Searching for Candlestick Park Read Online Free

Searching for Candlestick Park
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good to yowl and struggle.
    I got off at the downtown bus tunnel and went up the steps. The King Street Station, an old brick building with a clock tower, was just across the street onmy left. I crossed the street, which goes over the train tracks, and walked down the stairs into the station.
    At the foot of the stairs, a vendor was selling popcorn, muffins, and other snacks. My stomach told me it was lunchtime, but I knew I couldn’t afford to buy any food there; lunch would have to wait.
    The large room with high ceilings held a feeling of anticipation. A line of travelers snaked away from a ticket counter. People with bags and boxes of belongings at their feet sat in rows of black chairs down the center of the room.
    A lighted sign on the back wall announced arrivals and departures. I read the list, noting that trains went to Portland several times daily, including the train scheduled to depart next through Door #3. If I could sneak on board a train and ride to Portland, I would be 150 miles closer to San Francisco in just a few hours.
    Door #3 was open. I walked out onto a small concrete area surrounded by a black wrought-iron fence. An opening in the fence faced the train tracks.
    On the closest track, the Amtrak Superliner waited for passengers. The silver cars, each with a red and blue stripe, were higher than I expected. The door of the car closest to me was open; a yellow footstool stood below it, to help passengers step up into the train.
    The open door of the Amtrak Superliner was only about thirty feet from where I stood. I swallowed hard and looked around. Two men, both wearing blackpants, white shirts, and black vests, stood farther down the platform. One man held a clipboard and they studied the papers that were attached to it. Their backs were to me.
    No other passengers had come outside. There was no conductor or ticket-taker, either. I could dash across the platform, step on the yellow stool, and be inside the train in only a few seconds. As long as the two men didn’t turn around, no one would see me. Once I got on the train, I planned to hide in the bathroom until the train started moving. I had never ridden a train before, but I didn’t think anyone would check the tickets again after we left the station.
    Clutching Foxey’s box in both hands, I sprinted toward the open door of the train. I had one foot on the stool and one foot on the bottom step of the Amtrak car when I heard, “Hey! You boy! What do you think you’re doing?”
    I looked over my shoulder and saw the two men in black vests running toward me.
    “Get down from there,” the taller one said.
    I stepped back to the platform. “Isn’t this the train to Portland?” I asked, hoping I didn’t sound as scared as I felt.
    “It is,” the man replied, “but we aren’t boarding yet.”
    “When will you be boarding?” I asked.
    “Let me see your ticket,” the other man said.
    I made a show of feeling in my pockets before I said,“I must have left it on the sink in the rest room.” Then I hurried back through Door #3 into the station.
    I went into the rest room, just in case the men were watching me. I washed my hands for a long time, while I waited for my breathing to return to normal. A few short hours ago, I had been an honest boy. Now I was a thief and a liar. I didn’t like the way it made me feel.
    When I came out of the rest room, I looked quickly around, afraid the men in black vests and a police officer might be waiting to question me. But the men had not followed me.
    Even so, I wanted to get out of the train station. Instead of going up the stairs and leaving the station the way I had come, I quickly went out a door on the lower level.
    At the corner of the station, I looked to my left and saw the train. The two men now stood on either side of the yellow stool like bookends.
    Not wanting them to see me, I turned my back and walked away from the King Street Station. I was now in the Kingdome parking lot. It was nearly
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