Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2006 16:53:06 -0400 From: carl_mason@comcast.net Subject: HOBO TEEN - 7 HOBO TEEN - 7 Copyright 2006 by Carl Mason All rights reserved. Other than downloading one copy for strictly personal enjoyment, no part of this story may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, except for reviews, without the written permission of the author. However based on real events and places, "Hobo Teen" is strictly fictional. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. As in real life, however, the sexual themes unfold gradually. Comments on the story are appreciated and may be addressed to the author at carl_mason@comcast.net This story contains descriptions of sexual contact between males, both adults and teenagers. As such, it is homoerotic fiction designed for the personal enjoyment of legal, hopefully mature, adults. If you are not of legal age to read such material, if those in power and/or those whom you trust treat it as illegal, or if it would create unresolvable moral dilemmas in your life, please leave. Finally, remember that maturity generally demands safe sex. This story is highly indebted for its inspiration and many of its details to the book Riding the Rails; Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression by Errol Lincoln Uys. New York: Routledge, 2003, and the award-winning documentary film by Michael Uys and Lexy Lovell, Riding the Rails, produced by WGBH Educational Foundation, Boston, 2005. CHAPTER 7 (Revisiting Chapter 6) Dragon Jack's "Express" rolled into Charleston at around 11:00 o'clock the next morning. Jack dropped them off near a small hobo jungle, a jungle whose population was swollen because the strawberry harvest in the area was well underway. The long trip from Albany had been fun - and, God knows, they had made good friends. Even though Jack shared a few bucks with them, they were, however, nearly broke and more than ready to assume their role as "harvest tramps." (Continuing Our Story - Strawberry Shortcake) Pushing their way through a swirling mass of humanity at the morning shape-up, Cy snarled to Cali, "I can't believe this, bro! There's gotta be hundreds of people here; some have been here for a month. How are we going to get a job?" Cali just grunted and continued pushing his way towards the trucks where the farm bosses were already selecting workers. About a half hour later, as the truck in which they were standing bumped along a dusty road towards the farm, the Gloucester teen looked at his buddy in disbelief. "Have you figured out what just happened, Cali?" The diminutive blond simply shook his shaggy mop of hair, used his right hand to scratch his right pit, and broke into series of grunts and screeches that ended with a flurry of wild chest thumping. As others workers began to look at him (very) suspiciously, Cy laughed and snorted, "Thank you, Kong!" Trying to be heard over the noisy truck motor, the boy returned to human-speak, yelling, "I hate to tell you, boss, but I think I've seen this before. We're fresh and we're young and we look that way. We don't have a family pulling at us and slowing up down. We're new, so we're less likely to scream at the lower piecework rate they announced this morning. These bozos aren't interested in much beyond getting the work done as well, as cheaply, and with as few hassles as possible. As long as the bosses saw us, we had a good chance of being selected from the git-go." "Maybe so," Cy responded as the truck pulled into the farm lot. As the other workers moved into the immense field after grabbing small wheelbarrows and a supply of boxes, a supervisor (who walked with much the same strut as a railroad bull) came up to the boys. "Ok, you guys, I'm going to tell you what to do and how to do it. Follow the drill and you'll make money. Screw up and you're fired. It's that simple." For the next fifteen minutes, they got the word on how to pick and pack the right berries without bruising them and how to tend the plants as they moved along. They could either take short morning, noon, and afternoon breaks during the ten-hour shift or eat and drink on the run. "Watch for a few minutes and then get to work. You don't make money standing around," he concluded. The field looked like nothing other than an industrious anthill. Obviously under great pressure, the workers moved down the furrows pushing the wheelbarrows, paused, bent over, brushed away leaves to their left and right, picked berries, placed them in boxes, checked the plants, and moved on, all in one fluid motion. Once their boxes were filled, they rushed to have them tallied at the end of the field, rushed back, and began the process again. Cy quickly discovered several things about strawberries...and his own body. Strawberry plants are four or five inches high and grow in beds eight to twelve inches high. You have to bend at the waist to pick the fruit, which explains why the job is so difficult. Within an hour, the fifteen (nearly sixteen) year-old had a stiff back. He now understood the 'bos who had told him the night before that bending that way for ten to twelve hours a day, weeks at a time, could cause excruciating pain and lifelong disabilities. The boys worked their asses off - and it went pretty well for the first day. Three of their boxes were rejected the first time they took them in for inspection and credit, and one the second time. After that, all of their work was accepted. They had to stop for a few minutes when a boy came around with a tank of cool water strapped to his back. In agony at noon, they had to stand propped up against each other as they ate a meager lunch brought around by other small children. After deductions for lunch (25 cents each) and "water service" (5 cents each), they found at the end of the day that Cali had earned 95 cents, whereas Cy had earned all of a dollar five! Back in the jungle, covered in grime and sweat, they could do no more than collapse, though Cali did recover enough to give the Gloucester teen a short massage before they turned in. There was no point in taking part in the shape-up the second day, for they were completely wiped out and would never have been hired. They did buy 50 cents worth of scraps for the mulligan and chop some firewood, but little more. That week, they managed to get three more days of work, each earning around a dollar a day. Then a rumor hit the camp that men were earning good money harvesting hay in eastern Colorado. Having had quite enough of strawberries, the boys decided to catch out the next morning. They had a total of less than eight dollars in their pockets. Cy "celebrated" his sixteenth birthday in the Charleston jungle. After the boys had returned from the fields, Cali left for a few minutes, returning with his birthday present. He had talked an old buzzard into baking a shortcake and covering it with strawberries and whipped cream. Everyone around them seemed to think it was great. (At least, every crumb disappeared!) Cy? To tell the truth, he had a little trouble getting it down. (A Real Arkansas Welcome) Following the advice of the 'bos, Cy and Cali were able to avoid