim Reaper. Instead, I saw the familiar face of an old friend from high school.
“What are you doing way down here?” he asked.
“Son of a bitch!” I think I shouted, as a feeling of relief washed through my veins.
For reasons of good taste and legal advice, I’ll protect the anonymity of the driver and his pallid passenger. I have no idea who his passenger was, since the casket was closed. Suffice it to say the three of us had a pleasant ride to my destination, and two of us had a great conversation.
“So long, buddy, and thanks for the ride.” I hopped out and he drove away in the general direction of his passenger’s final stop.
That’s when I always wake out of my nightmare, always with the same nagging questions. Did Bill Zebub know he was spreading seeds of death? Does my dear departed mother know I stopped at Johnnie’s Bar? Did that stiff in the hearse ever pick up hitchhikers?
She did on her last ride.
Those events happened years ago. But my nightmare serves as a reminder that the next time a hearse stops to give me a ride, it’ll probably be my last.
So this recurring nightmare is a catalyst, of sorts, prodding me to get busy.
I awoke in my seat on the train with my face pressed against the giant window. The passing farms and forests and hemp had given over to the rail bed’s most constant companion, the Missouri River. Rails and rivers and prison escapees seem to end up together a lot, since they all seek the path of least resistance.
For a short century, this same river hosted the golden age of steamboat travel. Now the river is mostly empty on its surface. But hundreds of shipwrecks hide beneath the riverbed, hundreds of paddlewheel steamers that sank before the railroads had a chance to kill them off.
* * *
Brian the Conductor strode back through our rail car. He didn’t stop to chat with me, or even glance at me. I was relieved, but in a way it was sad that we couldn’t resolve a problem that was gonna piss off more unsuspecting passengers down the line.
That’s just the nature of things, I guess.
* * *
All those things—the recurrent nightmares, the dispute with Brian the Conductor—those things happened before she rolled into my life. She’s been with me for fifteen years now, a steady ride for almost 300,000 miles.
Together, we drove every mile of every road on my state highway map.
Maybe she would have preferred a normal life. Smooth highways. Familiar landmarks. But she accepted her fate without complaint.
Along our backroad odyssey, we’ve dodged rabbits and turtles, texters and drunks. We’ve slid sideways in sleet, jumped curbs and low-water crossings, even did the limbo under a downed power line. We’ve hung on the back of the Toad Suck Ferry, and every other ferry crossing every river on our map. We’ve passed every pun on every church marquee, every time and temperature sign, every clip joint and carny barker and corn dog vendor, every barbecue shack and Tex-Mex taco stand. And we’ve stopped at most of ’em.
We’ve driven by every brick shit house and half the meth labs in North America, into deep woods that hide chip mills, where forests get chewed up and spit out, and lead mines where brain cells go to die, and lonely backroads where the only sound is hate radio. During the time it took to complete our travels, the golden arches slung another ten billion burgers, I’d guess, and Congress got goatroped by fifty million angry, shouting factions.
We drove on roads that Tom Wolfe assigns to the great flyover. Yet in these backwoods, Joseph Smith found the Garden of Eden. I found the footprints of the world’s most notorious outlaw, the world’s preeminent adventure novelist, and the world’s greatest clown. That’s Jesse James, Mark Twain and Emmett Kelly, for the record.
It’s dangerous out there. And nowhere is it more dangerous than the wilderness in the middle of America. At the end of every black top road, where the sign warns that “State Maintenance Ends,” I knew I was crossing a threshold, a no man’s land scattered with rattlesnakes and rednecks, deep woods caverns and cracks named after devils, whirlpools and whiskey stills and puppy mills, meth cookers and cock fights and creeping vines that can smother whole forests and fish that jump up and smack you in the head.
It’s dangerous out there. And if you’re gonna ride into the wilderness, you need a trusty steed. My ride is a 1999 Pontiac Sunfire named Erifnus Caitnop, and she’s sleek and red and hides 120 horses under her hood, and I’ve rode ’em all, just to get her back to safe haven. Every time I went to the edge of civilization and jumped into the wilderness, she delivered me there.
Her top shows the scars from my canoe, and she’s hauled it 10,000 miles or more, dropping us beside dozens of remote riverbanks. I guess there were times that she wondered if she’d ever bring me back home, as she waited for my canoe and me to cover a lot of water.
There’s a surprising amount of water in America’s middle.
Some folks are silly enough to believe that we’ve tamed it.