Hod rides the Utopia back to Seattle with the other beaten men. They are a sorry-looking collection, frostbit sourdoughs with empty eyes and greenhorns fleeced before they even got to the fields, a few who probably made a small pile and blew it in town and can’t face another winter freezing their lungs and hacking the ground. The fog, constant up on deck, is a relief. Men appear in it, flick a glance at the state of Hod’s face, then turn away without meeting his eye. There is no brotherhood on this ship, each defeated stampeder minding his own troubles.
Hod has been down before, but never this alone. He misses the Army.
It started in Butte with hungry men. First the Gold Trust had their way and repealed the Sherman Act, then Amalgamated tossed Hod and hundreds more like him out of their pits.
“There’s a man named Coxey,” went the word in Finntown and Dublin Gulch, “gonna make it right. He’s got a plan.”
FREE SILVER! said the banners at the Union Hall. GOLD AT A PREMIUM, LABOR PAUPERIZED!
“May Day in Washington,” said the laborers with gleaming eyes. “Every damn American needs a job gonna tromp on Grover Cleveland’s flower bed. That don’t wake this government up nothing will.”
The plan was that the Government, which was the railroads and the mining outfits and the Rothschild bankers who had lured them out West to build their fortunes then dumped them like a gaggle of Chinamen, that Government, would pay them, the Workers, a decent wage to build roads, to dig canals to water the dry Western states and territories, and everybody would come out the better for it. Hod was younger then, just barely off the farm, but even he knew it was a desperate dream. But it was big, big as the Depression that had one man out of four walking the streets and feeling like shit on a bootheel.
“Coxey plans to leave on Easter,” said Bill Hogan, little Bill Hogan who’d never led anything bigger than a mule team but was as straight as they came and when voted General of the Butte Contingent said “Thanks, fellas, I’ll try to live up to it.” There were a bunch of them there who’d been in the same stope with Hod at the Orphan Girl—Hack Tuttle, Orrin Wheatley, Curly Armstrong—all shouting out and stamping their feet when the resolution to march was passed.
Of course marching to Washington was easy for Coxey and his troops, back east in Massillon almost to the Pennsylvania border. The Butte men could walk Coxey’s route twice over and never leave the state. The Northern Pacific said they wouldn’t haul a mob of tramps on their road even if every one of them paid full fare. Which neither Hod nor any of the other jobless men in Local Number One possessed.
And so it was that one night in the middle of April a dozen or so of the troops who’d been railroad hands snuck into the yard and convinced the watchman it was only patriotic that they liberate an NP locomotive and six open coal cars, plus a boxcar for supplies, and that he not inform his masters until the sun came over the Hill. The train stopped a quarter mile out of the yard and Hod was one of three hundred Commonweal soldiers to scale the coal-car sides and drop down into the grimy interior. Their cheers echoed off the insides of the car while they gathered steam and began to highball east.
Wild train coming your way, said the telegraph message sent ahead. Stay clear of our tracks.
It was cold, without a roof and with the train barreling across the scrublands, but with fifty men crammed together and the thrill of defiance running in their veins the night sped by.
The Union forever! Hurrah, boys, hurrah!
Down with the bosses, up with the stars!
—they sang—
Yes we’ll rally round the flag, boys, we’ll rally once again
Shouting the battle cry of Silver!
It had been the banks and their tight money that drove his old man off the farm, town people putting an arm around his shoulders and cooing into his ear till he took the loan and then there they were out in the yard with Sheriff White behind them, saying how it was just business and you had to be prudent with your finances. His own father, Esam Brackenridge, working for wages at the granary till it killed him with shame.
My country tis of thee
—they sang—
Once land of liberty
Of thee I sing
Land of the Millionaire
Farmers with pockets bare
Gypped by that cursed snare
The Money Ring
He’d never quite understood how they worked it, no matter how many speeches he heard and meetings he sat through. That was part of the con, of course, making it impossible for a simple toiler to follow, wrapping it in a gauze of words and laws and proclamations and economic ciphers, but somehow he knew somebody was getting rich without lifting a finger, and here they were, honest hardworking American men, without a pot to piss in or a window to toss it from.
