The Halloween Midnight Express - Part Two
One of Tiny’s
friends cried out, “Oh dang! It has got
to be close to
“Oh yah. So what?” responded Tiny.
“My Pa will whip
me if I’m not home by ten. I’m already
gonna be late!” he said in a panic while looking at his watch. With that he was gone. The other boys looked at Tiny for a moment,
hesitated, and then ran off to follow their departing friend.
“Stupid,” said
Tiny to himself. “Cowards.” He was standing not five feet from the
railroad tracks. And it was
In the dim
light, Ray saw the glow of his brother’s smile.
Fred pulled out his wooden train whistle. With a nod of encouragement from Ray, he blew
as hard as he could. Shrill! Ear-splitting! They were both astonished at the volume, but
that shock was immediately erased by the pleasure of hearing Tiny’s yelp of
panic. Glorious. But then the blur of motion, the shriek of
metal, the hiss of steam. The Midnight
Express came to a stop in front of them.
The Conductor
stepped down from his perch directly in front of Tiny Jackson, who fell
backwards on his seat, unable to do more than whimper. The Conductor wore all black except for a
fiery orange vest and a glowing pocket watch and chain. His face was a cauldron of swirling smoke
which arranged itself into something like a face, something like a smile. The terror, reached out towards Tiny. Its fingers were initially a pasty white,
adorned only by a coal black ring. Then
tendrils of smoke issued from the finger tips which wrapped around Tiny’s
wrist, pulling him to his feet.
Fred and Ray trembled in horror. They hadn’t wanted this. Even Tiny Jackson did not deserve this. They watched their former enemy being dragged
towards the train. He seemed to have
shrunken, a limp wreck of a child. They
could see the mournful faces of other children, faces pressed up to the glass
of each train carriage. Yet there was no
safety even for the brothers hidden in the darkest shadows of the trees.
Unseen, the
Engineer grabbed Fred from behind. The
Fireman did the same to Ray. The
Engineer’s laugh sounded like the hiss of steam, and yes, its face was a swirl
of vapor. Jets of steam shot from each
finger, searing Fred’s wrists.
The Fireman had
little flames for teeth. With each
inhale its black eyes bulged out, exposing a blue rim of fire around each
socket. As it pulled them past the
engine, Ray saw that the coal car was loaded with blackened children’s
skulls. He could image that his captor,
the Fireman, would soon return to his task of shoveling those skulls into the
furnace to generate more power, accelerating them all to their doom.
The Conductor,
Engineer and Fireman dragged their three victims down the length of the train,
shoving them into the last car alone.
The boys heard the door lock behind them, but tried it anyway. The door at the other end? Also locked.
In desperation, Fred kicked high and hard at the closest window. The glass shattered, then liquefied, and then
reformed solid again. They were
trapped. Tiny remained where he had been
tossed by the Conductor, on the floor, unmoving. A shudder rocked through the car. The train began to move. Then faster, much faster. Too fast to jump even if they could get out.
“If only we could
disconnect this car from the rest,” exclaimed Ray.
“But I think we
can,” responded Fred thoughtfully. “Yes
we can!” he exclaimed with confidence.
“We are locked in
if you haven’t noticed!”
“We can do it
from inside. Look, there is a trap
door. Underneath is a lever that
uncouples the cars.” They wrenched the
door hatch open and there it was, the lever.
“Glory be!”
shouted Ray, “but we’re going way too fast.
Fred got down on
his knees, ready to pull the lever. “You
yank on the emergency stop cord,” he said pointing to the cable that ran the
length of the car, “and then I can release the car.” Ray did so, but when he did, a peel of evil
laughter reverberated from the distant engine.
The train only rocketed faster.
“We’re lost,”
moaned Fred as he rolled over on his back.
“No,” said Ray
as his mind raced. “Wait. Your train whistle! What is the signal for all stop?”
Fred’s eyes grew
wide. “Two blasts!”
“Do it!” screamed
Ray as he launched himself onto his belly, preparing to pull the lever if the
train should actually slow. It did, but
only briefly and then began to accelerate again.
“Pull it!
The sensation was
the most terrifying thing all night. The car uncoupled from the train and then
immediately launched from the tracks. It
rocketed through the air, forever it seemed.
Then it hit, then rolled, and rolled.
There were splinters, then sparks, then flames and then the splash. When all was finally still, the three boys
climbed out of the wreckage that lay half submerged in a creek. Amazingly they had few scrapes or bruises,
but their clothes had not fared so well.
It was as if the clothing had taken all the violence, leaving only a few
useless scraps of fabric.
It was a cold
night. There were several miles to walk
before they could get home. Burlap gunny
sacks chafe against bare skin. A
lot. But that is all they could find in
the shed of the nearest farm. Their
minds raced for an explanation that Mom and Pop would actually buy. It might have been a mercy if they had longer
to walk. The house came into view all
too soon. It was very late. The lights were all on, everyone. Mom stood silhouetted in the window.
They envied the
ease with which Tiny had walked boldly into his house as they walked by just up
the road from their own house. But how
to get into their own? Both boys shared
a room in the basement. They had on
occasion slipped in through the window nestled low among Mom’s columbine
flowers, but Pop had screwed on the storm windows against the coming cold. They entertained the idea of searching
through the barn for the off chance of finding a screwdriver, but Pop kept all
of his tools in the mudroom of the house.
Obviously, the only chance was to slip in the back door and get down the
nearby stairs to their room, relying on boyish stealth.
Ingenious they
were. With just the right amount of lift
on the doorknob, they had learned how to open the back door without a
sound. The screen door was a little
trickier. Fred opened in coordination
with Ray who gently pressed one hand on the metal screen, while keeping his
other hand on the spring to prevent the characteristic thrum it made each time
it opened. This whole operation required
both boys to crouch down, which also kept them low and out of sight. They were finally safe! Safe!
Boys are always thinking stupid things like that. Nothing gets past parents, especially when
boys sneak into the house, nearly naked, at the stroke of
Mom stood
directly in the path towards their bedroom.
Pop stood looking over her shoulder.
The boys cringed, clutching the gunny sacks around their loins. They waited for a demon to leap at them from
one or both of their parents, but no.
Mom just looked at them in disappointment and said, “I really don’t want
to know.” She walked away through the
kitchen to her bedroom. Maybe they were
safe at last.
“Well I want to
know,” said Pop after she was out of earshot.
Never lie to a father. What a
waste of time that is. But what if he
won’t believe you? Tell him anyway. Their father listened patiently as they
rehearsed the events of the evening, all the way up until they got locked on
the last car of the Midnight Express.
Pop seemed unable
to take any more of this ludicrous story.
“Oh really! So how did you make
your escape?” They looked at each other
for a moment, wondering if there was any point in going further with their
story. But they continued with a brief
account of how they derailed the train.
At that point, Pop began to laugh.
“Now that is pretty funny,” he said while wiping tears from his
eyes. He took a moment to compose
himself and looked back over his shoulder for a moment to make sure that Mother
was truly gone. He drew closer to his
boys and spoke in a whisper. “That is
exactly how I made my escape from the Yellowstone Midnight Express when I was
about your age.”
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