Page Four PERSPECTIVES dazed and I half-dragged him, half walked him to the door through th miscellaneous fights starting up. Outside we stood in the doorway be forg we ran, trying to see which wa was best to go. In the instant, abov the buildings the great flames of th mill fires went up and went down again The skies burned. Then blacknes crushed down on the tips of stacks an furnaces just silhouetted behind th warehouses. A police siren whined and someone shifted gears too fast and w ran. We stumbled toward the freight yard through an alley, behind stores nc Around ash barrels and incinerator grates. We heard the sudden reluctan grunt of cars compacting and, as we go closer, the busy chug of the switch en- gines. I got Muscle through the hole in the fence and werhid in the shadow of the toolshed near track 18. We waited. "Hurt?" I whispered. "No. No. All right. Just candled for a second." "Numb?" He didn't answer. "How'd the fight start? The great big mans pick on you?" "A queer," he said aloud. "He comes 'p to me and propositions. Just like that. So I hit him." "Holy cow! So that's what he was." "Yeah. A queer. Can you imagine? A queer coming up to me. I coulda had that babe any time, the one at the bar. Any time, and this faery comes up to se." "Everybody'seems to like you," I said. "Yeah, Im popular, but I'm hard to get," he said. "I could have had that skirt any time," he added amusedly. A lantern swung in a wild arc beside the westbound freight and the solid figure of a man was outlined in the drifting steam. It was the yard man giving us the high sign. "Tight? Tight hell. You're drunk. Or it's the bump on your head." "Drunk!" And he spat disgustedly. "And why not?" He looked over at the fellow curled in the darkness who had beennwatching us like a cat. He made me nervous. Muscle shouted at him. "Where you from, punk?" He looked as if he didn't hear. "Where you from!"- Muscle boomed above the car wheels. The fellow stirred. "You talkin' to me? Where'd you get the punk stuff?" "Oh don't get tough. I ain't goin' to eat You." Muscle added cheerily, "Don't think I couldn't." "Up New York State. What's .it to you?". "Lippy, ain't you. Tough and lippy: got spirit. That's nice." The new fellow moved closer to the soft light now coming in the door as we got farther and farther from town. He was just a kid with a long curving nose and hair was smooth and straight back. When he saw Muscle was kidding he glowed with surprise and swagger. "Sure I'm tough. You gotta be tough to get anyplace these days." "Ain't it the truth?" Muscle said. "What place are you going?" I asked. The kidrstarted at hearing me. After Muscle first spoke he hadn't paid any attention to me. "Oh," he said. "Yeah. Yeah. Chi- cago maybe. Getta job. Something steady. My God there ain't a chance -fora young fells today. You got no idea how hard times is." "Yeah, Mister Hoover?" I said. "Who said I don't know?" "Aw gee. When you got a girl and you wanna get married like a young fella should, settle down and quitchas- ing every bitch he sees " "Aw, gee," Muscle said. "He's gotta girl." "Yeah," and tle kid grinned all over. "Aw. And you wants marry her." The kid's big popeyes and his droop- ing mouth were all cowlike and happy. "Now ain't that the nuts" Muscle was disgusted. "If the kid ain't found, his soulmate. Like the queer tonight thought maybe I was his soulmate. Don't I lookit though?" "Aw forget I ever said anything," the kid said and he sounded so lonely and e the way he curled up I thought he wa going to cry. "You guys are just bum that's all." y "You got me wrong, punk," Muslek e said seriously. "Don't get sore at me e I just don't go for this soulmate stuff . that's all. Women don't get you no s where." d The kid looked at Muscle for a while e "Say," he said, "you got a cut on your head, ain't you?" e "Yeah, but it ain't much. I just got a bump." s "I got some water if you want." He held up a milk bottle, r"Say, Muscle," I said, "I'll fix your t head." t "I don' wanna," Muscle said, but the kid put the bottle on the floor between 'us and the moon rising outside lit it 5up. "Naw," Muscle said. "I wanna talk about soulmates. You look at the kid and he wants to get married. Why? Be- cause he thinks he wants something and she wants something and they think they're going to get past by being mar- ried. but if you ask me, they'll keep right on wanting and wanting . . . . That's why they get families and kids. "Forget that stuff, punk, it ain't getting you nowhere." "Aw what do you know about it?" the kid said. "You don't know what a decent girl is, I'll bet. I'll get me a job and to me it's worth something even if it ain't to you." "Nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts," Muscle said and he rose and clasped his