We are—joining—Coxey’s Army—
—they sang, miners and teamsters and railroad men, tillers of wheat and builders of bridges, Northerners and Southerners and men born, like Hod, in the far West—
We are—marching—on to glory
We will—camp in—Cleveland’s backyard
On the first of May!
There must be some good men there, they thought, that flag they sang about must stand for something and if only they could bring the truth to Washington, truth in the flesh of a hundred thousand working men from every corner of the land, it would put the greenback boys on the run and there would be work and bread and pride enough to go around. Hod wasn’t sure of their names, but there had to be good men in the East, wizards of finance, who could do something.
Wild train coming.
They made Bozeman by daybreak and in the rail yard of the cow town there were a hundred people waiting, cheering as the Commonwealers stood on each other’s shoulders and climbed stiff-legged over the sides of the coal cars and cheered back, throats raw from singing, and there they commandeered a fresh engine and loaded up with coal from the NP stockpile and coupled ten beautiful spacious boxcars behind it.
“There’s law coming,” the telegraph operator told them. “Marshal McDer-mott just left Butte with an engine and two cabooses. Got him some eighty deputies.”
There were jeers from the Commonweal soldiers and from the crowd and much speculation as to the character of anyone who would throw in with the Czars of the Northern Pacific Railroad.
“Must not be a pimp left in Venus Alley,” said Jim Harmon as he jumped behind the throttle. “Who wants to go to Washington?”
The boxcars were rolling palaces after the open coal-haulers, and the folks in Bozeman had thrown meat and bread and cheese and even a few pies in with them as the wild train resumed its journey.
“This is still hot,” said Curly Armstrong, tears rolling down his cheeks. “Some lady woke up before the sun and baked us a damn pie.”
They had barely settled in, filling themselves with the donated food and bragging about what they would do if the Marshal and his deputies should have the misfortune of catching up with them, when the train stopped in the middle of the Bozeman Tunnel.
The men piled out and walked in the dark along the other boxcars and the coughing, dripping engine to find half of Bozeman Hill slid down over the track ahead of them.
“The NP done this,” decided Hack Tuttle, though the station agent had said there’d been a hard rain the day before and to watch out. “They called their agents out ahead of us.”
“It doesn’t matter how it happened,” said General Hogan. “We have to clear the track or give up.”
It was Hod who found the tools, half-hidden on the downside of the slope, the section gang who abandoned them probably still within shouting distance. There were fifteen shovels and they worked in relays, digging furiously till their arms gave out and then handing it over to the next man. Nobody was singing now, with that deputy train running up behind, and just when the track looked ready to roll on there was another cave-in.
“Damn if I aint doin the railroad’s work for free,” said one of the men, and that led to joking about the bill for services rendered they should hand over and finally Jim Harmon said the hell with it, jumped up behind the throttle again and got up a little steam and plowed right through the whole mess and out the other side of the tunnel. There were cheers and they loaded up with the shovels in hand in case there were more accidents or company mischief up ahead and Hod had the sudden thrilling idea—This is ours now.
Hod’s old man always said it was the railroad advertising lured him out West, too many years of making scratch in Kentucky and those handbills looked awfully good. It was the railroad brought him out cheap when he signed on to settle and the railroad dumped him off in Topeka with some hints about where any smart fella ought to stake his claim. The old man listened and went in with a crowd who guessed on the area around old Fort Zarah, which they got a charter for and called Zarah City and commenced to build while the old man bought a quarter section between there and Pawnee Rock and put a crop of sod corn in and waited for the railroad to make his town land worth something.
But that was the year the hoppers flew down and ate everything so he went hunting buffalo along with all the other busted farmers, and when he managed to bring a stinking, tick-infested roll of them in without getting scalped the agents were paying less than a dollar a hide. On account, they said, of the railroad charging so much to ship them back east.
