Lenny took the entrance ramp for I-4, and Serge stood to snap a final elevated photo back toward the train station. He sat down and stowed the camera. “I can’t believe nobody visits that depot anymore. They’re all too busy heading for the Tower of Terror or the Aerosmith roller coaster. What’s happening to us as a people?…”
“They have an Aerosmith roller coaster?”
“…The depot’s barely changed since it was built in 1926. This is where the town began, for heaven’s sake. People should be flocking here whether they’re taking a train or not. But now the only people who still come are forced to after making a horrible mess of their lives through a series of gross miscalculations until they can’t scrape together airplane money.”
“Now I can see how you got arrested that time in that old train car.”
“You mean the first time.”
“There were others?”
“I’m telling you, it’s like life is out to get me,” said Serge, reaching in the glove compartment for his novelty 3-D glasses.
“Flashback?” asked Lenny.
Serge nodded, slipping on the glasses. “Courtroom scene.”
“You ever watch The People’s Court?” asked Lenny.
“Shhh,” said Serge. “The flashback is starting…”
One year earlier, courtroom 3C, Palm Beach County Judicial Circuit.
The judge levied a stiff fine and probation on a retired banker for killing a prize swan with a pitching wedge at a local golf course.
“Bailiff, call the next case.”
“Number six-nine-seven-two-five, People versus Serge A. Storms.”
“Will the defendant please rise…” The judge stopped midsentence and took off his glasses. “Back already?”
“I can explain, Your Honor,” said Serge. “This is all a tragic miscarriage. A mockery of justice. If what I did was wrong, I don’t wanna be right!…”
“Your Honor,” interrupted the prosecutor. “The defendant is charged with burglary, trespassing, disturbing the peace, resisting arrest and vandalism, to wit: applying paint to an object of historic national importance.”
“What does that mean in English?” asked the judge. “Spray-painting graffiti? Throwing paint balloons?”
“Not exactly.”
“Then what exactly?”
“Uh, um…”
“You’re mumbling,” said the judge.
“He was in a historic railroad car, restoring some detail work that was chipping.”
The bailiff handed the judge an evidence bag marked “Exhibit A,” an extra-fine camel’s-hair brush with dried gold paint on the tip.
“There I was,” said Serge, “minding my own business…”
“Your Honor,” said the public defender. “This is really a mental-health case. The defendant needs professional care. He shouldn’t be in criminal court at all.”
“Why is he in my court?” asked the judge. “As I understand it, this all happened in Miami’s jurisdiction, at the…” He paused and flipped through some papers. “The Gold Coast Railroad Museum.”
“Your Honor, this violates the conditions of the probation that you placed upon him last week for breaking into the railroad car at the Flagler Museum, so it throws it back here,” said the prosecutor. “Most disturbing is the resisting-arrest charge.”
“What’s that about?” asked the judge.
The prosecutor picked up a copy of the police report. “When officers arrived, the suspect was applying paint in the dining compartment of an antique passenger car. When said officers attempted to effect arrest, the suspect dove from the car and ran across the museum, where he proceeded to climb into a nearby locomotive engine, refused to come down, and began singing, and I quote: ‘Riding that train. High on cocaine…’”
The judge ran his fingers through his hair and turned to the public defender. “Is your client on drugs?”
“That’s just the problem, Your Honor. He refuses to take his drugs.”
“That locomotive was number one fifty-three, Florida East Coast Railway,” said Serge, “which pulled a rescue train out of the Keys during the Labor Day hurricane of 1935…”
The judge held up a hand for Serge to stop and turned to the public defender. “So what’s with all the trains, anyway?”
Serge kept talking in the background: “…and that railroad car I was painting was the famous Ferdinand Magellan, built in 1928 and later retrofitted with armor plating and bulletproof glass for none other than the president of the United States!…”
“Your Honor, Mr. Storms, like so many other unfortunate Americans, is battling severe mental illness. He’s going through a phase right now.”
“A phase?”
“…You see,” said Serge, “this was in the days before Air Force One, when the president had to travel by rail. The Magellan was first used by Franklin Roosevelt in 1942. And it was on the rear platform of this very car that, on November 3, 1948, a grinning Harry Truman held up the Dewey Defeats Truman newspaper in the now-famous photograph…”
“Your Honor, he gets on these compulsive tangents,” said the public defender. “He has to find out every single thing there is to know about a subject, talk to as many experts as he can, see and touch everything…”
“I object!” said Serge, jumping to his feet. “He’s making it sound weird.”
