THE HOOFER
By
Walter M. Miller, Jr.
They all knew he was a spacer because
of the white goggle marks on his sun-scorched face,
and so they tolerated him and helped him. They
even made allowances for him when he staggered and
fell in the aisle of the bus while pursuing the harassed
little housewife from seat to seat and cajoling her
to sit and talk with him.
Having fallen, he decided to sleep
in the aisle. Two men helped him to the back
of the bus, dumped him on the rear seat, and tucked
his gin bottle safely out of sight. After all,
he had not seen Earth for nine months, and judging
by the crusted matter about his eyelids, he couldn’t
have seen it too well now, even if he had been sober.
Glare-blindness, gravity-legs, and agoraphobia were
excuses for a lot of things, when a man was just back
from Big Bottomless. And who could blame a man
for acting strangely?
Minutes later, he was back up the
aisle and swaying giddily over the little housewife.
“How!” he said. “Me Chief Broken
Wing. You wanta Indian wrestle?”
The girl, who sat nervously staring
at him, smiled wanly, and shook her head.
“Quiet li’l pigeon, aren’tcha?”
he burbled affectionately, crashing into the seat
beside her.
The two men slid out of their seats,
and a hand clamped his shoulder. “Come
on, Broken Wing, let’s go back to bed.”
“My name’s Hogey,”
he said. “Big Hogey Parker. I was just
kidding about being a Indian.”
“Yeah. Come on, let’s
go have a drink.” They got him on his feet,
and led him stumbling back down the aisle.
“My ma was half Cherokee, see?
That’s how come I said it. You wanta hear
a war whoop? Real stuff.”
“Never mind.”
He cupped his hands to his mouth and
favored them with a blood-curdling proof of his ancestry,
while the female passengers stirred restlessly and
hunched in their seats. The driver stopped the
bus and went back to warn him against any further
display. The driver flashed a deputy’s
badge and threatened to turn him over to a constable.
“I gotta get home,” Big
Hogey told him. “I got me a son now, that’s
why. You know? A little baby pigeon of a
son. Haven’t seen him yet.”
“Will you just sit still and be quiet then,
eh?”
Big Hogey nodded emphatically.
“Shorry, officer, I didn’t mean to make
any trouble.”
When the bus started again, he fell
on his side and lay still. He made retching sounds
for a time, then rested, snoring softly. The bus
driver woke him again at Caine’s junction, retrieved
his gin bottle from behind the seat, and helped him
down the aisle and out of the bus.
Big Hogey stumbled about for a moment,
then sat down hard in the gravel at the shoulder of
the road. The driver paused with one foot on the
step, looking around. There was not even a store
at the road junction, but only a freight building
next to the railroad track, a couple of farmhouses
at the edge of a side-road, and, just across the way,
a deserted filling station with a sagging roof.
The land was Great Plains country, treeless, barren,
and rolling.
Big Hogey got up and staggered around
in front of the bus, clutching at it for support,
losing his duffle bag.
“Hey, watch the traffic!”
The driver warned. With a surge of unwelcome
compassion he trotted around after his troublesome
passenger, taking his arm as he sagged again.
“You crossing?”
“Yah,” Hogey muttered. “Lemme
alone, I’m okay.”
The driver started across the highway
with him. The traffic was sparse, but fast and
dangerous in the central ninety-mile lane.
“I’m okay,” Hogey
kept protesting. “I’m a tumbler, ya
know? Gravity’s got me. Damn gravity.
I’m not used to gravity, ya know? I
used to be a tumbler huk! only
now I gotta be a hoofer. ’Count of li’l
Hogey. You know about li’l Hogey?”
“Yeah. Your son. Come on.”
“Say, you gotta son? I bet you gotta son.”
“Two kids,” said the driver,
catching Hogey’s bag as it slipped from his
shoulder. “Both girls.”
“Say, you oughta be home with
them kids. Man oughta stick with his family.
You oughta get another job.” Hogey eyed
him owlishly, waggled a moralistic finger, skidded
on the gravel as they stepped onto the opposite shoulder,
and sprawled again.
