Rock Island Line by David Rhodes (i am reading a book TXT) ๐
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- Author: David Rhodes
Read book online ยซRock Island Line by David Rhodes (i am reading a book TXT) ๐ยป. Author - David Rhodes
Sy had a piece of iron he wanted straightened, and when John tipped up his hood in order to see what he was working on in full light, Sy asked him where he kept the anvil. John told him in the back somewhere and closed down the hood and resumed welding. Sy went back to look, and because one man could spend all day looking back there, three or four of the others went to help. They found it behind two oil drums and a short block.
โHere, Iโll get back in there and hand it out,โ said Brenneman.
โJust lift it on out,โ said Henry Yoder, โfrom there.โ
โNo thanks.โ Brenneman got back between the drums and set it up on the block.
Marion took it out and set it on the floor. โI heard,โ he said, โthat there was a fella in Clinton who could pick one of these up with one hand, by grabbinโ ahold of it by the horn.โ
โI could do that,โ said Sy.
โCome on.โ
โI could. Bring it on out here where thereโs plenty of air.โ
Brenneman carried it out into a clearing beside the lane. โOK, go ahead.โ
โWait a minute. Now, just exactly what did this fella in Clinton do?โ
โHeโs hedging!โ
โNo. Just what did he do exactly?โ
John had taken off his hood and come back. Marion told him that Sy was about to try to pick up the anvil by the horn.
โ. . . . so he just lifted it off the ground. No further. Just off the ground.โ
โCome on, Bontrager.โ
But for all the joking it was noticed that Sy was nearly a giant, and that his hands were bigger than a normal head. But still it seemed impossible. Then he bent down and wrapped his sausage fingers around the end of the horn, tilted it up so that it pointed straight in the air and lifted. At first nothing, but it didnโt slip either; and then Marion, who had his face on the ground, shouted, โItโs off. Drop it, Sy, itโs off.โ And he dropped it.
They congratulated him and he went off to find a hand sledge to straighten his piece of metal. Marion grabbed ahold of the horn, gave a little tug and shook his head. No one else wanted to know exactly how hard it would be. โIn all your life youโll never see that done again,โ said Brenneman. โItโs incredible anyone could be that strong.โ
โHe always was big,โ said Henry Yoder.
Then everything settled down. Brenneman got a set of leathers for his pump and left. Henry Yoder left with Marion in his car toward Marionโs place. Sy straightened his hitch and put it up behind his tractor seat and drove away. John worked on a small one-cylinder motor, taking off the flywheel to get at the points. Marion and Henry Yoder came back, parked across the street and went into the store.
โI tell you, he did,โ they told Wilson. โHe picked it right up off the ground, as easy as you please.โ
โItโs impossible. Sy Bontrager?โ
โ Yes.โ
โWell, heโs big . . . No, itโs impossible. Thereโs a fly in the soup somewhere.โ
โHe did it.โ
โItโs physically impossible,โ and Wilson went over to the window next to the street and looked out. No one over there but John, walking around and looking into the street. Wilson looked absently out at him, thinking privately to himself about all the things he had to do before winter, the windows, the rain gutters, some of the roof, get bales around the foundation, install ... John walked across the garage again and looked out, oddly enough, Wilson thought, as though he wanted to be sure he was alone. Then he bent over, and from the store window and in a line clear down an aisle of tools and oil drums Wilson saw him lift his anvil with one hand by grasping the horn, straight up until it was several inches above the ground, behind which he could see the red Riley oil drum, then set it down and hurry back to the small engine.
Wilsonโs mind raced. For the first time in his life, he thought: What can possibly be inside him? What is he made of to be able to do that when heโs no bigger than I am? Thereโs never been any indication of that. Muscles are muscles, and bones are bones; what could make someone so different?
โHe did it, I tell you. He said he could and then he did it,โ said Marion.
Yes, he probably did, thought Wilson. Itโs possible. Itโs not that strange if a big man can do it. But still he wondered; and after his store was empty, he closed the door and went over to the garage, thinking that he would have a better look at both the anvil and his son. He watched John putting tiny brass jets and springs into the carburetor of the Briggs and Stratton, and there was no indication there of anything. โHello,โ he said when John looked up, and tried to look casual and uninterested as he went over to where the anvil sat on its back, pointed straight up into the air. When John turned around he grabbed ahold of it with both hands and lifted. And stopped. He felt sure he could, if he really wanted to, with both hands, but one hand! It seemed impossible.
โI was sorry to hear about your dog,โ said John, and blushed as he looked at his father.
โSo was I,โ he answered. โItโs been three days so far and I
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