the short distance local trains and catch out on a red ball or fast freight. Looking outside the boxcar, however, they were already shaken. There had to be 300 hoboes on that long train! The gondolas were full; the boxcars seemed loaded...both inside and on the roofs; there were even 'bos clinging to the flatcars! It was pretty obvious that not all of these men would be able to get work. The atmosphere in their boxcar also contributed to Cy's feeling of uneasiness. The car held a goodly number of 'bos of all ages and conditions - but there was something of a strained silence. The youngest teens, in particular, were clustered together, casting nervous glances around the car. "What's happening, Cali?" the curly-haired one asked. "W-e-l-l," his blond sidekick drawled, "my guess is that there are one or two wolves in this car. The young'uns smell 'em and that's why they're huddled. They shouldn't be worried. Here in broad daylight, nothing's going to happen to them. The other 'bos wouldn't stand for it. Tonight, however, they'd be smart to stick together and keep one eye open. There might even be a jackroller who'd like to get his hands on whatever the kids made in the strawberry fields. As you know from personal experience, they're not gentle, and they seem to be most active at nighttime." Cy muttered, "Happy days are here again," and resumed trying to get comfortable on the rough planking. All went well across the Southeast. In fact, they were across the Mississippi and into the northeastern corner of Arkansas before they encountered the slightest difficulty. It was probably outside Blytheville that the train stopped for water. Cy was never sure, for he had been sound asleep. He awakened to yelling that was going on up and down the length of the stopped train. Cy and a sleepy Cali crept over to the door and peered out. By the light of lanterns and torches, at least fifty railroad bulls and local police armed with nightsticks and guns were rousting the 'bos from the train, car by car. After cutting over 100 men out of the herd, the rest were allowed to reboard the train - and were warned never to show their faces again in those parts. After the freight departed, the captive 'bos were quickly transported to a nearby town by truck and forced into a rough stockade made of wood and barbed wire. In the morning, they were taken before the county judge and charged with trespassing on railroad property, vagrancy, and threatening the public welfare. Without further ado, they were declared guilty, fined one-half of the money in their possession, and sentenced to not less than 30 nor more than 60 days of compensatory labor, the location to be determined by the sheriff. Suddenly, the judge noticed Cali. "That fish is too small," he barked. "Throw him back!" The sheriff muttered that the little blond would be driven out of town and dumped before noon. The remainder of Cy's group of 24 men was stuffed into a large cell in the courthouse basement. Before long, a clerk informed them that they had been remanded to the DOT (Department of Transportation). They would serve their sentence on a chain gang assigned to heavy road construction. Once the clerk had collected two of the four dollars in Cy's pocket and given him a stamped receipt, the men were taken to a DOT camp near the construction site. There they were fed their first meal of the day - a cornmeal mush with some traces of something with a pork taste - before their heads were shaved and they were stripped and told to line up for striped prison clothing. As expected, Cy's equipment provoked a few crude snickers and lewd glances when they made him remove his jockstrap, but he kept his cool. Unfortunately, by the time he reached the pants table, they were out of anything that would conceivably fit him, and the officer in charge told the crew to return his own pants. They threw them in his direction, but he never saw the jockstrap or his $2.00 again. The youngster knew enough not to say a word. Before he could get his pants on, however, the head guard snarled that he wasn't moving fast enough and hit at him with his billy club. Dragged out of the line, the prison-striped shirt torn from his back, he was savagely taken by the head guard right in front of the others. When he had finished with the sobbing boy, the thoroughly cowed prisoners were chained together and spent the night in another stockade. In the morning, after "enjoying" a bowlful of absolute slop, the chained men were put to work under guard removing a heavy ledge of rock from the projected roadway with sledgehammers and pickaxes. At night, they were given a slightly more substantial meal, but, in general, that was the regimen. That is, they were expected to urinate and defecate "in place," were never allowed to wash (other than when it rained), were given two inadequate meals a day, and were always chained together - unless a member of the work gang died or passed out cold. The guards were allowed to administer punishment - and seemed to enjoy that duty immensely. Cali was in fact driven out of town on the day he had been sentenced. Pushed roughly out of the car, he was told that he ever returned he might not live to regret it. Naturally, as soon as the sheriff's car had turned around and driven out of sight, he set off for town. Carefully concealing himself, he moved around town until he located a preacher's home. When he crept into the preacher's office, he gave a performance to end all performances. The tears flowed; the (real) horrors of the boys' treatment by those who were ostensibly Christian were recounted in graphic detail; a story of how his big brother - his only living relative - had saved his life and now was his only protection against both natural dangers and the snares of evil was spun. W. C. Fields and Clarence Darrow would have been equally proud! Catching his breath, Cali turned to see a lovely young woman standing in the open doorway to the preacher's office. "Cali," she said kindly, "would you kindly step outside...just for a minute?" It would have been impossible for the young lad not to have heard the ensuing conversation. "Jonathan," she said with all of the moral fervor of a period (and a place) much given to moral fervor, "this is wrong. If the sheriff and the judge only practiced a scrap of the faith they profess, this would be a God-fearing county. We must do something. If you can't or won't, darling, I will." The young lad was promptly ushered back into the study and thence into the parsonage, only to be treated like one of God's chosen. Some nine days later, the preacher, a deputy sheriff, and Cali drove out to the DOT camp where Cy, pardoned by the Governor, was to be released. As they approached the deserted yard, Cy rose from a bench outside the fence. Below his shaven head, Cali noticed that he wore neither shirt nor shoes. Also, his trousers were falling apart (which didn't hide very much), but he was clean and managed a weak smile. Several days after that, the boys - rested, well fed, their possessions and money restored, and one-way passenger train tickets to Denver in their pockets - resumed their odyssey. To Be Continued