The driver blew a weary breath, looked
down at him, and shook his head. Maybe it’d
be kinder to find a constable after all. This
guy could get himself killed, wandering around loose.
“Somebody supposed to meet you?”
he asked, squinting around at the dusty hills.
“Huk! who,
me?” Hogey giggled, belched, and shook his head.
“Nope. Nobody knows I’m coming.
S’prise. I’m supposed to be here a
week ago.” He looked up at the driver with
a pained expression. “Week late, ya
know? Marie’s gonna be sore woo-hoo! is
she gonna be sore!” He waggled his head severely
at the ground.
“Which way are you going?”
the driver grunted impatiently.
Hogey pointed down the side-road that
led back into the hills. “Marie’s
pop’s place. You know where? ’Bout
three miles from here. Gotta walk, I guess.”
“Don’t,” the driver
warned. “You sit there by the culvert till
you get a ride. Okay?”
Hogey nodded forlornly.
“Now stay out of the road,”
the driver warned, then hurried back across the highway.
Moments later, the atomic battery-driven motors droned
mournfully, and the bus pulled away.
Big Hogey blinked after it, rubbing
the back of his neck. “Nice people,”
he said. “Nice buncha people. All hoofers.”
With a grunt and a lurch, he got to
his feet, but his legs wouldn’t work right.
With his tumbler’s reflexes, he fought to right
himself with frantic arm motions, but gravity claimed
him, and he went stumbling into the ditch.
“Damn legs, damn crazy legs!” he cried.
The bottom of the ditch was wet, and
he crawled up the embankment with mud-soaked knees,
and sat on the shoulder again. The gin bottle
was still intact. He had himself a long fiery
drink, and it warmed him deep down. He blinked
around at the gaunt and treeless land.
The sun was almost down, forge-red
on a dusty horizon. The blood-streaked sky faded
into sulphurous yellow toward the zenith, and the
very air that hung over the land seemed full of yellow
smoke, the omnipresent dust of the plains.
A farm truck turned onto the side-road
and moaned away, its driver hardly glancing at the
dark young man who sat swaying on his duffle bag near
the culvert. Hogey scarcely noticed the vehicle.
He just kept staring at the crazy sun.
He shook his head. It wasn’t
really the sun. The sun, the real sun, was a
hateful eye-sizzling horror in the dead black pit.
It painted everything with pure white pain, and you
saw things by the reflected pain-light. The fat
red sun was strictly a phoney, and it didn’t
fool him any. He hated it for what he knew it
was behind the gory mask, and for what it had done
to his eyes.
With a grunt, he got to his feet,
managed to shoulder the duffle bag, and started off
down the middle of the farm road, lurching from side
to side, and keeping his eyes on the rolling distances.
Another car turned onto the side-road, honking angrily.
Hogey tried to turn around to look
at it, but he forgot to shift his footing. He
staggered and went down on the pavement. The car’s
tires screeched on the hot asphalt. Hogey lay
there for a moment, groaning. That one had hurt
his hip. A car door slammed and a big man with
a florid face got out and stalked toward him, looking
angry.
“What the hell’s the matter
with you, fella?” he drawled. “You
soused? Man, you’ve really got a load.”
Hogey got up doggedly, shaking his
head to clear it. “Space legs,” he
prevaricated. “Got space legs. Can’t
stand the gravity.”
The burly farmer retrieved his gin
bottle for him, still miraculously unbroken.
“Here’s your gravity,” he grunted.
“Listen, fella, you better get home pronto.”
“Pronto? Hey, I’m
no Mex. Honest, I’m just space burned.
You know?”
“Yeah. Say, who are you,
anyway? Do you live around here?”
It was obvious that the big man had
taken him for a hobo or a tramp. Hogey pulled
himself together. “Goin’ to the Hauptman’s
place. Marie. You know Marie?”
The farmer’s eyebrows went up.
“Marie Hauptman? Sure I know her. Only
she’s Marie Parker now. Has been, nigh on
six years. Say ” He paused,
then gaped. “You ain’t her husband
by any chance?”
