The Long Ride Home…Fiction by Chinle Miller

 

Glenwood Springs, Colorado

After quickly pausing one last time to gaze at the sheer maroon-red cliffs and forested ridges high above, Jim Bone stepped onto the train.

Worried that Jim might change his mind, the train made a clanking sound, lurched a bit, and began slowly moving, pulling out of the station. The massive engine let out a series of sharp whistles that echoed all the way up-canyon to the little valley of Four Mile Creek. There, the sound bounced off the cinderblock walls of Jim’s house, then bent around to the back yard where Jim had often sat in the evenings by the choke-cherry bushes and iris, listening to that same haunting sound, wondering where the big silver train was going, who was on it, what stories they lived.

Now he’d find out.

Jim settled into one of the seats in the almost-empty car, as far from any other passengers as possible. Train now picking up speed, he looked out the window at the big river alongside the tracks, then raised his eyes just in time to catch one last glimpse of Glenwood Springs, his home for the last 10 years. That glimpse was an accident—right now, he wished he were anywhere else.

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As the train worked harder and faster on making Jim’s wish come true, the white-tipped waves of the Colorado River fell behind, engulfed by the deep maroon-walled canyon. The chika chika of the tracks drummed songs of rambling adventure. A mile or two out, Glenwood was already in the rear-view mirror of Jim’s memory.

Back at that little cinderblock house on Four Mile Creek, Jim’s girlfriend Natalie was talking on the phone to her best friend Patsy, no idea that Jim was on the train. The day after tomorrow, Natalie would receive an envelope, postmarked Green River, Utah, with the keys to Jim’s old Oldsmobile and a note asking her to pick up the car at the train station. The note would be scrawled on the back of a California Zephyr ticket to Salt Lake City. Natalie would cry for a moment, then call Patsy.

The train, finally up to speed, emerged from the deep ruby canyon of the Colorado River and rolled through the middle of the little coal town of New Castle, rattling the pop bottles in the old faded-green tarpaper-wrapped grocery store near the tracks. A few more miles and the train slowed at a yellow-brick station with the word “Rifle” above the door.

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Jim rose to get off. He could call the county road shop from the station phone here in Rifle and tell Jerry he was sick, then hitch a ride back to Glenwood, go back to work tomorrow, and nobody would ever guess how close he’d come to leaving.

The train stopped long enough to take on the mail, no passengers, then slowly started up again, taking its time, waiting for a small herd of mule deer to cross the tracks on their way to the river for a drink. Jim had plenty of time to get off, but as the train picked up speed, Jim finally sat back down, unaware of the gray-haired couple in the rear of the car who were watching the back of his blue-and-brown plaid wool jacket—the man wondering why Jim hadn’t gotten off the train, the woman wondering why this handsome man in his prime seemed troubled.

Gathering momentum, the train rolled through sagebrush flats and headed for more river canyon. Jim swayed with the motion, lost in a deep sense of regret, a profound feeling in a place where Jim hadn’t felt anything for a long time.

He’d felt this regret since early this morning, when Natalie told him she’d taken the pup to the pound—the little leopard-spotted Heeler puppy he’d found by the county road up near the old Sunlight Mine, the pup who’d been riding next to him in the road grader for the last two weeks while he promised Nat he’d find it a home.

Last night, Natalie had taken it to the pound on her way to work at the Riviera Restaurant. Jim had gone to bed early after a 16-hour stint working on a bridge abutment that was trying to wash out. Even though Natalie had warned him, he felt betrayed when he found the pup missing this morning. But deep inside he knew it was more than the pup that was wrong.

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Walking out the door without a word after she’d told him, he drove his Olds down to the dog jail, that dingy yellow building that used to be the people jail.

“Jim, I’m not supposed to tell people where the pets go, cause sometimes it can cause problems,” the shelter custodian, Joe, stumbled on his words. “Usually we have dogs in here for awhile, but that pup was picked up last evening right after your gal brought it in. It was taken by a woman goin’ through on her way back over to Utah. That pup seemed to really like her, Jim, if it’s any consolation. She said she’s out a lot in the backcountry. That pup will have a good life, chasin’ bunnies.”

“What was her name, Joe? Where can I get ahold of her?”

