"To Texas?" he asked smiling. "Texas is a big
   state." The newsstand attendant laughed. "You know
   where you're going in Texas, right?"
   "Yes sir, I do."
   "Well," he said, "just make a right at this first
   corridor and at the end of the corridor, you'll find the
   ticket booths." "Thank you," I said.
   "Say, that's a pretty doll you're carrying, as
   pretty as you," he said. I forgot how tightly I was
   holding on to Angel. I smiled and started away. "Not
   running away from home, are you?" he called to me. "Oh, no, sir."
   He and the newsstand attendant laughed again.
   When I arrived at the ticket booth, I asked for a ticket
   to Fullerton, Texas. That was really all I knew about
   Grandma Jana's home. I thought once I arrived there, I
   could call her to come get me.
   The ticket seller smirked.
   "Fullerton, Texas?" He looked at his charts.
   "Don't have any train stop there, Miss. What's it
   near?"
   "Oh, I'm not sure. I think . . ."
   "Houston? Dallas? El Paso?"
   I began to panic. If I didn't choose one, he
   would surely think I was a girl running away from
   home. He might even signal to the policeman and
   nothing would be more horrible, more embarrassing
   and degrading than being brought back to Farthy in a
   police car right in the middle of Momma's charity
   affair.
   "Dallas," I said quickly. All I wanted to do was
   get to Texas. Once I was there, I would call Grandma
   Jana. I was sure she would see to it that I was brought
   to her home, no matter how far away I was.
   "Okay, Dallas. Well," he said, "the best I can do
   for you is send you to our hub city, Atlanta. You'll
   have quite a layover there, however; unless you come
   back and leave early in the morning tomorrow." "No, I don't care about the layover," I
   stammered.
   "I see. Round trip, I imagine?"
   "No," I said quickly. "One way."
   "You want general seating, a car, a sleeper?" "A car," I replied.
   He nodded and began working on ray ticket,
   "That will be one hundred and sixty-two dollars." One hundred and sixty-two! That didn't leave
   me much money for anything else. Perhaps I should
   have chosen general seating, I thought, but I didn't
   hesitate. I didn't want the ticket seller to know that I
   didn't have much traveling money. I counted it out
   quickly and he gave me the ticket.
   "You leave from platform C, in about fifteen
   minutes. That's down to the right and over. You can't
   miss it."
   "Thank you." I took my ticket and started away.
   Now that I actually had the ticket in my hand and I
   was heading for the train platform, the reality of what
   I was doing set in. My heart was thumping so hard, I
   thought I would go into a faint and make a scene. I
   imagined a crowd of people clustered around me, the
   young policeman holding everyone back. It frightened
   me even more to imagine it, so hurried to the platform
   and took the first available seat on a bench. Because
   there was still some time before the train left, there
   weren't many people here. I saw a woman with two
   little girls two benches down from me. She was reading to them from a children's storybook to keep them occupied. I couldn't help remembering the way
   Momma would read to me.
   How different the world was when I was very
   little and we were all living in our Boston home, I
   thought. Watching this mother and her children made
   me wonder about the baby I was carrying. Was it a
   boy or a girl? When I gave birth, should I keep the
   child or give it up for adoption? What would Grandma
   Jana's advice be? Could I give up the baby once I had
   held it in my arms? But wasn't I too young to be a
   mother, and if I did become a mother, what kind of a
   mother would I be?
   I knew I would never be a mother like mine. I'd
   rather give the child away than be that, I thought. I set
   Angel down beside me and closed my eyes. The
   rumble of trains approaching and leaving other
   platforms made the floor quake. Soon, more and more
   people began to arrive. When a man in a suit and tie
   sat down beside me, I hugged Angel to me. The man
   smiled but then immediately opened a newspaper and
   began reading.
   My heart began to thump again. It was getting
   closer and closer to my departure. I looked back. Was
   I making the right decision? It would be easy to change my mind. I could simply call and have Miles return. Soon, he would be arriving at Farthy himself and he would either mention taking me to the train station or be asked where he had gone. Momma would find out and send him right back to get me, but
   he wouldn't arrive in time.
   There was no returning, I thought, and when the
   train came rumbling in, I got up immediately to enter
   as soon as the doors opened. I found my car quickly
   and took a seat by the window. Then I put my suitcase
   overhead, set Angel beside me snugly and waited
   anxiously. There was room for at least three other
   people, but only an elderly gentleman came into my
   car. He nodded, smiled, took his seat and immediately
   began reading his newspaper.
   Finally, the train began to pull away. My heart
   thumped in rhythm with the thump of the train's
   wheels as they turned on the tracks. The station
   disappeared behind us and we shot out into the
   twilight, heading south, heading away from the only
   world I had ever known.
