It was the Mystic, and they went over it. It first took them up to the sky and then below the ground, like a giant version of the Wild Mouse at Topsham Fair. And when they finally came out into the sun again, it was shining between buildings so tall you couldn’t see the tops of them through the Big Dog’s windows.
When Blaze and Johnny finally got off at the Tremont Street terminal, the first thing they did was look for cops. They need not have bothered. The terminal was huge. Announcements blared from overhead like the voice of God. Travelers schooled like fish. Blaze and Johnny huddled close together, shoulder to shoulder, as if afraid opposing currents of travelers might sweep them apart, never to see each other again.
“Over there,” Johnny said. “Come on.”
They walked over to a bank of phones. They were all in use. They waited by the one on the end until the black man using it finished his call and walked away.
“What was that thing around his head?” Blaze asked, staring after the black man with fascination.
“Aw, that’s to keep his hair straight. Like a turban. I think they call em doo-rags. Don’t stare, you look like a hick. Squeeze up next to me.”
Blaze did.
“Now gimme a di — holy shit, this thing takes a
Blaze did.
There was a phone book bound in stiff plastic covers on the shelf of the kiosk. John consulted it, dropped his quarter, and dialed. When he spoke, he deepened his voice. When he hung up, he was smiling.
“We got two nights at the Hunington Avenue YMCA. Twenty bucks for two nights! Call me a Christian!” He raised his hand.
Blaze slapped it, then said, “But we can’t spend almost two hundred bucks in two days, can we?”
“In a town where a phone-call costs a quarter? You shittin me?” John looked around with glowing eyes. It was as though he owned the bus terminal and everything in it. Blaze would not see anyone with that exact same look in his eyes for a long time — not until he met George.
“Listen, Blaze, let’s go to the ballgame now. What do you say?”
Blaze scratched his head. It was all going too fast for him. “How? We don’t even know how to get there.”
“Every cab in Boston knows how to get to Fenway.”
“Cabs cost money. We ain’t —”
He saw Johnny smiling, and he began to smile, too. Sweet truth dawned in a burst. They
“But…what if there’s no day game?”
“Blaze, why do you think I picked today to go?”
Blaze began to laugh. Then they were in each other’s arms again, just like in Portland. They pounded each other on the back and laughed into each other’s faces. Blaze never forgot it. He picked John up and twirled him around twice in the air. People turned to look, most of them smiling at the big galoot and his skinny pal.
They went out and got their cab, and when the hackie dropped them on Lansdowne Street, John tipped him a buck. It was quarter to one and the scant daytime crowd was just starting to trickle in. The game was a thriller. Boston beat the Birds in ten, 3-2. Boston fielded a bad team that year, but on that August afternoon they played like champs.
After the game, the boys wandered the downtown area, rubbernecking and trying to avoid cops. The shadows were growing long by then, and Blaze’s belly was rumbling. John had gobbled a couple of dogs at the game, but Blaze had been too enthralled by the spectacle of the ballplayers on the field — real people with sweat on their necks — to eat. He had also been awed by the size of the crowd, thousands of people all in the same place. But now he was hungry.
They went into a dim narrow place called Lindy’s Steak House that smelled of beer and charring beef. A number of couples sat in high booths padded with red leather. To the left was a long bar, scratched and pitted but still glowing like there was light in the wood. There were bowls of salted nuts and pretzels spotted along it every three feet or so. Behind the bar were photos of ballplayers, some signed, and a painting of a barenaked woman. The man presiding over the bar was very large. He bent toward them.
“What’s yours, boys?”
“Uh,” John said. For the first time that day he appeared stymied.
“Steak!” Blaze said. “Two big steaks, n milk to go with.”
The big man grinned, showing formidable teeth. He looked like he could have chewed a phone book to ribbons. “Got money?”
Blaze slapped a twenty on the counter.
The big man picked it up and checked Andy Jackson by the light. He snapped the bill between his fingers. Then he made it disappear. “Okay,” he said.
“No change?” John asked.
The big man said, “No, and you won’t be sorry.”
He turned, opened a freezer, and took out two of the biggest, reddest steaks Blaze had ever seen in his life. There was a deep grill at the end of the bar, and when the big man tossed the steaks on, almost contemptuously, flames leaped up.
“Hicks’ special, comin right up,” he said.