“Weirdness isn’t grounds for an objection,” said the judge. “And that’s your own attorney.”
“Then I respectfully withdraw.” Serge sat back down and turned to the public defender. “Proceed.”
“Your Honor, why is this man even being allowed to speak?” complained the prosecutor. “He’s not even representing himself anymore, and he’s completely out of line. As a matter of fact, we’re not following any of the procedures at all!”
“First thing — relax,” said the judge. “This is a minor case. Second, this is my court, and third, I kinda like the guy. Is that okay with you?”
The prosecutor sat down and sulked. The judge turned back to the public defender. “Continue.”
“He’ll go days without sleep, covering incredible distances on foot, and he only stops when he passes out from sheer exhaustion.”
“Interesting,” said the judge. “And right now it’s railroads?”
“Railroads.”
Serge raised his hand.
“You’re not in school,” said the judge.
“May I?” asked Serge.
The judge leaned back in his chair and got comfortable again. “Go ahead.”
The prosecutor snapped a pencil in two and threw the pieces on his table.
“You see, the railroads made Florida,” said Serge. “They played a major role in most states, but not like here, where their influence was an iron fist, the train companies owning much of the land and businesses along their routes. I’m not saying it was wrong or right; I’m just saying it worked. Completely opened up the peninsula.”
“What about air-conditioning?” asked the judge. “I understand that when Mr. Carrier went into mass production, it jump-started all kinds of development.”
“Your Honor,” interjected the public defender, “Mr. Storms had, uh, a number of arrests last year dealing with the air-conditioning and refrigeration industry. I don’t think we want to go there.”
“Understood,” said the judge. “Continue, Mr. Storms.”
“Thank you, and Your Honor’s point is well taken. But that never would have been possible if it wasn’t for the rail pioneers. It all started with Flagler…” Serge began pacing in front of the empty jury box. “Time? The Gilded Age! Place? Jacksonville! The rich valued their leisure, and the railroads went down to Florida just to get to the new luxury hotels, which were built just for the railroads. After traversing the St. Johns, Flagler erected the Ponce de Leon in St. Augustine, then the Alcazar, and remodeled the Cordova and Ormond, laying tracks all the way. The Royal Poinciana and the Breakers went up in Palm Beach, more tracks, still going south, right through the big freeze of 1895 — chug-a-chug, chug-a-chug…” — Serge shuffled across the courtroom, arms going in circles like pistons moving the wheels of a steam engine — “…chug-a-chug, chug-a-chug. Woo-woo! The tracks reached the bottom of the state, and residents were so happy they wanted to name their town Flagler. But did Big Henry accept this honor? Hell, no! He said, ‘Why don’t we name this place after the Indian word they use for the river.’ That little town? Miami! Fresh produce moved north, tourists south, the Florida East Coast Railway kept on going, right up to the beach, then into the sea. He had to be crazy to keep going — crazy like a fox!…Chug-a-chug, chug-a-chug…Another Henry, Henry S. Sanford, ran the South Florida Railroad down the middle of the state in the 1880s. And on the Gulf Coast, yet another Henry — where were they all coming from? — this one named Plant, built a third railroad and more hotels. His line made it down to Cedar Key, and the little fishing village exploded as it became the southernmost port at the end of the tracks. But then the tracks continued south, and Cedar Key was forgotten. The tracks stopped again at another tiny outpost. Its name? Tampa!…Bang, bang, bang! War breaks out in Cuba! Troop trains to Florida, Teddy Roosevelt, the Rough Riders, Hearst, José Martí. The war ends! We win! More trains, more tourists, more hotels! The Boca Grande Line, the Gasparilla Inn, hope and prosperity for all!…Chug-a-chug, chug-a-chug…Train fares drop, the bourgeois climb on board, everyone riding south on The Havana Special, The Florida Special, The Orange Blossom Special. Then, daring! Railroads unveil the deco streamliners! In 1939, The Silver Meteor debuted its New York–Miami night runs with a sleek Electro-Motive diesel. The Atlantic Coast Line countered with The Champion and Illinois Central rolled out The City of Miami…”