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Authors: Ivan Doig

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He paused to make sure the lesson was sinking in on us. “That refund is still ready and waiting.”

Herman must have given that the quickest think in history, for I immediately felt his bolstering hand in the middle of my back, making our decision. I spoke it, in our biggest leap of fate or faith yet. “Nothing doing. We're going with on the what's-it. The special.”

Shrugging as if our blind determination was water off his back, the driver crowfooted away toward the waiting bus. “Hop on.”

22.

T
HE LAST TWO
seats were way at the back of the bus, which meant the entire hobo contingent had a chance to look us over from stem to stern as we wove up the aisle. Stepping aboard right after us, from tossing my suitcase and Herman's duffel into the baggage compartment with a collection of bedrolls and what looked to me like bundles of belongings but for some reason were called bindles, the driver sang out, “Okey-doke, final call. Last bus to W-I-S-D-O-M, for those of you who know the alphabet.”

“We're all scholars of the Braille sort,” a man taller and brawnier than the rest called out.

“I bet you've put the touch on many a thing all right, Highpockets,” retorted the driver, counting heads to make sure the total matched the number of tickets he had punched. “Talk about faces a person can't forget even if he tries. Druv the majority of you scissorbills at this same time last year, if I don't miss my guess.”

“That's us, Hoppy, last but nowhere near least,” a scrawny old fellow with a cracked voice was heard from next. “Had a chance to take drivin' lessons since then, have ye?”

The driver snorted and made as if to fling his cap at the offender. “I have druv longer than you been off your ma's hind tit.”

“That makes you older than the pharaoh's dick, don't it, Hop,” the fellow plenty far along in years himself cracked back, to hoots of encouragement and cries of “Lay it to him, Skeeter.” Of course, I was following this like a puppy lapping milk, until Herman tugged my ear to bring me close enough for a whispered “Phoo. Rough tongues. Don't listen too much.”

“Let's can the mutual admiration and get this crate goin',” the one called Highpockets spoke with authority. “Else the best kips are gonna be taken at the Big Hole Riviera.”

“Birds like you can always roost in the diamond willows,” the driver responded crossly. Nonethless he dragged himself into place behind the steering wheel, managed to find the clutch and brake pedal with his feet, fiddled around some on the dashboard, and eventually ground the starter—it growled so much like the DeSoto back in Manitowoc that Herman and I couldn't help trading amused glances—until it eventually caught, and the bus bucked its way out of the depot driveway as if hiccuping.

Hoppy mastered the gearshift somewhat better on the downhill run from the Butte business district and away, I could now hope, from the nightmarish orphanage. Herman was breathing easier, too, as the bus hit the highway, with the splash of
MOST WANTED
posters receding behind him. The tortured side of his face missing its eye relaxed a little, even.

•   •   •

P
RETTY QUICK
we had something new to worry about as Highpockets, who by all indications was some sort of topkick of the hoboes, made his way to the rear and squatted in the aisle by us. Up close, he showed more wear and tear than at first appearance, what Gram called weary lines at the corners of his hooded eyes. Some time back, his nose apparently had been rearranged by a fist, and he bore a sizable quarter-moon scar at the corner of his mouth. But I would not want to have been the other guy in the fight, strong as his unrelenting gaze was and the rest of him more than enough to back it up. Cordial but direct, he asked, “You fellows going calling on the near and dear, down in the Hole? Or what?”

Or what
required some answering on this bus, all right, as it bucketed along making exhaust noise as if it needed a new muffler, or maybe any muffler. Catching on to the situation if not the conversation level, Herman intuitively sealed his lips in favor of mine.

“Huh-uh, we're going haying like everybody else,” I launched into. “See, I'm a stacker team driver, and my grandpa here is a sort of a roustabout, good at lots of stuff. But you need to excuse his not talking”—the story built as fast as I could get it out of my mouth—“he's straight from the old country and doesn't savvy English very much. He's over here taking care of me because”—I had to swallow hard to move from invention to the real answer about near and dear relatives—“my parents passed away, and we're all each other has.” That at least was the truth of the moment, although Gram was due a major mental apology for substituting Herman for her in the larger picture of life.

