โIโm Jack Valen,โ the man said. โLoreda Martinelli.โ
He put the truck in gear and they drove north. The suspension on the truck was shot. The leather seat burped up and down at every bump.
Loreda stared out the window. In the brief flash of their headlights or in the glare of billboards lit up by streetlights, she saw people camped on the side of the road, and hobos walking with packs slung over their backs.
They passed the school and the hospital and the squatterโs camp, which lay shrouded in darkness.
And then they were past the places Loreda knew, past the town of Welty.
Out here, there was nothing but road.
โHey, what do you have to do this late at night?โ she said. It occurred to her suddenly that she could have put herself in danger.
The man lit a cigarette, exhaled a stream of blue-gray smoke through his open window. โSame as you, I imagine.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
He turned. For the first time she saw his entire face, the tanned roughness of it, the sharp nose and black eyes. โYouโre running away from something. Or someone.โ
โAnd you are, too?โ
โKid, if you arenโt running away these days, you arenโt paying attention. But no, Iโm not running.โ He smiled in a way that made him almost handsome. โI donโt want to get caught out here, either.โ
โMy dad did that.โ โDid what?โ
โRan out in the middle of the night. Never came back.โ
โWell โฆ thatโs a hell of a thing,โ he said at last. โWhat about your mom?โ
โWhat about her?โ
He turned onto a long dirt road. Darkness.
Loreda didnโt see lights anywhere, just blackness. No houses, no streetlights, no other cars on the road.
โW-where are we going?โ
โI told you I had a stop to make before I dropped you at the bus station.โ โOut here? In the middle of nowhere?โ
He let the truck roll to a stop. โI need your word, kid. You wonโt talk about this place. Or me. Or anything you see here.โ
They were in a huge grassy field. A barn stood alongside a dilapidated ranch house, both bathed in moonlight. A dozen or so cars and trucks were parked in the grass, their headlights off. Thin yellow lines in between the boards of the barn indicated that there was something going on inside. โNo one listens to people like me,โ Loreda said. She couldnโt bring herself to say the word she meant:ย Okies.
โIf you donโt give me your word, Iโll turn around right now and drop you off on the main road.โ
Loreda looked at him. He was impatient with her, she could tell. A tic pulled at the corner of his eyes, but otherwise he appeared calm. He was waiting for her to decide, but he wouldnโt wait long.
She should tell him to turn around right now, take her back to the road. Whatever was going on in that barn this late at night couldnโt be good. And grown-ups didnโt demand this kind of promise from kids.
โIs it bad, whatโs going on in there?โ
โNo,โ he said. โItโs good. But these are dangerous times.โ
Loreda looked into the manโs dark eyes. He was โฆ intense. A little frightening, perhaps, but alive in a way she hadnโt seen before. Here was a man who wouldnโt live in a dirty tent and eat scraps and be grateful for it. He wasnโt broken like the rest of them. His vitality called out to her,
reminded her of better times, of the man sheโd thought her father to be. โI promise.โ
He drove forward, threading his way through the parked cars. Near the doors, he parked the truck and turned off the engine.
โYou stay in the truck,โ he said, opening his door. โHow long will you be?โ
โAs long as I need to be.โ
Loreda watched him walk toward the barn and open the door. She saw a flash of light, and what looked like shadow people gathered within. Then he closed the door behind him.
Loreda stared at the dark barn, the streaks of light bleeding through the cracks. What were they doing in there?
An automobile chugged up alongside the truck, parked. Its headlights snapped off.
Loreda saw a couple get out of the car. They were well dressed, all in black, both smoking cigarettes. Definitely not migrants or farmers.
Loreda made a snap decision: she got out of the truck and followed the couple to the barn.
The barn door opened.
Loreda slipped in behind the couple and immediately pressed herself back against the rough boards of the barn.
She couldnโt have said what she was expecting to seeโgrown-ups drinking hooch and dancing the Lindy Hop maybeโbut whatever sheโd expected, it wasnโt this. Men dressed in suits mingled with women, some of whom were wearing pants.ย Pants.ย They seemed to be all talking at once, gesturing with their hands as if arguing. The place felt alive, hive-like with activity. Cigarette smoke created a haze that blurred everyone and stung Loredaโs eyes.
There were about ten tables set up in the barnโs dusty, shadowed interior, with lanterns set on each one, creating pockets of light shot through with dust and smoke. Typewriters and mimeograph machines were positioned on the tables. Women sat in chairs and smoked and typed. There was a strange aroma in the air, mixed in with the smell of smoke. Stacks of papers lined the tabletops. Every once in a while Loreda heard theย briiiiingย of a carriage return.