   "Ticket, miss?" the conductor said. I had it
   clutched in my hand and handed it to him quickly. He
   punched it and smiled. I sat back and looked out the
   window as the train snaked on, carrying me into tunnels of darkness and over hills toward new horizons. We seemed to be riding into the
   approaching night, the darkness crawling toward us. I caught glimpses of stars peeping down between clouds. They never seemed farther away than they did
   now.
   The train rocked on. From time to time, I saw
   the lights of other cities or houses out in the distance,
   their windows a warm yellow. Within those houses,
   families sat together having dinner. Those children
   felt safe and secure with parents who loved them.
   They weren't as rich as I was, and their homes could
   fit in one corner of Farthinggale Manor and be lost,
   but they would be going to sleep in their own beds
   tonight and their parents would kiss them good night.
   Mothers would tuck in little children. Daddies would
   kiss them on their cheeks or foreheads and promise
   them an even brighter or happier tomorrow. I had no one to promise me a happier or
   brighter tomorrow, no one but Angel. She and I sat
   like two lost children being pulled into the unknown.
   We were tired and hungry and already quite lonely.
   Even though the gentleman across from me eyed me
   curiously when I placed Angel firmly in my lap, I kept
   her there, hugging her tightly to me as the train rolled on. I was determined. There was no turning back, not now, not ever. Soon, the monotonou 
					     					 			s rhythm of its
   wheels put me to sleep.
   I awoke with a start in the middle of the night.
   It was dark in the car, but there were lights on the
   outside of the train and lights in the corridor, so after
   my initial confusion, I remembered exactly where I
   was and what I had done. The gentleman across from
   me was asleep with his newspaper opened on his lap.
   His body rocked from side to side with the train. I
   curled up again and closed my eyes. In moments, I
   was asleep once more.
   I awoke with the first light of morning and
   looked out over the farms and fiat fields. The elderly
   gentleman was already awake.
   "How far are you going, Miss?" he asked. "Atlanta."
   "I get off at the next stop. You've got a good
   five hours more. You can get some breakfast in the
   dining car. Very pretty doll," he said nodding toward
   Angel. "I don't think I've ever seen one that pretty," he
   added with a smile of admiration.
   "Thank you."
   "Going home?"
   "Yes," I said. I thought it was better to say that.
   In a way might be going home, I reasoned.
   He stretched.
   "Me too," he said. "Been on the road nearly a
   month. I'm a salesman, wholesale shoes."
   "That must be hard for you, being away from
   your family so long."
   "That it is. Nothing like going home. Of course,
   all my children are grown, so there's just me and the
   good woman. It's nice though. We have five
   grandchildren," he added, smiling proudly.
   I smiled back at him and then I thought, soon
   Momma would have a grandchild, only she would
   never be able to appreciate her grandchild the way this
   man appreciates his grandchildren, for hers was
   fathered by her new husband. The twisted and dark
   world of Farthy would follow my baby forever, I
   concluded. It was almost a reason not to have it. But maybe I could find another world, a world
   very different from Farthy, and bring my child into
   that world. If only I could, if only could, if only I
   could. I chanted it like a prayer in rhythm with the
   train's wheels. Then my stomach churned with
   hunger.
   "I guess I will get some breakfast," I said
   standing. "I'll watch your doll for you," the gentleman
   offered.
   "Oh, no sir. She goes everywhere I do," I said.
   "And besides, she's just as hungry."
   He laughed and I went out to find the dining
   car.
   We stopped at his stop while I was having
   something to eat, so he was gone by the time I
   returned. I spent the next three and a half hours alone,
   staring out the window. When I heard the
   announcement for Atlanta, my heart began to pound
   again. The first leg of my long and sad journey was
   over. I was far away from Farthy and by now,
   Momma was surely frantic and angry. I wondered
   how she would handle it. Would she call the police or
   would she be afraid of a scandal? Would she try to
   contact Tony in Europe?
   One thing was sure, I thought. She didn't let
   what happened interfere with her charity affair at
   Farthy. No one who attended would be able to tell
   anything was wrong by looking at her face and she
   would instruct the servants, Miles and Curtis
   especially, not to mention one word about it to
   anyone.
   I could just hear her.
   "She will be back once she's over her tantrum."
   "No, I won't, Momma," I pledged. "No, I won't." I stood on the platform for a few moments
   reading all the signs that instructed passengers where
   to go for different destinations. The Atlanta terminal
   was bigger than the one in Boston and there seemed to
   be twice, maybe three times the number of people
   rushing about. I found an information booth in the
   large lobby and showed my ticket to the girl behind
   the desk.
   "You have to go down the corridor on the left
   there and make the first right. You'll see the signs, but
   this train isn't scheduled to depart until eight P.M.