Highpockets heard me out with scarcely a blink, his scrutiny all the more unnerving for that. More than a few of the other hoboes were swung around in their seats, taking all this in. Like them, Highpockets had on a shapeless old hat that signified rough living and outdoor labor, more than likely the mark of being a true hobo. Sitting back on his haunches, he skeptically eyed our fresh Stetsons and my fancy rodeo shirt. “You trying to tell me you and Gramps are on your uppers?”

Fortunately I had enough bunkhouse lingo to answer, “We're not broke, but we can see it from here.” All the honesty I could summon seemed to be called for. “What it is, we got robbed blind. Back on the dog bus, the one from Billings.” Herman, who had gone stiff as a coffin lid at my designation of him as grandpa, unbent enough to bob his head in confirmation of “robbed blind.” I plunged on. “A sonofabitching phony preacher gyppo”—my vocabulary gleaned from the Double W riders fit right in with this audience, it seemed—“picked Gramps's pocket and wiped us clean, so that's why we're on here with you.” I made myself shut up, praying that was just enough and not too much or too little.

It at least worked with Highpockets, who relaxed and bounced on his haunches a bit, glancing around at the other listening hoboes. “Their bad luck to run into a fingersmith, pulling the old sky pilot dodge, eh, boys? Seen that one put over on many a pilgrim.” He slapped my knee, startling the daylights out of me, and gave Herman that round O sign of forefinger touching the tip of the thumb, the rest of the fingers up, which means OK. Herman smiled weakly in return. “Stealing isn't our style,” Highpockets was saying, his gunsight gaze sweeping around to take in the whole set of rough-and-ready men, “at least from each other.” Unfolding to his full height, nearly scraping the ceiling of the bus, he gestured around. “You're gonna be with us, better howdy up with the boys.”

Right then the bus jolted off the highway, slewing somewhat too fast onto a gravel road headed south. Highpockets grabbed a seatback to keep his balance, laughing. “Hold on to your stovepipes,” he advised about our Stetsons, “here comes the real haywagon ride.” Another of the hoboes yelped to the driver, “Kick 'er in the ribs and let 'er buck, Hoppy!”

“I'll do the driving, you do the sitting with your thumb up your butt, how about,” the driver hollered back, wrestling the steering wheel as the shuddering bus adjusted to the gravel surface, more or less. Which had suddenly narrowed to what my father the construction catskinner would have scoffed at as a goat trail, so much so that Herman and I now were peering almost straight down the steep bank of a fast-flowing river on our side. I gulped, and Herman narrowed his good eye in concern. I know it wasn't possible for the rear tires to be traveling on thin air over the water, but that's how it seemed.

Unconcerned about the Greyhound flirting with the fishes, Highpockets got back to introductions up and down the aisle. The Jersey Mosquito. Oscar the Swede. Midnight Frankie. Snuffy. Overland Pete. Shakespeare, who looked to me like any ordinary human being.

“Then there's Fingy.” Highpockets pointed to a squat swarthy man who gave Herman a comradely wink and waved a hand short of two fingers.

The roster of the last bus to Wisdom went on pretty much like that. Bughouse Louie. Pooch. Peerless Peterson. The California Kid, who was the most gray-haired of the bunch. So many others of the sort that I was having trouble keeping track, and Herman looked swamped from the first by the roll call of nicknames.

No sooner had Highpockets finished than the scrawny one with shoulder blades jutting high as his neck, the Jersey Mosquito known familiarly as Skeeter, leaned into the aisle and addressed me. “That's us, to the last jot and tittle. Now, who be ye?”

At least I had no trouble figuring this out, although I had a pang at forsaking Red Chief.

“I'm Snag.” My jack-o'-lantern smile showed off the jagged reason. “And him here,” I indicated Herman, “is One Eye,” no explanation needed there, either.

“Good enough for me.” Highpockets credited us both and flashed that OK sign again. “Welcome to the Johnson family,” he left us with, and worked his way seatback by seatback up front to where he sat, the aisle a lot like the deck of a rolling ship as the bus galloped along on the unpaved road.

To my relief and no doubt Herman's, the other hoboes took his lead, everyone settling in for the ride, which may have looked short on the map but wound along the twisty river, which would head one direction and then another, with timbered mountains hemming it in so close it was hard to see the sky. I began to wonder about this route that hardly seemed to rate being marked in red on a map. Why were there no towns? Or ranches? A forest ranger station, even. Out there in back-road nowhere, I grew more jittery as every riverbend curve threatened the Greyhound's groaning springs and Hoppy's straining grapple with the steering wheel, the water always right down there waiting for a bus to capsize upside down.