When Jack strode forward, people stopped what they were doing and turned toward him. He pulled a newspaper off a table in front of him and climbed up several loft steps, then faced the crowd. He lifted the newspaper up. The headline read: โLos Angeles Declares War on Migrants.โ
โPolice Chief James โTwo Gunsโ Davis, with the support of the big growers, the railroads, the state relief agencies, and the rest of the state fat cats, just closed the California border to migrants.โ Jack threw the paper to the straw-covered floor. โThink of it. Desperate people, good people,ย Americans,ย are being stopped at the border at gunpoint and turned away. To go where? Many of them are starving back home or dying of dust pneumonia. If they wonโt turn back, the coppers are jailing them for vagrancy and judges are sentencing them to hard labor.โ
Loreda was hardly surprised. She knew what it was like to come here looking for better and be treated as worse.
โBastards,โ someone yelled.
โAll across the state of California, the big growers are taking advantage of the people who work for them. The migrants coming into the state are so desperate to feed their families, theyโll take any wage. There are more than seventy thousand homeless people between here and Bakersfield. Children are dying in the squattersโ camps at a rate of two a day, from malnutrition or disease. Itโs not right. Not in America. I donโt care if there is a Depression. Enough is enough. Itโs up to us to help them. We have to get them to join the Workers Alliance and stand up for their rights.โ
There was a roar of approval from the crowd.
Loreda nodded. His words struck a nerve with her, made her think for the first time,ย We donโt have to take this.
โNow is the time, comrades. The government wonโt help these people. It is up to us. We have to convince the workers to stand up. Rise up. Use any means at our disposal to stop big business from crushing the workers and taking advantage of them. We must stand together and fight this capitalist injustice. We will fight for the migrant workers here and in the Central Valley, help them organize into unions and battle for better wages. The time โฆ is now!โ
โYes!โ Loreda shouted. โYes!โ
Jack jumped down from the riser on the loft ladder, but just before he did, Loreda saw him look directly at her.
He strode toward her, making his way easily through the crowd.
Loreda felt the intensity of his gaze; she felt like a mouse paralyzed by the gaze of a hunting hawk.
โI thought I told you to stay in the truck.โ โI want to join your group. I could help.โ
โOh, really?โ He towered over her, was even taller than her mom. She drew in a tight, ragged breath. โGo home, kid. Youโre too young for this.โ
โI am a migrant worker.โ
He lit a cigarette, studied her.
โWe live in the ditch-bank camp off Sutter Road. I picked cotton this fall when I should have been in school. If I hadnโt, we would have starved. We live in a tent. We wanted the jobs in the fields so badly that sometimes we slept in ditches at the side of the road to be first in line. The bossโthat fat pig, Weltyโhe doesnโt care if we make enough to eat.โ
โWelty, huh? Weโve been trying to unionize the migrant camps. Weโve met with resistance. The Okies are stubborn and proud.โ
โDonโt call us that,โ she said. โWeโre people who just want jobs. My grandparents and my mom โฆ they donโt believe in government handouts. They want to make it on their own, butโฆโ
โBut what?โ
โItโs not going to work, is it? Us coming here for a better life and actually getting it?โ
โNot without a fight.โ
โI want to fight,โ Loreda said, realizing as she said it that sheโd been itching for this fight for a long time.ย Thisย was what sheโd run away to find, not her lily-livered father.ย Thisย was the passion sheโd lost. She felt the heat of it.
โHow old are you, really?โ โThirteen.โ
โAnd your old man ran out on the family when he lost his job in โฆ St.
Louis.โ
โTexas,โ Loreda said.
โKid, men like that arenโt worth shit. And youโre too young to be walking around on your own. Howโd you get to California?โ
โMy mom brought us.โ
โAll by herself? She must be tough.โ
โI called her a coward tonight.โ
He gave her a knowing look. โIs she going to be worried?โ
Loreda nodded. โUnless they went looking for me. What if theyโre gone?โ At that, homesickness gripped her; not the kind for a place, but for people. Her people. Mom and Ant. Grandma and Grandpa. The people who loved her.
โKid, the people who love you stay. Youโve already learned that. Go find your mom and tell her youโve been as dumb as a box of marbles. And let her hold you tight.โ
Loreda felt the sting of tears. A police siren wailed outside.
โShit,โ Jack said, taking her by the arm, dragging her across the barn, through the panicking crowd.
He shoved her up the ladder in front of him and pushed her into the loft. โThereโs fire in you, kid. Donโt let the bastards put it out. Stay here till morning or you might end up in the hoosegow.โ
He dropped down the loft ladder to the barn floor.