The next season it was hailstorms did the crop, and then somebody paid somebody more than somebody else did so Great Falls got the railhead instead of Zarah City and the town dried up when the drought came in and settled, more or less permanent, for the next ten years. Hod, third of eight, would run to find the old man wherever he was whenever the sky broke, eager-eyed, but the old man would barely look up and say “Hope it don’t rot the beans.” Then the year him and everybody else around went over to the winter wheat that the Mennonites brought to the country he made forty bushels an acre, but the price dropped out when the railroad upped its rates.
“Everywhere there’s a river in this country, there’s a railroad alongside it,” the old man would intone when the oil lamps were lit and the day’s work had bested him again. “A river feeds a man—a railroad bleeds him.” In what was left of Zarah City and in Pawnee Rock the other busted men who used to talk of Dull Knife and Little Wolf or the murderous Dalton boys or the wide-open days of Dodge could speak only of the depredations of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe, spitting bitterly into the Kansas dust and elaborating on the many tentacles of the conspiracy. It wasn’t the fellas who worked on the road, no, they were just poor stiffs who risked getting scalded or run over or crushed in a pile-up for their two dollars a day, and it wasn’t the trains themselves, which made your heart race every time they came smoking past across the prairie. It was something big and dark and far off that was crushing them down, something that sent orders out that fixed the prices against you, and his father railed on about men in top hats whispering, passing bribes in the halls of power to keep the poor farmer down.
There was the cyclone one year, then that killer frost, then the Great Snow where he lost most of the livestock and always the cornworms and the chinch bugs and the birds eating your seed and the sinking recognition that this land you’d bought would bury you before it would feed you. And Mother falling into a mood the winter where the sun never come out once, barely talking, till they found her one day, Hod and his brother Zeb, or found her from the neck down, and the long stain on the rail it took a month for the passing trains to polish away.
And then the bank called in the note and the Unruhs, who were Men-nonites, bought it all at auction for half of what they’d offered their father the year before.
Rupe Heizer, who’d been in that original Kentucky colony, was with the railroad office then and offered Hod’s father a section house and a foreman job. Just supervising.
“I slit my own throat fore I work for any railroad,” the old man said at the time. They told him he was too old for the salt mine in Hutchinson and he was too proud to work for any of the farmers who would offer him a job, so he signed on at the granary and dried up and died.
The Railroad was out there somewhere, big and dark and not so far off, crushing down on them, but this, this engine, this train, this stretch of track, belonged to Hogan’s Army. It was owed to them.
Dynamite Johnny O’Brien finds Hod by the stern rail, staring out into the fog.
“You’re well clear of that Yukon mess,” says the captain. “It’s a suckers’ game.”
“You let the folks you carry up there in on that?”
O’Brien laughs. “People start thinking gold,” he says, “they don’t listen to nobody. You got plans?”
Hod shakes his head. “Just enjoying the boat ride.”
“Cause I got a little sideline, running guns to them that’s willing to pay dear for em. This deal in Cuba is heating up, and you seem like a capable young fella—”
“Not my fight.” The captain is a friendly old coot and a hell of a poker player, but not likely to be particular about which side he sells to.
“Well, keep it in mind. Always got room for a boy who don’t stall at breakin a few rules.”
Wild train from copper country.
They rolled into Livingston in the late afternoon, stopping short so the couple soldiers who had been switchmen could trot ahead and reset the rails. It was certain now that somebody was trying to side-track them, but when they eased into the station there was another crowd cheering and General Hogan begged off that he was too busy and so this young fellow, meaning Hod, would explain their quest to the multitude.
Hod stood on a pallet in front of the roundhouse and looked them over. The NP had an office here, it was their biggest train shop in the state, and he half expected to be shot at. But here were all these people smiling, eager to hear his story.
“We’re not tramps and we’re not cranks and we’re not revolutionists,” he told them. “We’re just an army of honest toilers gone to tell the government what’s right and what’s wrong. Our politicians are supposed to do that, but somehow the message gets lost on the trip—” and here there was much joking and laughter, “—or they just plain sell us away.” A cheer greeted this and a dozen fellows came up and said they were enlisting for the campaign.