“Hogey, that’s me. Big Hogey Parker.”
“Well, I’ll be!
Get in the car. I’m going right past John
Hauptman’s place. Boy, you’re in
no shape to walk it.”
He grinned wryly, waggled his head,
and helped Hogey and his bag into the back seat.
A woman with a sun-wrinkled neck sat rigidly beside
the farmer in the front, and she neither greeted the
passenger nor looked around.
“They don’t make cars
like this anymore,” the farmer called over the
growl of the ancient gasoline engine and the grind
of gears. “You can have them new atomics
with their loads of hot isotopes under the seat.
Ain’t safe, I say eh, Martha?”
The woman with the sun-baked neck
quivered her head slightly. “A car like
this was good enough for Pa, an’ I reckon it’s
good enough for us,” she drawled mournfully.
Five minutes later the car drew in
to the side of the road. “Reckon you can
walk it from here,” the farmer said. “That’s
Hauptman’s road just up ahead.”
He helped Hogey out of the car and
drove away without looking back to see if Hogey stayed
on his feet. The woman with the sun-baked neck
was suddenly talking garrulously in his direction.
It was twilight. The sun had
set, and the yellow sky was turning gray. Hogey
was too tired to go on, and his legs would no longer
hold him. He blinked around at the land, got
his eyes focused, and found what looked like Hauptman’s
place on a distant hillside. It was a big frame
house surrounded by a wheatfield, and a few scrawny
trees. Having located it, he stretched out in
the tall grass beyond the ditch to take a little rest.
Somewhere dogs were barking, and a
cricket sang creaking monotony in the grass.
Once there was the distant thunder of a rocket blast
from the launching station six miles to the west,
but it faded quickly. An A-motored convertible
whined past on the road, but Hogey went unseen.
When he awoke, it was night, and he
was shivering. His stomach was screeching, and
his nerves dancing with high voltages. He sat
up and groped for his watch, then remembered he had
pawned it after the poker game. Remembering the
game and the results of the game made him wince and
bite his lip and grope for the bottle again.
He sat breathing heavily for a moment
after the stiff drink. Equating time to position
had become second nature with him, but he had to think
for a moment because his defective vision prevented
him from seeing the Earth-crescent.
Vega was almost straight above him
in the late August sky, so he knew it wasn’t
much after sundown probably about eight
o’clock. He braced himself with another
swallow of gin, picked himself up and got back to
the road, feeling a little sobered after the nap.
He limped on up the pavement and turned
left at the narrow drive that led between barbed-wire
fences toward the Hauptman farmhouse, five hundred
yards or so from the farm road. The fields on
his left belonged to Marie’s father, he knew.
He was getting close close to home and
woman and child.
He dropped the bag suddenly and leaned
against a fence post, rolling his head on his forearms
and choking in spasms of air. He was shaking all
over, and his belly writhed. He wanted to turn
and run. He wanted to crawl out in the grass
and hide.
What were they going to say?
And Marie, Marie most of all. How was he going
to tell her about the money?
Six hitches in space, and every time
the promise had been the same: One more tour,
baby, and we’ll have enough dough, and then I’ll
quit for good. One more time, and we’ll
have our stake enough to open a little
business, or buy a house with a mortgage and get a
job.
And she had waited, but the money
had never been quite enough until this time.
This time the tour had lasted nine months, and he had
signed on for every run from station to moon-base
to pick up the bonuses. And this time he’d
made it. Two weeks ago, there had been forty-eight
hundred in the bank. And now ...
“Why?” he groaned,
striking his forehead against his forearms. His
arm slipped, and his head hit the top of the fencepost,
and the pain blinded him for a moment. He staggered
back into the road with a low roar, wiped blood from
his forehead, and savagely kicked his bag.
It rolled a couple of yards up the
road. He leaped after it and kicked it again.
When he had finished with it, he stood panting and
angry, but feeling better. He shouldered the
bag and hiked on toward the farmhouse.