Soon enough, I had something else to worry about. When a swerve around a pothole the size of a washtub swayed Herman halfway into my seat, he glanced around to make sure no one was watching, then took me by the ear again, this time with a harder pinch. His whisper was all that much sharper, too. “Why am I
Grossvater
all the sudden?”

Uh oh. I didn't have to understand German to know he was put out about being designated grandfather.

“It's to cover our tracks,” I sped into rapid-fire explanation as low as I could whisper. “See, this way, if anybody ever picks up our trail and starts nosing around, you're not on the spot for being my great-uncle, like they're looking for, you're just my grandpa in the natural order of things.” Herman's deep frown did not move a muscle. Casting around for anything that might thaw him, I invoked the Apache method or what I hoped might be. “I bet Winnetou did this all the time, scrubbing out his trail with a batch of sagebrush or something, so his enemy couldn't run him down. That's all we're doing, you being the grossfather is just our, uh, scrub brush, sort of.”

Herman did not buy my interpretation entirely, his grip on my ear not letting up. “Your eye-dea, this Wisdom bus is.” He cast a dubious look around at our fellow passengers. “Now look who we are with, one step from bums.”

“Two,” I said, wincing from his hold on me. “Tramps are in between, remember.”

He still didn't relent. “What is this Johnsons family?”

I took a guess. “Maybe it means all the hoboes, sort of like a tribe?” This time I harked back to Crow Fair. “Like the Indians we saw in the camp there, but without tepees or braids or moccasins—”

“No fancy-dancing, I betcha, either,” he said, pretty sarcastic for him.

“Herman, listen,” I persevered, ear pinch or no ear pinch, “like it or not, we have to stick with these guys. Think about it, okay?” I managed to flash the hobo sign for that. “You can tell by looking they aren't ever going to turn you in, are they. They've got their own reasons to avoid the cops.”

Wrinkled in concentration, Herman followed my logic around all the corners he could, finally shaking his head. “If you say so, Donny. I don't got a better eye-dea.” He pressed against his seatback as if bracing himself. “Let's go be hoboes, Gramps will live and learn.”

•   •   •

N
O SOONER
had our whispered conversation ended than a shout from down the aisle roused the Jersey Mosquito, sitting across from us. “Hey, Skeeter, you old skinflint, pass the bugle,” the Johnson family member known as Peerless Peterson, if I remembered the roll call right, piped up, spitting a tobacco plug onto the floor, evidently to clear his mouth.

Not for the purpose it sounded like, though. “I'm the man what can, ye damn moocher,” Skeeter yipped back, but instead of a musical instrument he fumbled out from somewhere something long and slim wrapped in a paper bag. Seeing me onlooking in confusion, Skeeter paused to explain, “Hoppy ain't supposed to see any bottles on the bus. This way, he don't. Right, Hop?”

“You have got the only Greyhound driver with blinders on,” Hoppy agreed to that, perilously close to the truth according to the way he hunched over the wheel to peer fixedly through the windshield as the bus shimmied on the washboard road.

Skeeter, proper host, was screwing the top off the hidden bottle when he noticed Herman craning over in curiosity along with me. “Hey there, One Eye, you want a swig? This is giggle juice you don't get just any old where, it's—”

“Wait, don't tell him,” I jumped in barely in time. “He'll tell you.”

Herman received the sacked bottle from the surprised Skeeter, nodded his thanks, tipped it up like sounding the bugle charge, and chugged enough of a drink to swirl in his mouth good and plenty. He swallowed as if the contents were tough going down, but when he got his voice, he announced without a shade of a doubt:

“Fruit wine, plenty fermented. Wild Irish Rose, I betcha.”

“Damned if he ain't right,” Skeeter said, pop-eyed with awe. “How'd ye do that? Boys, we got a miracle worker here. At the hooch store I asked for Rosie in a skirt”—he displayed the bagged bottle Herman had without hesitation handed back to him—“I was gonna have some fun with you fellas whose tongues has been worked to leather by too much Thunderbird. But One Eye nailed it first taste. Beat that!”

Highpockets, who didn't seem to miss anything, shifted in his seat and pinned a penetrating look on me. “What's more, his English improves around a bottle, eh? Usually that operates the other way.”

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