hands above him, stretching. "I really and truly feel good," he said, leaning in the half-open door, then he went to the end of the car. There was straw there and clean ma- nure smell. He fumbled around back there and I tried not to think of any- thing I was so tired., "Hey, you guys!" Muscle shouted. "Find something?" "Jesus Christ yes." The kid and I went back to him. He was holding a snatch and its yellow flickering splattered his face. "Well, don't tell me we got a treasure," I said. "We sure have. Look." He held something large up out of the straw and lowered the match. Before it went out we saw it was a man and his face had one side swollen until it didn't look like a face and the mouth was ripped at the corner and the flesh hung down. The other side was untouched with just a struggle of blood on it. The kid half- screamed, gurgling as if he'd swallowed his tongue. After. the first shockMuscle stared down at the dead man contemplatively. "God damn," he whispered. "For Christ sake, let's get out of here," I said. "What for? He ain't going to eat you." "Good God, you know what they'd do to us. We'd burn just like that." "Relax, punk. Relax." He sniffed. "He don't smell good, does he?" "It's liquor," "He ain't a pretty sight at all." "Let's get out of here. You know what they can do to us." "Throw us in the can." "We can't prove nothing. They'd burn us." "Oh relax. It ain't nothing. You can't jump out the train now anyhow. It's going too fast. Sit down. Take some of the straw. He don't need it." "Quit your goddam kidding," I said, but it was true. We were moving too fast; jumping would have been suicide. Muscle made us sit down near the door again and the three of us lined up against the door, backs to the wall, waited for the train to slow up some. The moon was high outside and streamed in, shifting like a searchlight when we swung around'a curve, short- ening and lengthening as the car swayed. The wheels spread a steady beat over our silence and that milk bottle teetered in the moonlight. Muscle spoke first. He seemed to continue some conversation he had been having with himself silently. "That's what's wrong with guys. Most guys." The kid trembled beside me, looking back at the end of the car, then outside. s "What are you talking about?" I s asked Muscle. "Oh, take that guy bacl5 there. He's dead, ain't he? What are we scared of?" "Oh, I'm not looking for any hang- ing, 'specially my own." "Naw. You don't get me. I mean. you take that queer tonight and this kid here and that dead guy. They all sort of stand for something." "I don't know about the kid or the queer, but the dead guy stands for us burning and I don't like it. Let's jump." Muscle stared at the milk bottle oddly as it tempted equilibrium in the dancing moonlight. "Gimme a match." he said tensely, and I handed him my box. Pulling an old pipe from his pocket, he held it carefully for me to see. "Guess I'll smoke. You still can't jump, punk," he added casually. "Well, there's no sense in hurting our- self, I guess. But I'm getting ready," I said. "Aw, take it easy," he said and with extreme casualness he went on, "You know, it's funny how you never know what's in the other guy's mind, isn't it?" "What do you expect? Even the mind readers are wrong." "I got something figured out, kiddo, and maybe the kid there thinks I'm nuts, but I think I understand guys like him and that queer." "What do you expect? Those guys are born that way, that's all," I said. "That ain't all either. They're born that way, but that ain't all." "No," I said. "They're different all right: that's why we call them queers." "But we're all different. Not queers, I mean, but different and it's like a thread that's running from him to me and you to me and the dead guy and the kid and his girl . . . only there ain't no thread really." "Listen, you guys," the kid broke in, "I think it's slowing up." I jumped up but Muscle grabbed me. "Aw shut up, you. I'll tell you. You wait. You'll kill yourself." The cold danger of Muscle's tone stopped the kid. Then Muscle turned back to me and he talked softly, "It's like that queer was trying to tell me something and I didn't want to listen . . or I couldn't." He faltered, then blurted out, "Me, I gave up telling people things when I was a kid." "You sure wouldn't believe it tonight, my fran'," I said. "Sure, I know. But I wanna ask you something. You know how it is in the fall with people burning their leaves, how they smell?" "Yeah?" "Hang on to the kid there; he's ner- vous. When I said burning leaves, what did they make you think of? Right then I mean." I realized that even in this time wait- ing to jump from the car, him mention- ing burning leaves had made me re- member something. "Well, it's this way," I said, "my home town's