The door cracked open. Cops appeared in the opening, holding guns and billy clubs. Behind them, red lights flashed. Cops streamed into the barn, scooped up the papers and the typewriters and the mimeograph machines.
Loreda saw a cop hit Jack in the head with his club. Jack staggered but didnโt fall. Weaving a little, he grinned at the copper. โThatโs all you got?โ
The copโs face tightened. โYouโre a dead man, Valen. Sooner or later.โ He hit Jack again, harder.
โRound โem up, fellas,โ the policeman said, as blood splattered his uniform. โWe donโt want Reds in our town.โ
Reds.
Communists.
ELSA WALKED BENEATH ANย anemic moon into the town of Welty. At this hour, the streets were deserted.
There it was: the police station, tucked on a side street, not far from the library.
She didnโt believe that anyone in authority would actually help her, or even listen to her, but her daughter was missing. This was all she could think of to do.
The parking lot was empty but for a few cruisers and an old-fashioned truck. In the light cast downward from a streetlamp, she saw a bindle stiff standing beside the truck smoking a cigarette. She didnโt make eye contact but felt him watching her.
Elsa straightened to her full height, unaware that sheโd become hunched on her walk here.
She moved past the vagrant and entered the station. Inside, the lobby was austere; one row of chairs against a wall, each one empty. Light shone down from the ceiling onto a man in uniform, smoking a hand-rolled cigarette, at a desk with a black phone.
She tried to look confident. Clutching her fraying handbag strap, she crossed the tile floor, made her way to the officer at the desk.
He was tall and thin, with slicked-back hair and a thin mustache. He wrinkled his nose at her disheveled appearance.
She cleared her throat. โUh. Sir. Iโm here to report a missing girl.โ She tensed, waited for it:ย We donโt care about your kind.
โUh-huh?โ
โMy daughter. Sheโs thirteen. Do you have children?โ He was silent so long she almost turned away.
โI do. A twelve-year-old, in fact. Sheโs the reason Iโm losing my hair.โ Elsa would have smiled any other time. โWe had a fight. I said โฆ
Anyway, she ran away.โ
โDo you have any idea where sheโd go? What direction?โ
Elsa shook her head. โHer โฆ father left us a while ago. She misses him, blames me, but we have no idea where he is.โ
โFolks are doing that these days. Last week we had a fella kill his whole family before he killed himself. Hard times.โ
Elsa waited for more. The man stared at her.
โYou wonโt find her,โ Elsa said dully. โHow could you?โ โIโll keep my eye out. Mostly, they come back.โ
Elsa tried to compose herself, but his kindness unraveled her more than cruelty could. โShe has black hair and blue eyes. Well, almost violet, really,
but she says only I see that. Her name is Loreda Martinelli.โ โBeautiful name.โ He wrote it down.
Elsa nodded, stood there a moment longer.
โMy recommendation is to go home, maโam. Wait. I bet sheโll come back. Itโs obvious you love her. Sometimes our kids donโt see whatโs right in front of them.โ
Elsa backed away, unable to even thank him for his kindness.
Outside, she stared across the empty parking lot and thought:ย Where is she?
Elsaโs legs started to give out on her. She stumbled, nearly fell. Someone steadied her. โYou okay?โ
She wrenched sideways, pulled away.
He backed off, lifted his hands in the air. โHey, Iโm not going to hurt you.โ
โIโIโm fine,โ she said.
โIโd say youโre further from fine than anyone Iโve ever met.โ
It was the bindle stiff sheโd seen by the truck on her way into the station. An ugly bruise discolored one of his cheekbones. Dried blood flecked his collar. His black hair was too long, raggedly cut, threaded with gray at the temples.
โIโm fine.โ
โYou look exhausted. Let me drive you home.โ โYou must think Iโm stupid.โ
โIโm not dangerous.โ
โSays the bloodied-up man at the police station at one in the morning.โ He smiled. โA good beating makes them feel better.โ
โWhat did you do?โ
โDo? You think you need to commit a crime to get beaten up by the coppers? Iโm just unpopular these days. Radical ideas,โ he said, still smiling. โLet me drive you home. You will be safe with me.โ He put a hand to his chest. โJailbirdโs honor.โ
โNo, thanks.โ
Elsa didnโt like the way he was staring at her. He reminded her of the hungry men who lurked in shadows to steal what they wanted. Deep-set black eyes peered out from his craggy face; he had a jutting nose and pushed-out chin. And he needed a shave. โWhat are you looking at?โ
โYou remind me of someone, thatโs all. A warrior.โ โYeah. Iโm a warrior, all right.โ
Elsa walked away. Out on the main road, she turned left, toward the camp. It was the only thing she could think of to do.ย Go home.ย Ant was there.
Wait and hope.