They’re hoofers, that’s
all just an Earth-chained bunch of hoofers,
even Marie. And I’m a tumbler. A born
tumbler. Know what that means? It means God,
what does it mean? It means out in Big Bottomless,
where Earth’s like a fat moon with fuzzy mold
growing on it. Mold, that’s all you are,
just mold.
A dog barked, and he wondered if he
had been muttering aloud. He came to a fence-gap
and paused in the darkness. The road wound around
and came up the hill in front of the house. Maybe
they were sitting on the porch. Maybe they’d
already heard him coming. Maybe ...
He was trembling again. He fished
the fifth of gin out of his coat pocket and sloshed
it. Still over half a pint. He decided to
kill it. It wouldn’t do to go home with
a bottle sticking out of his pocket. He stood
there in the night wind, sipping at it, and watching
the reddish moon come up in the east. The moon
looked as phoney as the setting sun.
He straightened in sudden determination.
It had to be sometime. Get it over with, get
it over with now. He opened the fence-gap, slipped
through, and closed it firmly behind him. He retrieved
his bag, and waded quietly through the tall grass
until he reached the hedge which divided an area of
sickly peach trees from the field. He got over
the hedge somehow, and started through the trees toward
the house. He stumbled over some old boards,
and they clattered.
“Shhh!” he hissed, and moved on.
The dogs were barking angrily, and
he heard a screen door slam. He stopped.
“Ho there!” a male voice
called experimentally from the house.
One of Marie’s brothers.
Hogey stood frozen in the shadow of a peach tree,
waiting.
“Anybody out there?” the man called again.
Hogey waited, then heard the man muttering, “Sic
’im, boy, sic ’im.”
The hound’s bark became eager.
The animal came chasing down the slope, and stopped
ten feet away to crouch and bark frantically at the
shadow in the gloom. He knew the dog.
“Hooky!” he whispered. “Hooky
boy here!”
The dog stopped barking, sniffed,
trotted closer, and went “Rrrooff!”
Then he started sniffing suspiciously again.
“Easy, Hooky, here boy!” he whispered.
The dog came forward silently, sniffed
his hand, and whined in recognition. Then he
trotted around Hogey, panting doggy affection and
dancing an invitation to romp. The man whistled
from the porch. The dog froze, then trotted quickly
back up the slope.
“Nothing, eh, Hooky?”
the man on the porch said. “Chasin’
armadillos again, eh?”
The screen door slammed again, and
the porch light went out. Hogey stood there staring,
unable to think. Somewhere beyond the window lights
were his woman, his son.
What the hell was a tumbler doing with a woman and
a son?
After perhaps a minute, he stepped
forward again. He tripped over a shovel, and
his foot plunged into something that went squelch
and swallowed the foot past the ankle. He fell
forward into a heap of sand, and his foot went deeper
into the sloppy wetness.
He lay there with his stinging forehead
on his arms, cursing softly and crying. Finally
he rolled over, pulled his foot out of the mess, and
took off his shoes. They were full of mud sticky
sandy mud.
The dark world was reeling about him,
and the wind was dragging at his breath. He fell
back against the sand pile and let his feet sink in
the mud hole and wriggled his toes. He was laughing
soundlessly, and his face was wet in the wind.
He couldn’t think. He couldn’t remember
where he was and why, and he stopped caring, and after
a while he felt better.
The stars were swimming over him,
dancing crazily, and the mud cooled his feet, and
the sand was soft behind him. He saw a rocket
go up on a tail of flame from the station, and waited
for the sound of its blast, but he was already asleep
when it came.
It was far past midnight when he became
conscious of the dog licking wetly at his ear and
cheek. He pushed the animal away with a low curse
and mopped at the side of his face. He stirred,
and groaned. His feet were burning up! He
tried to pull them toward him, but they wouldn’t
budge. There was something wrong with his legs.
For an instant he stared wildly around
in the night. Then he remembered where he was,
closed his eyes and shuddered. When he opened
them again, the moon had emerged from behind a cloud,
and he could see clearly the cruel trap into which
he had accidentally stumbled. A pile of old boards,
a careful stack of new lumber, a pick and shovel, a
sand-pile, heaps of fresh-turned earth, and a concrete
mixer well, it added up.