   Don't you have anyplace to go until then? It's hours
   and hours."
   "No," I said. "It'll be all right."
   "Suit yourself," she said and turned to someone
   else. I bought a magazine and then followed her
   directions and arrived at my platform. It was much
   wider and longer than the one in Boston. There was a
   small lounge area off to the right, so I went directly to
   it and sat on a bench toward the rear. Then I counted
   my money. I didn't have much left, and hoped I had
   enough for lunch and dinner.
   "I bet I could turn one of your one-dollar bills
   into a five-dollar bill," someone said and I looked up and into the most radiant black eyes I had ever seen. The young man standing in front of me had thick, rich ebony hair and bronze skin. He was tall and handsome with broad, strong shoulders that made the seams of
   his thin, short-sleeve shirt strain.
   "Pardon me?"
   "Just trust me with one of those one-dollar bills
   a moment and I'll show you," he said sitting down
   beside me. I don't know why I did it, but I handed this
   stranger one of my precious dollars. I knew that
   unsuspecting travelers, especially young girls like
   myself, were targets for con artists everywhere. But
   he had said he would turn my one into a five and not
   vice versa and I liked looking at him.
   From what I could see, he had nothing in his
   hands and of course, he had no sleeves in which to
   hide anything. He folded my dollar very carefully in
   his palm right before my eyes. He made it as small as
   he could. Then he turned his hand over so I could see
   only the top of his closed fist. He held it in front of me
   and smiled.
   "Okay, you touch my hand," he said. His eyes
   twinkled.
   "Touch your hand?" He nodded. I put my finger
   on his middle knuckle and then took it off quickly. He
   laughed.
   "It's not goin' ta burn ya. Okay, that was good
   enough anyway," he said and turned his hand over,
   palm up again. Then, before my eyes, he unfolded the
   bill and there it was--a five-dollar bill?
   "How did you do that?" I asked, my eyes wide.
   He shrugged.
   "Magic, how else? Anyway, here it is, five
   dollars," he said handing it to me. "The way you were
   counting your money, right down to-the penny, you
   look like you needed an extra four dollars," he said. "Is that right?" Heat came into my face. "Well,
   I'm not accustomed to taking money from strangers,
   even magic money," I replied thrusting the five-dollar
   bill back at him.
   "Okay. I won't be a stranger then," he said
   leaning back and holding his palms up. "My name's
   Thomas Luke Casteel, but most everyone just calls me
   Luke. And you are?" he extended his hand.
   I stared at him, not knowing whether I should
   laugh or get up and walk away. He was too handsome
   to be a con man, thought; rather, I hoped.
					     					 			 />   "Leigh VanVoreen." I shook his hand. "There, now we're not strangers and you can
   keep the magic money."
   "I really don't need it. I have enough to get
   where I have to go. I must insist you change this back
   to my one-dollar bill." He laughed.
   "I don't know the magic to change it back.
   Sorry."
   "You're being very foolish, giving away money
   like that." He shrugged.
   "Easy come, easy go. Besides, it was worth far
   more than four dollars to have seen your face when I
   performed my trick," he said fixing his eyes on me. I
   felt myself blush.
   "Are you a magician?"
   "Not really. I've been working in a circus
   nearby and I picked up a lot of stuff like that from the
   carnies." "Carnies?"
   "Carnival people. They're wonderful people to
   know. They stick together through thick and thin and
   help each other all the time, and some of them have
   traveled all over the world and know a great many
   things. Just sitting around and listening to them talk, I
   learn a lot. You'd be surprised how much I already
   know, and knowledge and experience is what makes
   you older," he added proudly.
   "You don't look that old."
   "Seventeen. You don't look very old either." "I'm almost fourteen."
   "Well, we're not much older than Romeo and
   Juliet, you know," he said. "The duchess told me
   about them. She was a professional actress in Europe.
   Now, she does the knife throwing act with her
   husband."
   "You mean, she stands there while he throws
   knives around her?"
   "Yep."
   "I could never do that. And what if her husband
   got mad at her?" I asked.
   Luke laughed again.
   "That's a big joke around the tents. It's not as
   dangerous as it seems. There's a technique to it, just as
   there is for most anything in the circus, but that's what
   I love about the circus--the illusions, the makebelieve world, the excitement."
   "It sounds like fun. What do you do?" "I just took on a part-time job, just for a short
   while, just to be around it. I want to be a circus barker
   one day. You know, the man who calls to the people."
   He jumped up and cried out, "Come one, come all, to
   the greatest show on earth. We have one-eyed giants,
   a snake lady, the smallest man in the world, the
   bearded lady, Boris the lion tamer, the greatest acrobatic team in the air!" he recited as if he were standing on a platform. People nearby turned our way, but he didn't seem to care that he was attracting