“The Northern Pacific won’t carry us,” Hod told them, “cause they don’t want the truth to be known. The newspapers make fun of us, make us out as deadbeats cause it helps them sell papers. The only ones we got pulling for us,” he said, feeling like the light in their eyes would lift him clear off the ground, “is the ordinary Americans like you folks.”
More cheers then and men pumping his hand and slapping him on the back and a young girl kissed his cheek and pressed a flag into his arms and then a steam whistle blew, the boys ahold of a fresh engine, and it was time to go.
“Whatever you do, don’t stop!” shouted a man who wore the Union pin on his lapel, smiling and steering Hod through the happy, cheering crowd to the snorting Liberty Train. “We got enough men jobless in Livingston already!”
Wild train coming. Step aside and watch our smoke.
They left the station with the new engine and a few more boxcars with red-white-and-blue bunting draped on them, the boxcar doors open and men sitting up on the roofs like a horde of scruffy baronets surveying their domain. They waved their hats to the crowd waiting when they rolled through Big Timber at dusk, then a few miles past had to stop and dig out another section of track, this time a mess of big rocks that must have been dynamited down.
There were tramps among them, despite what he’d told the people in Livingston. He’d noticed them before, maybe a dozen or so men who stood in the shadows till the food was passed around and seemed to have their own secret language together, the ones who were off relieving themselves in the bushes or just looking on like spectators as the rest wrestled boulders off the track. You looked them in the eye and could see that they belonged to no place, to no one. Hod was not like them, he thought, not just along for the ride. He was going places. First to Washington, and then—well, wherever they had a road needed building. And somehow, though the exact strategy was unclear in his head, he would make enough jack, save enough, to stop chasing the next piece of bread and make his stand. Find a girl. It wouldn’t be farming, though—he’d seen enough of that quagmire—or digging rocks out of a hole. It would be—something else.
There was no liquor allowed on the train and the men had been good about that. Cursing was discouraged. One of the soldiers had been a barber, a Greek named Diomedes, and he gave shaves every morning in the lead boxcar. Hod always climbed forward, only just sprouting whiskers then, to be among the first. He’d seen fear in the eyes of small children more than once when he’d approached a house looking for work. There were dogs trained to attack men like him. The line between a man out of work with nowhere to call home and a tramp out after a handout was thin enough for most people to ignore, and there’d been times when he wanted to just throw it all in and either beg or steal, but he wasn’t a thief and he wasn’t a tramp.
He was a soldier in Hogan’s Army.
The track was cleared and the train rolled forward again, headlight cutting through darkness now, stopping at the jerkwater towns where there was suddenly no water to jerk, the tanks emptied by whoever the company had sent ahead of them, going slower and slower till finally Jim Harmon had to stop the train and uncouple the boxcars.
“Can’t make steam without water,” he said. “And we’re boiling it off fast pulling this load.”
Hod joined the twenty men who climbed onto the engine to scout ahead, and it wasn’t much more than a mile when they found the next tank, emptied. They piled out then and searched around till Idaho Shorty, who’d been a hoist operator for Amalgamated, found a pond and they set up a bucket brigade, all of them aware of the time lost to the deputy train as the mossy water sloshed from hand to hand. They climbed on again and backed up and recoupled, the men in the boxcars cheering, but now they had to go easy, hoping the boilerful would last them all the way to Billings. Hod stayed in the engine compartment, spelling the fireman, heaving coal into the scorching maw of the furnace.
The deputy train caught up outside Columbus, just where the rail cut over the Yellowstone River, yanking off a series of three short warning whistles maybe a mile behind them. Jim Harmon slowed to a stop, pulled off a long warning burst to tell the boys to stay put, then backed them up so the last boxcar was slap in the middle of the bridge. Hod jumped down, the engine still huffing wetly beside him, the river roaring below, walking to join the others hopping down from the boxcars and moving back to spill out on the bridge behind their train, facing the headlight of the posse’s locomotive as it slowed and stopped a hundred yards short.