“Jim, I can’t tell you that, cause I don’t know. It was late and I didn’t do the paperwork like I should’ve. She drives a little old Willys jeep—green, beat up, Utah plates. Nice lookin’ gal, sandy-colored hair. That’s all I can tell you Jim. I’m sure sorry.”

Jim silently walked out of the pound, got in his Olds and sat there for a minute, then drove around town for awhile as if he might see the old green jeep that had taken his pup. Finally, for no real reason, on impulse, he turned into the parking lot by the train station.

Just as the passenger train rolled in from the east, a sense of futility crashed hard in Jim against a deep feeling of bitterness, like two massive train cars coupling.

Jim really had no intention of leaving, he hadn’t even considered it. But something drove him to walk over to the ticket window and get in line behind a fellow in a well-cut deep blue suit who was arguing with the ticket agent in a subdued voice.

Turning from the window, the fellow asked Jim. “Would you like a ticket? They won’t give me a refund, and I need to finish up some business here. My bad luck is your good luck, sir, if you’re wanting to go west.”

Still feeling that searing sense of hopelessness, Jim took it, but he really didn’t care if he got a free ticket or not. He didn’t care about much of anything right then, except his missing buddy, little Blue.

But maybe the free ticket was a sign, a change of direction somehow in a life that had long needed bearings. Jim had been wanting to go back to the desert for years, but his life in Glenwood just slipped by, day by day, a haze of routine comfort, never getting ahead enough to do anything else. And now little Blue was way ahead of him in making a new life, going west to Utah in some old green jeep.

And that train sitting there, that train he’d heard every day for 10 years—that big silver train was going west, too, to Salt Lake City—Temple City, Utah, on the other side of the Zion Curtain.

And so, unexpectedly, Jim had stepped onto the train.

Now, as the train left Rifle and continued west, Jim could see the engines curving around way ahead, following the rolling river into De-Beque Canyon. He’d heard there were wild horses here, but the odds of seeing them from a noisy train were slim.

Maybe he should get off in Grand Junction, he thought. It was only 85 miles from home—he could still make that phone call and get back to Glenwood today. But maybe he should just keep going—it had been years since he’d been in Utah, and that had been just a quick visit to Bluff, the little town along the San Juan River where he grew up with his brother Roger—they’d been raised there by their mom’s brother.

His uncle was now in heaven, having been an Episcopal priest, and his brother Roger was now in hell—Green River, Utah, that is. Jim smiled wryly, thinking of all the times he’d razzed his brother about living in the remote town out in the middle of that sweeping empty desert.

He hadn’t seen Roger in three years. Maybe he’d just go on over there for a few days, then head back home. Hell, maybe he’d just go the run of the ticket to Salt Lake, become a Mormon, get a job, and start a new life there. He liked toying with the idea.

He was feeling a little better now, and as the train edged next to the yellow cliffs of DeBeque Canyon, Jim started singing to himself softly.

Ramblin’ rose, ramblin’ rose, How I love you, heaven knows. Wild and windblown
That’s how you’ve grown, Who can cling to a ramblin’ rose.

Behind him, the gray-haired woman heard the tune, looked out the window, and began humming along. The gray-haired man, immersed in a story in the paper about old-timers, didn’t hear anything.

Hearing her humming, Jim turned. The woman smiled. He touched his hat brim in return. He must be feeling better, the gray-haired woman thought.

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The river canyon suddenly opened into a wide valley, and they now passed by peach orchards interspersed with picturesque farm houses, just on the outskirts of Grand Junction. Soon the train began to slow as it negotiated the streets of the city. Jim looked down at the drivers in the passenger cars waiting at each crossing and wondered what their lives were like. He waved back at a couple of red-headed kids on bikes. As the train rolled to a stop, a voice came over a scratchy speaker:

“Folks, we’re in Grand Junction, Colorado. We’ll be here for 20 minutes. There’s a snack bar here and telephones. If you get off, please have your tickets ready when you reboard. Thanks for riding the California Zephyr with us. Our next stop will be Thompson, Utah.”

The gray-haired woman stood and got off the train, long skirt swishing and cowboy boots clicking on the wooden floor of the car. The smell of coffee floated in through the open car door, and Jim decided to go get a cup. Glenwood was forgotten, at least for now.

On the sidewalk in front of the station was a little portable snack bar with sandwiches and drinks.The gray-haired woman was ordering muffins and tea. Jim ordered a ham sandwich and black coffee. Up close, the woman looked to be in her early-70s, Jim thought. She was slight and wiry, and her tanned and lined face spoke of a life in the outdoors, a life in wind and sun.

