The bus lurched violently sideways and Logan jerked awake. He could hear a babble of voices, but there was nothing to be seen in the black night. Even his little nightlight overhead had gone out. He looked around blearily for a moment and then, grateful for the darkness, wiped the side of his face where he’d drooled onto the smelly seat.
With a blast of cold air, the bus driver climbed back onto the bus. Where’s he been? thought Logan, still foggy.
“Sorry, folks. End of the line. That last rut took us straight into the ditch and nothing short of a tow truck is going to get us out of here tonight.”
The driver cut off the chorus of groans with the wave of a hand. “Don’t fret! We’re only two city blocks from the bus station. For those of you who aren’t interested in making the trek, another transport will be along smartly to ferry you to the station. Otherwise, it’s only a short clip. And I’ll turn the engine back on to keep you warm.”
Logan realized he must have been more tired than he thought. He didn’t remember falling asleep, but here he was at the end of the line. As the engine revved to life, the light came on over Logan’s seat again. He ignored the grumbling of the other passengers and gathered up the pages of Abbie’s notebook that lay scattered at his feet. A bit damp, some of them, but he thought he had them all. Somehow, though, the last page he’d been reading was torn. Maybe he’d ripped it in his sleep? He dropped to his knees and peered under the seat. Nothing.
He stuffed all the loose pages into the notebook and slipped the whole thing into the plastic bag. Logan pulled himself to his feet and clomped down the centre aisle of the bus. The driver nodded at him and Logan stepped out into the frigid night, immediately regretting his decision. He ducked his head further into his hood and pointed himself in the direction of the lights that blinked “Pus Sta ion” a block and a half away.
Three a.m. A bad time of the morning for feeling cheerful and worse when a person’s fingers are so frozen they couldn’t dial a phone for help even if there was a phone to dial. Logan slogged up to the bus station just in time to see the other bus passengers pull up in a heated cab with luggage stowed in the open trunk. The adversity of the weather must have had some kind of bonding effect as there was much hugging and bellowing of good-byes in the frozen air before they all headed off into the icy dark. The coffee shop was closed and as Logan crunched across the ice to the main door of the station a man inside flipped off the remaining lights and stepped out into the cold.
“We’re shut down for the night, young fella,” he said briskly.
“But I don’t have anywhere to stay until daylight,” said Logan. “I thought this was an all-night coffee shop.”
“In Clearwater?” The man laughed. “Best head for the Sally Ann, young man. They can usually find a bed for homeless folks. Might be a little tight for space on a night this cold, though.”
Homeless? Logan opened his mouth to tell the guy he wasn’t homeless, but his audience was walking away. The man waved at the bus driver, who was stepping into a waiting car. The car honked twice — two sharp staccato notes that cut through the air like crystal. The man turned back to look at Logan. “I’ve got to go, young fella. Burt’s missus was kind enough to offer me a lift. She doesn’t like driving on icy nights, so I can’t keep her waiting.”
He pointed across the street and down a few blocks, in the direction the bus had just come from. “The shelter’s back there, maybe a block before where the bus conked out. No walk at all for a strapping young man like yourself. You’ll be there in no time.” He climbed into the waiting car, which gave another sharp honk and then pulled away, red taillights gleaming like a wolf’s eyes in the darkness.
Logan huddled in the bus station doorway and looked out across the street. Clearwater’s downtown had seen better days. There were at least a dozen cars abandoned to either cold or rust along the main road. Many of the storefronts were shut down with windows boarded over. Logan kicked at a chunk of frozen muck on the sidewalk in frustration. He was not anxious to make the return trip across the same icy, rutted road he had already struggled along once that evening.
His head snapped up to the sound of footsteps crunching through the frozen snow. A figure seemed to materialize out of the shadows into the pool of light beneath the only streetlamp that still functioned outside the station. His breath formed a cloud around his head and he looked at Logan through one good eye. The other appeared to be swollen shut. His feet were encased in old rubber boots tied up inside clear plastic grocery bags. “Cold enough fer ya?” he asked cheerfully.
What am I supposed to say to that? thought Logan. Is this guy crazy? He finally settled on “Yeah. I guess so.”
