Tough: Hobo

The rails don’t hum anymore; they scream. Artie “Iron-Lung” Miller wasn’t built for the modern world, but he was forged for the steel road. He carried everything he owned in a canvas pack that smelled of woodsmoke and old copper. At sixty-four, his skin was the color of a cured tobacco leaf, mapped with scars from narrow misses and cold nights.

When the sun finally cracked the horizon, bathing the desert in a deceptive, pale gold, the train slowed at a siding. The kid crawled out, stiff but alive. He looked at Artie, who was already lighting a hand-rolled cigarette with steady fingers. hobo tough

He wasn't alone. A kid, barely twenty, was huddled in the corner, shivering so hard his teeth sounded like castanets. He was wearing a designer hoodie that might as well have been made of tissue paper. The rails don’t hum anymore; they scream