He gripped his ankles and pulled,
but his feet wouldn’t budge. In sudden
terror, he tried to stand up, but his ankles were clutched
by the concrete too, and he fell back in the sand
with a low moan. He lay still for several minutes,
considering carefully.
He pulled at his left foot. It
was locked in a vise. He tugged even more desperately
at his right foot. It was equally immovable.
He sat up with a whimper and clawed
at the rough concrete until his nails tore and his
fingertips bled. The surface still felt damp,
but it had hardened while he slept.
He sat there stunned until Hooky began
licking at his scuffed fingers. He shouldered
the dog away, and dug his hands into the sand-pile
to stop the bleeding. Hooky licked at his face,
panting love.
“Get away!” he croaked savagely.
The dog whined softly, trotted a short
distance away, circled, and came back to crouch down
in the sand directly before Hogey, inching forward
experimentally.
Hogey gripped fistfuls of the dry
sand and cursed between his teeth, while his eyes
wandered over the sky. They came to rest on the
sliver of light the space station rising
in the west, floating out in Big Bottomless where
the gang was Nichols and Guerrera and Lavrenti
and Fats. And he wasn’t forgetting Keesey,
the rookie who’d replaced him.
Keesey would have a rough time for
a while rough as a cob. The pit was
no playground. The first time you went out of
the station in a suit, the pit got you. Everything
was falling, and you fell, with it. Everything.
The skeletons of steel, the tire-shaped station, the
spheres and docks and nightmare shapes all
tied together by umbilical cables and flexible tubes.
Like some crazy sea-thing they seemed, floating in
a black ocean with its tentacles bound together by
drifting strands in the dark tide that bore it.
Everything was pain-bright or dead
black, and it wheeled around you, and you went nuts
trying to figure which way was down. In fact,
it took you months to teach your body that all
ways were down and that the pit was bottomless.
He became conscious of a plaintive
sound in the wind, and froze to listen.
It was a baby crying.
It was nearly a minute before he got
the significance of it. It hit him where he lived,
and he began jerking frantically at his encased feet
and sobbing low in his throat. They’d hear
him if he kept that up. He stopped and covered
his ears to close out the cry of his firstborn.
A light went on in the house, and when it went off
again, the infant’s cry had ceased.
Another rocket went up from the station,
and he cursed it. Space was a disease, and he
had it.
“Help!” he cried out suddenly.
“I’m stuck! Help me, help me!”
He knew he was yelling hysterically
at the sky and fighting the relentless concrete that
clutched his feet, and after a moment he stopped.
The light was on in the house again,
and he heard faint sounds. The stirring-about
woke the baby again, and once more the infant’s
wail came on the breeze.
Make the kid shut up, make the kid shut up ...
But that was no good. It wasn’t
the kid’s fault. It wasn’t Marie’s
fault. No fathers allowed in space, they said,
but it wasn’t their fault either. They
were right, and he had only himself to blame.
The kid was an accident, but that didn’t change
anything. Not a thing in the world. It remained
a tragedy.
A tumbler had no business with a family,
but what was a man going to do? Take a skinning
knife, boy, and make yourself a eunuch. But that
was no good either. They needed bulls out there
in the pit, not steers. And when a man came down
from a year’s hitch, what was he going to do?
Live in a lonely shack and read books for kicks?
Because you were a man, you sought out a woman.
And because she was a woman, she got a kid, and that
was the end of it. It was nobody’s fault,
nobody’s at all.
He stared at the red eye of Mars low
in the southwest. They were running out there
now, and next year he would have been on the long long
run ...
But there was no use thinking about
it. Next year and the years after belonged to
little Hogey.
He sat there with his feet locked
in the solid concrete of the footing, staring out
into Big Bottomless while his son’s cry came
from the house and the Hauptman menfolk came wading
through the tall grass in search of someone who had
cried out. His feet were stuck tight, and he wouldn’t
ever get them out. He was sobbing softly when
they found him.