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The woman smiled at Jim and asked, “Are you enjoying the ride?” Jim replied, “I am. I haven’t been on a train since I was a kid.”

“We’re getting off soon, in Thompson. It’ll be good to get home. Where are you headed?”
Jim surprised himself with his answer, “Green River. My brother has a melon farm there and I’m going to go work for him. I was born and raised in the desert, and I’m kind of in the mood to go back for awhile.”

The woman extended her hand. “Nice to meet you.You know, we’re only about 25 miles from Green River—come on over and visit us at the Rancho Not So Grande, about a mile up Thompson Canyon. I’m Mattie Davis.”

Coffee in one hand, Jim stuck the sandwich in his jacket pocket so he could shake her hand. Back on the train, Mattie introduced Jim to her husband, Jack Davis. Jack seemed detached, now reading about Paris hairstyles in a magazine someone had left on the next seat. Jack loved to read, but his standard fare was either Louis L’Amour or the Blue Mountain Journal from down in Monticello.

He’d never seen Vogue Magazine. Now this was different!

Soon the train was on its way, dropping down through the drainage of Salt Creek into Horsethief Canyon, there meeting its old friend the Colorado River once again. Horsethief Canyon soon merged with the multicolored walls of Ruby Canyon, tall ramparts streaked with desert varnish, inky black on crimson. Jim saw a huge Bald Eagle rise from the river with a fish in its talons, scattering a flock of smaller birds before it like prismatic speckles against the sun.

Huge ancient cottonwood trees bent over the river like monks, blessing their beloved and holy water with outstretched gnarly arms wearing a hint of spring green. Flotillas of early-arriving geese left snowflake tracks on the thin-edged ice before hopping into the river, oblivious to the cold water in their comfy down jackets.

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As the train rattled on, Jim caught a quick glimpse up Rattlesnake Canyon, narrow and deep, elegant arches carved high above in the Entrada sandstone. Someday he would come back and hike up there, walking out onto the highest arch of all, standing with arms outstretched, just to see what it felt like to be out in thin air like that eagle he’d just seen.

Suddenly the light coming in through the windows went dim, then bright again, then dim, and Jim realized there must be another set of tracks here, as another train was passing them only a few feet away, going toward where they’d just been. It was a freight train, its huge round cars painted with the words “Corn Syrup.”

The California Zephyr slowed almost imperceptibly as it began the climb back up out of the river canyon, up onto the Mancos flats of the Cisco Desert above. Following the river would soon be impossible, for its course churned its way wall-to-wall through Westwater Canyon, thundering and driving its spring snowmelt through places like the Room of Doom and Skull Cave, places where trains weren’t welcome.

Jim now noticed a rough two-track road, almost a trail, paralleling the train, following the turns and bends of the tracks so closely that the train would surely brush against any vehicle there. Someone had recently driven it, leaving narrow tire-tracks in the soft dirt, tracks that still had a soft dusting of unmelted snow. Jim wondered why anyone would be way out here—it was too early for a rancher to be grazing stock.

As they neared the little settlement of Cisco, the whistle sounded. Train clattering over road crossing, Jim caught a quick glimpse of a little olive-colored jeep waiting for the train to pass. In it were two passengers—the driver, a woman with sandy brown hair—and a little merle dog, black and white spots blending into a dusty blue color, eyes wide at the sight of the big blue train.

The image was quickly gone, left behind in the clacking of the rails. Jim jumped up, “Blue! It’s Blue!”

At the same time, Mattie said, “Look, Davis!” She nudged him, “Pops, we just passed Callie!”

They soon reached the station at Thompson, where Mattie helped her husband Jack collect his new-found assortment of reading materials. Mattie paused as she passed Jim.

“Come on by sometime, Jim, and I’ll introduce you to our friend Callie. She comes by our place quite often, especially when she needs to write up her archaeology reports. See ya soon.”

A half-hour later, Jim stepped down off the train, finally back home in the desert.

He felt suddenly free, carefree, no luggage, no baggage. Waiting in the dark by the closed station with its art deco glassblock windows, he watched the train slowly disappear around a curve to the west. He quickly kneeled down, putting his ear to the rails.