in a valley and the moun- tains are just like walls around it and in the fall you get up in the mountains and look down. You can't see the town hardly because.of the smoke. It's like a cloud sort of settled in the valley only a couple of church steeples stick up out of it and maybe in the evening around six you can see electric lights just dim. If you want to know, that's what I thought." "Yeah?" Muscle said. "Me, I get something different, me and my old man sitting on the side of a dirt road. My God, we're all different, ain't we?" 1 "Yeah, so what?" "My old man was like that; he wasf all the time looking for a soulmate. I1 don't know for sure, but I think so." "I wanna get outta here," the kid f whimpered hysterically.t "My, my. You aint scared, kiddo? My,C my." Muscle teased him. Then he snar- t led. "Aw get your mind off him. He's dead. You got too much imagination.r Guys like you shouldn't have so much imagination. It ain't good. You see," he c said to me, "the old man started going around with this girl in our home town. He had a long time growing up and get- ting old, I guess. My old lady got fat and cranky over him and he started in on this girl. You listening?" "Yeah. But I dont know what for. Let's get the hell outa here." "Ain't you enjoying this like I am," he jeered. "Whyn't you jump? Scared?" He took my arm in a crushing grip, "Whyn't you just sit here listen to me while I talk?" He shook my arm and went on with his story. "You see, I used to think he was Jesus Christ the second, hero stuff, so one day I tell him about the burning leaves." Muscle lit his pipe and tossed the match still burning back toward the dead man in the darkness. It went out at the height of its flaring arc. Just then the teetering bottle fell, rolling and bumping and banging back and forth until it finally tumbled out the door. "Well," I asked, "What'd he say?" "Oh, nothing, just nothing. It was like he didn't know what I was talking about. I remember it clear as day." "That's too bad." "Aw hell. What do you expect?", He grunted, "Soulmates! And this punk here'll go killing himself chasing a girl, living up to what he thinks she is, fight- ing to keep a job and what for . . .? A lousy apartment in Philly or Chicago or some lump of concrete like that." "Aw, what d'you know?" the kid blub- bered. "Shut up, kid," I said. "For Christ sake let him finish. Go on about your old man. Get it over with." "What do you mean?" Muscle said. "Oh, about the girl and him." "Oh, I told him about the leaves and he didn't say nothing. But once I saw them, him and the girl, together once walking though before she give him the gate and he lit out. Walking along some road out of the woods near our town. It was a long time but I still remember. She looked so damn happy." Muscle looked sidelong at us and added sheep- ishly, "Young and far away. I like that," he said defensively. "The old man was talking but she wasn't listening. He left town right after and she married some guy about a year after. We never saw the old man again." Muscle lit his pipe again and watched the match fly brightly to the floor. "My God, isn't there enough trouble without you throwing lighted matches around." "You're nervous, son. Your nerves is shot, my boy. What you need is a good, long rest," Muscle said sagely. "Goddam you anyway. We gotta get out of here, you big slug. Seriously," I said, "I'm scared." Muscle still held my arm. We went to the door, hanging on as the car swayed. The whole country was in moonlight. You could see the farms laid out, the fields furrowed and the hills checkered with the first shoots of the new crops. Once the train sped past a dust road with two ruts that were white and straight in the moonlight until they climbed a hill and disappeared. I thought about the kid and that dead guy and suddenly felt awfully lonely. "God damn, god damn, god damn .." Muscle whispered hoarsely. "I don't really want to go," he said. "I really and truly feel good. Do you get me?" "Well, to hell with you. We got to, that's all." "All right, all right," he said, then as if he were driving himself to speak, "But say, there's something more I want to tell you. Want, get me, not got to. Understand?" I nodded and looked out. "Oh for Crissake," he said and stamped his foot. He tried to light his pipe and his hands shook evenmore than just from the train. Carefully he threw the lighted match back at the straw pile and it went out in midair. "Wait a minute for me," he said and he went back into the dark, out of the wind, I thought, to get his pipe lit. The kid came up to me trembling. "What are we going to do? I'm going nuts," he said. "It's slowing up, ain't it?" "No," I answered. "But were getting out, Muscle or no Muscle." "Come on." the kid said just as I