Men with bayonets climbed out of the cabooses then and walked toward them, backlit, uncertain, seemingly leaderless. Orrin Wheatley had the Stars and Stripes the young girl give Hod and the boys spread it out and they got the Butte Miners’ Union flag out as well and began to discourse with the deputies.
“Go ahead and shoot,” they called. “We got nothing to shoot back with.”
“Man have to be yellow scum to shoot through the American flag.”
“Hope you fellas can swim,” the armed men called back, “cause we get holt of you it’s over the side.”
“You step near with them frogstickers, you gone end up sittin on em.”
The silhouettes shifted around before them, breaking into tentative knots of men who wavered forward and back, while Bill Hogan lined the boys up in three lines of attack.
“They start to fire, I suppose we’ll have to rush them,” he said, looking grim and very tired. “What’s your name, son?”
He was looking right at Hod. “Hod, sir. Hod Brackenridge.”
“Well, Sergeant Brackenridge, I need you to lead this first line.”
“Yes, sir.”
“But only if they fire.”
“Yes sir.”
“Surrender!” called one of the silhouettes.
“Surrender to who?” called Hogan after the jeers of his men had died down. Heated discussion in front of the posse’s headlight.
“We got a U.S. Marshal here,” called another voice.
“There been a federal crime committed?”
More heated discussion.
“There sure as hell been something committed!”
Mocking laughter now, soldiers calling the men with the bayonets a pack of sorry jailbirds and worse.
“You gone give up?” The first voice again.
“Sure are,” called Bill Hogan, stepping out in front. If they started shooting, Hod thought, Hogan would be the first to get it. And he would be the next. “We’re gonna turn ourselves in to the government. In Washington.”
A huge cheer from the working men then, and if there’d been rail ballast on the bridge to throw they’d have thrown it, so full of the Army and the rightness of their cause they could burst. There was yet more heated words from next to the deputy train and then the silhouettes began to melt away.
“Go back to Butte and starve to death, you yellow sonsabitches!”
“Dogs know when they’re whipped, all right!”
“Tell the NP they can pick up their train in Washington!”
But the posse’s engine just sat there blowing steam like the boss bull in a pasture, headlight glaring in their faces.
“Better load up, fellas,” said Bill Hogan. “This aint over.”
They piled back into the boxcars and called roll and set out, at a snail’s pace to conserve on water, followed at a not-so-respectful distance by the deputy train.
“If I known we be going this slow,” said Hack Tuttle, glumly watching the moonlit hills crawl by, “I’d of mailed myself to Washington.”
Hod isn’t sure how long the little man has been by his elbow, standing at the back rail of the ship, the little man whose face is a worse sight than his own.
“It was the dogs what done it,” says the little man, though Hod hasn’t asked. “There was a team carrying us up to Dawson. You seen how they run em—”
“I’ve seen a bit,” says Hod. “But I never traveled with them.”
“There’s a lead dog and he’s the boss. Run em all day for a scrap of salt fish that look like shoe leather. Only what they do is just throw it one piece at a time into the pack after they’ve unhitched em, and that boss dog he got to bully all the others off it, scarf it down quick without the others getting any, or else he’s not the boss dog no more. ‘Keeps em keen,’ says this English fella that runs the teams.”
“Dogs’ll fight over food,” says Hod.
“But it aint just the food,” says the little man. Deep scars pucker the side of his face, his lip split in two at the corner, one eye milky white. “It’s that they hate that sumbitch boss dog. Got the whip behind em and this dog they want to kill, that they’re all afraid of, in front where all they can think about is takin a bite outta his hind end.”
“But they run as a pack.”
The little man shakes his head. “It’s just red murder tied into traces. We was asleep by the fire when these two younger dogs went after the boss—they gang up like that sometimes, kill the old boss and then fight each other—and the scrap brung em right on top of us. I tried to push em away and one turned on me, like to chewed half my face off before I rolled him into the fire.”
Hod lets it sit for a long moment.