Standing back up, Jim shook his fist in mock anger. “Lying Hollywood bastards!You can’t hear the train through the rails.”

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Down a dirt street with a faded “Broadway” sign, Jim walked slowly toward the lights of downtown, where he could barely make out the flashing neon sign of the Robbers Roost Motel. He soon neared a little bar with “Billiards” painted in ten-foot letters on its dingy white clapboard side. “Back at 1,” said the hand-scrawled curled-up yellowed sign in the window. Jim smiled—the owner must’ve got on the train and never came back, just like that, no luggage, nothin’. Probably over in Glenwood Springs right now, eating linguini at the Riviera.

As Jim walked by the desultory old bar, he noticed two skinny little strays watching him from the alley, eyes shining in the dark. He stopped and called to them.

“C’mon out kids, what’s up?”

The dogs hesitated and started to run, then turned back and watched him, warily. Jim called again, then, remembering the long-forgotten sandwich he’d bought in Grand Junction, took it out of his jacket pocket and tossed a small piece in their direction. One little dog turned tail and ran, but the other quickly snatched up the piece of bread, gulping it down. The dog then sat and watched Jim as the other dog, obviously from the same litter, slowly came out of the shadows.

Jim, now engrossed with the little strays, tossed two pieces of bread midway between the dogs and himself, then lay down in the middle of the dark empty street, pretending to ignore the young dogs, talking softly. Only in Green River, Utah, could you lay in the middle of the street and not get run over, Jim thought, smiling. Smelling the sandwich, the dogs eventually came to him, warily eating from his hand, finally letting Jim pet them, still half-afraid.

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Jim stood and began slowly walking in the direction of his brother’s house, a mile or so away towards the river road. The dogs hesitated, ready to run back to the shelter of the dark alley, knowing their luck was too good to last. After a moment, Jim turned and looked back, and suddenly a strange sense of peace flowed through him.

He whistled to the dogs gently. “C’mon, let’s go home—it’s way past time for us to go home.” The dogs followed, wagging and dancing happily while jumping up to gingerly touch cold noses to his open hands.

Several months later, nearly two hundred miles to the east, Natalie soaked luxuriantly in the steamy waters of the Glenwood Hot Springs Pool, watching the last failing rays of sunset above those inspiring maroon cliffs.

Her new boyfriend sat on the edge of the pool, feet dangling in warm water and a shroud of steam floating around his straight black hair. Tony was the cook at the Riviera, the restaurant where Natalie waitressed.

Now Tony paid the rent at the cinderblock house on Four Mile. In the afternoons, before he and Natalie would go to work, Tony relaxed in the back yard by the chokecherry bushes and iris, wondering where the big silver train was off to this time, who was on it, what stories they lived.

That same day, down in the Glenwood train yards, the flattened hulk of Jim’s Olds was loaded onto a flatbed on the eastbound freight, headed for the smelter in Denver. The old car, impounded from the station parking lot and unclaimed, had finally been sold as scrap.

No one ever found Jim’s note to Natalie in the console.

Natalie, honey, let the next poor bastard have a dog. Love, Jimmy

To read the PDF version of this article, click here and here.

Follow this link to read Chinle’s newest novel:

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3 comments for “The Long Ride Home…Fiction by Chinle Miller

  1. Joey Ziffenheimer
    January 19, 2015 at 6:15 pm

    Chinle Miller. One. Excellent. Writer.

  2. George Wilson
    October 20, 2015 at 3:07 pm

    Chinle Miller…one realy fine writer…love her stylw…working through her Bud Chumway series of books all the Café series…and now read this….want more….

  3. Mrs. E D Trimm
    January 9, 2017 at 7:05 pm

    When the craziness of the real world overcomes me, I run to the audible Bud Shumway for comfort. I love Miller’s deceptively simple style of presenting and solving mysteries. I appreciate her reminder that there were times that were quieter and life more enjoyable. I am aware there were serious problems boiling to the to the surface but even the oppressed had the comfort of their loved ones. I so enjoy relearning my geology and wish I had had the mah to earn my earth scientist degree and the courage to have gone where I had been accepted to grad school for my higher degrees in archaeology. With all that in mind, it’s no wonder I listened o every Bud Shumway and read what wasn’t available on Audible. The question that nags me is how Wilma Jean ended up married to Bud, when she was married to someone else in Miller’s short stories.

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