“Plannin’ on standing out here all night? Station’s closed, y’know.”
“Uh, yeah. I do know.” Logan wasn’t about to tell this old idiot anything about what he was planning.
“Well, yer welcome to keep company with me. I’m headin’ back to the highway. Need to hitch a ride to Evergreen. It’s too damn cold in this fool town.”
Logan was shocked out of his speechlessness. “I’ve just come from Evergreen,” he said. “I’m not going back there. The guy from the station told me about the Salvation Army shelter…”
“Full up, son. Jest been there m’self, I’m sorry to say. No room at the inn and all that. You come with me. Buddy o’ mine’s got a place in Evergreen we can crash at. Be there by morning. When it’s this cold, no problem catching a ride. People feel sorry for ya freezin’ on the side of the freeway.”
“I can’t. I need to stay here in Clearwater. I… I’m meeting someone here in the morning.”
“Suit yerself. It’ll be a cold wait out here, though yer young bones likely don’t feel it the way mine do.”
Right, thought Logan, bitterly. I hadn’t even noticed the cold. He shrugged and turned away.
The old fellow put a hand on Logan’s arm. “If yer set in yer mind, then you might have a look at that shop over there. See the one with the plastic on the window?”
Logan repressed a desire to yank his arm out of the man’s grasp. He peered through the darkness across the street where something was flapping in the wind. He nodded. “I see it.”
“One of them boards at the front is loose,” said the old guy, tucking his head down away from the wind. “There’s a burning barrel inside to keep ya warm, but better make sure you damp the flames down good before dawn. Cops around this town ain’t too friendly towards strangers.” He winked his good eye at Logan, nodded, and was gone into the darkness before Logan could think of any reply.
“Thanks,” Logan yelled, but the wind whipped the word back into his face. He hurried across the road to see if what the old drifter had said was true. Sure enough, under a sign saying “DAYAL’S MARKET,” Logan found a board that was loose. He pulled it as far away from the door frame as he could and squeezed through.
Just being out of the gale made him feel as though he had stepped into a warm cave. The store smelled as though something had rotted very thoroughly somewhere inside, but Logan was still overcome with a wave of relief. He hadn’t realized how anxious he really had been. Stepping cautiously in the dark, Logan clanged one of his boots into something large and metal. The ashy smell told him he’d found the burning barrel. He spent a few minutes scrambling around to pick up a pile of debris from the floor but realized how foolish this was just as he stuffed the material into the barrel. No matches. No lighter. The thing was useless to him.
His eyes adjusted to the dark, and a little warmer from all the exercise, Logan stepped toward the outline of something low a few feet away. It turned out to be an old wooden bench. Logan sank down on the bench and pulled out Abbie’s notebook from his pocket. He could feel moisture on his cheeks from his hair and eyelashes thawing. Maybe a little heat was leaking from one of the adjoining store fronts. It wasn’t really warm enough to undo his coat, but at least he knew he wouldn’t freeze.
On one end of the bench was a pile of newspapers, neatly folded. Logan lay down and spread the papers over his legs as best he could. Too dark to read any more of the notebook, he listened to the plastic blow around outside the window and tried to push thoughts of his rugby team out of his mind. What about driving? He could think about that. His mom had signed him up to start lessons in the spring, but he didn’t need them. He knew how to drive, not that it really mattered. The chances of getting a car from his dad likely evaporated when he didn’t make the team. No rugby scholarship. No beaming father. Life sucks and then you die, Dad, he thought. Haven’t you figured that out by now?
He didn’t want to think about his dad, shacked up with his new secretary-slash-girlfriend in Denver. His dad had probably heard all about Logan getting booted off the team by now.
Logan shivered a little and tucked his left arm under his head. He’d think about the lists of cars he had made for Abbie. Right. That was safer. He’d dig through her notebook and read them over again in the morning to see if he’d changed his mind at all. Maybe he needed to reconsider a few newer models. Maybe the Zephyr merited a place on the list after all — just because. And thinking of running boards and gull wings, Logan fell asleep with Abbie’s notebook as his only pillow against the hard wood of the old bench.