“Hard life up there,” he says finally. There are plenty other guys the little man could have picked to talk to. Like the bunch who brought their whiskey aboard and have stayed below dosing themselves with it ever since the steamer pulled out from Skaguay, the ones you figure in a year will be living from drink to drink. But no, he picked Hod, smelled something on him.
“Them gold fields run me good,” muses the little man, his dead eye toward Hod. “But didn’t nobody throw me a scrap of nothing at the end of it.”
The mayor was there with the crowd to greet the Wild Train steaming alone into the yard the next morning. The people had flags and food and there were Kodak bugs taking photographs of the historic moment, the Commonweal soldiers waiting for the mayor to finish his welcome speech. But when he got to the part about how Billings had been named for a fella that was President of the Northern Pacific Railroad somebody started shooting, and a couple deputies who’d snuck forward jumped onto the engine to grab Hogan and Jim Harmon. There were townspeople screaming and running and a couple hit who fell down and it was Hod, not thinking about what might happen, who led the counterattack. There was plenty lying around to throw—rocks and bricks and iron coupling pins—and with half the men from the town joining them it wasn’t long before the deputies give up their hostages and made a run to hole up in the NP roundhouse. The mayor had his sheriff arrest the couple of them that had been snatched by the crowd to keep them from being tore apart and then there was a rush to find another engine, as their last one was a sorry sight from the fusillade. It was like the whole town was in with them, men running home to get their rifles to make sure nobody else chanced in from the deputy train and women bringing a stew and the baker cleaning his shop out of loaves and this was a town that lived off the railroad, a town built by the railroad, and when it was discovered the water tanks here had been emptied too didn’t they ring the fire bell and set their pumper company to filling the new engine’s empty tender.
“If there were boxcars available,” called Bill Hogan just before they pulled out in the early afternoon, “I believe this whole town of Billings would throw in and ride to Washington with us!”
The people cheered and little boys ran alongside the train as long as they could, then flung handfuls of ballast gravel at the deputy train when it skulked after a few minutes later.
They’d lifted some rubber hose from one of the shops in the yard and twice stopped for the men to run out and siphon water, once from the Bighorn River and once from Sarpy Creek, their pursuers stopping back just within sight, going so slow now and carrying such a light load compared to the Liberty Train that their engine was barely thirsty.
“Either they’ve been ordered to escort us out of the state or they’ve got somebody waiting ahead,” said General Hogan. “You boys be ready for anything.”
The engine hauling them now had been waiting to be serviced, its metal parts screaming as they ground together ungreased, and they limped into Forsyth to find another. But the only engine waiting there had the throttle taken out of it and the couple mechanics in their ranks had to work in lantern light to pull the one out of their present ride and switch it over. There was no cheering crowd in the yard.
“Word come through they’s government troops on their way from Miles City,” said the station agent, watching the mechanics with his hands stuck in his back pockets. “If I was you fellas, I’d make scarce.”
But they had stuck together this far and weren’t about to be scattered. So when the Federal soldiers shown up and surrounded them, not one man among them tried to run.
“We commandeered this equipment in the name of the American working man,” Curly Armstrong announced to the major who stepped forward to demand their surrender. “And we’d appreciate it if you’d peel that mess of scabs and reprobates that’s lurking behind off our backs.”
But the major only put them under arrest and crowded them back into the boxcars to wait for the engine to be ready to haul them to Fort Keough. Coxey would have to do without them in the nation’s capital. Hod sat in the crush of silent, sullen men on the board floor and imagined his name being scribed on a blacklist by every mine super from Butte to Bisbee, and figured to be among those picked to draw a month or two in the Helena slammer. He didn’t figure on the three more years of jacking rock and half-dozen borrowed names it took him to put a decent prospector’s stake together.
Bill Hogan, feeling betrayed by the flag that hung from the bulkhead wall, attempted to reason with the sergeant guarding the boxcar he’d been locked in with Hod and eighty fellow Commonwealers. “You are aware,” he said, “that you are bound to serve the United States government and its citizens, not the Railroad Trust.”
“That’s an interesting theory,” the sergeant replied, picking his nose. “You ought to write a book about it.”
