Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) š
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- Author: George Schultz
Read book online Ā«Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) šĀ». Author - George Schultz
He continued his surprisingly-rapid walking. Past Telegraph. Past Outer Drive. Good heavens, could this beāSouthfield Street? Southfieldāthat he was fast approaching? Already? This quickly? Could he have been walking long enoughāthat heād actually made his way as far east, as Southfield? That was incredibleāif not impossible!
Heād lost all track of timeāand place! Heād, obviously, walked a very long way! And yet, he was not the slightest bit fatigued. Maybe lugging all those groceries, for all of those blocksāand for all of those yearsāhad finally paid off. Had bestowed upon himāsome kind of an endurance dividend! Well, it was about time! About damn timeāthat something good had come, from all those thankless, frustrating, exhausting, exercises!
Stillāwhether hauling those many bags had been an actual benefit, or notāthe amount of time, that he had just spent walking, had gone so mind-bogglingly quickly! Too quickly! How can this be? Everythingāeverythingāappeared so surreal! Appeared to be happening, almost, in slow motionādespite the speed, with which heād arrived at Southfield! (That was Southfield!) Heād walked so far! And in such a short span of time! Incredible! The whole thingāthe entire adventureāwas unbelievable!
It seemed impossible! It was impossible! How could he have walked that far? And that fast? Everythingāsimply everythingāwas such a stupid damn mess! Such a totally-disjointed mess! Such an abominableāsuch a damnableāmess!
He wishedāfervently wishedāthat Grandpa Piepczyk was still around. He would know what to do. What to say. How to act. He was such a neat guy! Heād always been soāso very helpful! So very helpful!
Grandpaāhis heroāhad, in his charity, spent a lot of time with Jason. Much time! The only father figureāthat the boy had ever known. Such a wonderful man! And nowāhe wasnāt available. Sadly unavailable! Damn!
Equally sadly (almost, anyway) was the factāthat Grandma Piepczyk had become the next thing to a recluse! Ever since Grandpa had passed away! She remained holed upāin that dinky, dark, depressing, assisted-living apartmentāway over, on Ford Road. Way out in Garden City. Jason almost never saw her. A totally regrettable situation! So sad! One of manyāmany, manyādeeply-regrettable situations, it seemed.
Grandpa, now! Heād been so neat! He had owned the neatest set of old-time Lionel electric trains. Replicas of so many nifty train carsāand engines. All from out of the 1940ās. That must have been the neatest epoch! The forties!
Jasonās grandfatherāhe had owned the most overwhelmingly-complete set, of ārailroad stuffā, that the lad could ever have imagined. A whole passel, of āancientā locomotive stuff. Five or six enginesātwo that even puffed white smoke. (Youād had to insert a tiny white pill, in the top of the engineāand Grandpa, regrettably, always seemed to be running out of them. Well, they were kind of expensive.)
Plus, there was a variety of tenders. (āThatās where the ārailroad guysā kept all the coal, yāknowā¦ to shovel into the engineā, Grandpa had explainedāmore than once.)
And box cars? The old man had, literally, dozens of thoseāas well as alleged fuel-carrying tanker cars. Gasoline, theyād lugged. For thousands, of neighborhood gas stations. Old, cylindrical, cars. The yellow-and-blue Sunoco car had still displayed the companyās older logo. The one with the red arrow running from āwest to eastāāinstead of heading down from ānorthwest to southeastā. That carāthe one, with that intriguing logoāhad, for some reason, always enraptured Our Hero. Right into his teens.
And then there were all those passenger cars. And (probably) 25 or 30 cabooses. Each one of those highly-interesting carsāhad been entirely different, from the others.
The old man had even built a whole, miniature, ātownāāwith his own hands! His private, highly-unique, little village! Had placed the elaborate villageāon an old wooden door! A hugeāa very heavyāone! A 50āor 60-year-old former-bedroom door! One that heād keptāfor decades. Heād situated the entire, amazing, projectāatop two ratty-looking, very-old, wooden sawhorsesāin his constant-source-of-wonderment basement.
Jason and Grandpa had never been closerāthan when those trains were buzzing around that half-mile, of curved track. The young man had been allowed to play, with these neat ātoysā! To be an honest-to-God āengineerāāfor, literally, his entire life!
When heād been three or four, Grandpa had even bought him an authentic, blue-and-white-striped, engineerās cap. Our Hero still possessed the shrine-like āchapeauāādespite the fact that heād, long since, outgrown the beloved āclassicā. The capāwas one of his most-cherished possessions!
Jason had often wondered whetherāhad there been any other grandchildrenāwould he have been permitted all those āengineeringā privileges. Any of those priceless, precious, indulgences?
Oh, probably. But, then, he was certain that any other grandkids wouldāve been permitted those same cherished entitlements. Good old Grandpa Piepczyk! The man had never seemed like the type of personāwho would ever show any favoritism. To anyone.
Would Jason, himself, have been jealousāof having to share all of these āadventuresā with others? Heād hoped not. Heād always felt as though he was not a jealous person. Still, naturally, he had often wondered.
Trains! Those wonderful trains! Those glorious trains! Those supposed ātoysā had always intrigued the boy. Even once heād become a young man.
On the tragic occasion, when Grandma and Grandpa wound up having to sell their houseāonce Grandpa had gotten so terribly illāJason had wanted the remarkable train collection! Had yearned for it! Had lusted for those wondrous trains! All of them! Every last one of them! Especially the oneāwith that Sunoco logo! Those carsāand the surrounding sceneryāthat Grandpa had, so expertly, created! Even that stupid old bedroom door! The oneāon which that wondrous conglomeration had sat, for lo those many decades!
Grandpa had been agreeableāto the transfer, of ownership! More than simply agreeable! Even Grandma was ready to go along with it. But, their daughterāthe sainted Sheilaāhad put the kibosh on it! Our Hero guessed, glumly, thatāāIt figuresā.
Well, hell, it was true, that they didnāt have nearly enough roomāāfor hardly anything elseāāin the stupid, one-bedroom, apartment.
Jason had, grudgingly, also figured that he was probably pretty lucky to even have that stupid, creaky, old Murphy bed! The oneāwhich swung out, of
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