Hod waits until all the gold and the body of Fritz Stammerjohn has been unloaded before leaving the steamer. Nobody is waiting for him on the Alaska Dock. He hurries up the steep hill and away from the Utopia in the light rain, carrying nothing, trying to mix in with the crowd on the streets. Everything south of the Deadline has been rebuilt in brick since the ’89 fire, the box-houses moved into basements, with barkers and brass bands trying to lure stampeders in for one last blowout before they can escape Seattle. Yesler Way, the old skid road, has had cobblestones laid in since he left, but there are still tramps loitering outside the Occidental Hotel, hanging a story on whoever passes by. Hod has a ten-dollar bill in his pocket, his parting gift from Jeff Smith, and both sides of his face are still discolored from the fight.
They are advertising for porters at the Occidental and for an experienced mixologist at Morrison’s Saloon and for deck apes on the steamship line, but he is white and doesn’t drink liquor and all the steamers are heading for Skaguay where he is wanted for murder. The skid-road palaces have the same music coming out of them and the passing stampeders the same look of bewildered hopefulness as when he left, but there are no dogs running free in Seattle, every stray with four legs under it having been snatched up and sold as a champion sled-puller, and there is a streetcar rolling down Yesler full of women not for rent. Hod is about to turn onto Second Avenue when he runs into a Songster Brigade blasting in the other direction.
Before Jehovah’s awful throne
Ye nations bow with sacred joy
Know that the Lord is God alone
He can create, He can destroy
—sing the uniformed marchers, the horns behind them flat and loud, swinging four abreast onto the big street—
His sovereign power, without our aid
Made us of clay, and formed us men
And when, like wandering sheep we strayed
He brought us to the fold again!
A phalanx of no-hopers slump behind the ranks, only a few of them clapping in time with the bass drum. A big olive-skinned man in a long coat and bowler hat brings up the rear, walking with his hands in his pockets. He sees Hod watching.
“Soup, soap, and salvation,” he says, nodding forward to the marching Army.
“Don’t know about soap or salvation,” says Hod, “but I haven’t eaten all day.”
“They got their barracks just up here, with a kitchen attached. Yesterday it was beef stew.”
Hod falls in with the man, an Indian from Wisconsin who says he’s called Big Ten.
“I got an Indin name too,” he says, and then makes a sound with lots of parts to it.
“What’s that mean?”
“Walks Far—” he deadpans, “—But Would Sooner Ride.”
Major Tannenbaum, in charge of divine inspiration while they wolf down their day-old bread and Scotch broth, is the scourge of demon rum.
“It is the weakness, the craving for libation that has dragged you to this depth,” he booms, striding back and forth in front of the benches in the damp basement commissary. “The hop and the grape are seeds of the Devil, and their essence his liquid fire. Satan is a deceiver who goes by many a name. Gin is his name, whiskey is his name, beer is his name—”
“Poor bastard wants a drink so bad he can taste it,” mutters Big Ten to Hod as they empty their tins. “Lot of these gospel sharks used to swim in the stuff.”
“—rum is his name, schnapps is his name—”
“He’s getting soused just saying the kinds.”
“—and wine—wine is his name, present even at the Papist Holy Com-munion—”
“You trying to get to the goldfields?” asks Hod.
“Hell no. Just trying to keep my head above water. But the only thing I got going in this town is I’m not a Chinaman.”
“The Devil floats in on a sea of alcohol,” says Major Tannenbaum, “captures your soul, and sails away.”
“How bout you?”
Hod can feel the Indian studying the cuts around his eyes, the bruises on his cheeks. The rest of the men enduring the sermon are a beat-looking lot, red-nosed and palsy-handed, the walking wounded slurping barley soup under a smoke-darkened banner that reads JOIN THE RANKS OF THE SAVED. Hard to say just when the older fellas’ lives went off the tracks, thinks Hod, but the younger ones don’t look much different than him.
Tannenbaum shakes his fist in the air. “He who renounces drink renounces Satan!”
“I’m not a Chinaman either,” says Hod, and wipes the bowl clean with the last of his bread.