Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) š
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- Author: George Schultz
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āWell, I was, yāknow, grateful . . . for all the, all theā¦ all the trouble heād had to go through! That heād had to go throughā¦ for me!ā
āRight! All the unspeakable ātroubleā . . . of having to take his pants down! And, of course, his drivvies too!ā
āOh, Debbie!ā
āYou see? You seeā¦ what Iām getting at? Itās never you! Itās always someone else! Somebody else! Or, itās āThe Fickle Finger of Fateā! Always someoneā¦ or somethingā¦ else! Never you! Never Sheila!ā
āDebbie?ā Sheila wasādefinitelyāsensing an advantage, slipping away! āDebā¦ Iām sorry! Iāveā¦ youāve given me a lot! A lot of things toā¦ to think about! Iām truly sorry!ā
āI donāt believe you, Sheel! Not for one minute! The only thing youāre sorry forā¦ the only thing, that youāre sorry about . . . is that your conniving assā¦ is in jail!ā
āDebbie? Debbie, listen! You canāt . . .ā
āOhā¦ donāt worry! Iāll go your damn bail!ā
āOhā¦ Debbie! Thank you! Thank youā¦ so much!ā
Sheila aroseāand started to make her way around the table! To embrace her benefactor! But, the visitorāemphaticallyāheld up her hand!
āDonāt touch me, Sheel,ā she hissed. āDonāt even come near me! I feel sorry for you! But, not in the way youāve devoted, your miserable life . . . to making people feel sorry for you! I genuinely pity you! Youā¦ and your totally-warped way of thinking! Your, simply-screwed-up, way, of living! Iād do the same for some poor, helpless, flea-bitten, muttā¦ in the damn dog pound! So, donāt feel so damn aggrandized!ā
Debbie arose! The look she gave Sheilaāthe expression, on her faceāwas indescribable!
If Sheila Rutkowski had everāin her entire lifeāhad been completely and utterly bemused, this wouldāve been the time!
NINETEEN
February 19, 1942
After three weeks of highly-gratifying āactive datingā, Jason and Valerie found themselves, at The OlympiaāāThe Big Red Barnāālocated at Grand River, and McGraw, Avenues. The couple was occupying two $1.25 seats, in the lower portion, of the balcony.
Grandpa Piepczyk had neglected to advise his grandsonāthat it was a fourāor five-story climb, to the very top, of the upper level. They would, then, walk down to their billetsāin the second row, from the railing. The brass railingāwhich looked out, over the entire ice surface. A fantastic view! And, of course, there were all those ghostsāof all those players! They haunted the balconyāas well as the lower level! Probably even more so! It was great!
This glorious happening was taking place, on a coolish Thursday eveningāand the auspicious occasion was deemedāmaybe far too happilyāto be the coupleās āfirst non-movie dateā.
Well, that āfactoidā (another word from the future) wasnāt entirely true. Since, on the Thursdayāa week before their looked-forward-to trek, to take in the Red Wings hockey contest (against the storied Chicago Blackhawks)āJason had ātaken possessionā of his brand spanking new Hawthorn bicycle. Valerie had been right! It was beautiful!
Not only was she a fantastic authorityāwhen it came to bike selectionāshe had also known of a real, bona fide, cinder-laden, ābike trackā, at Rouge Park, located on Joy Road, at Burt Road.
The large cinder, oval was adjacent to a bike-rental standāand on the Saturday and Sunday afternoons, that had followed āThe Fantastic Hawthorne Acquisitionāāthe young couple had tooled their ātwo-wheelersā out, to the facility. The male half of that tandem had been quite hesitantāto enter the oval.
āIsnāt this a private track?ā heād posed. āIt looks like a private track. I mean, wonāt theyā¦ ?ā
āNah. I think itās run, by the city. Nancy and Iā¦ and, sometimes, June and Iā¦ we used to come out here. All the time. That was before Nancy went on off, to Bowling Greenā¦ to college, yāknow. And, of course, Junieā¦ she went and got herself all wrapped up, in school. And in her parentsā confectionary. Back then, we rode hereā¦ all of usā¦ all the time.ā
The happy couple had ridden milesāand for hoursāon both afternoons! They didnāt do much talking, given thatāthough they had āschleppedā side-by-sideāthey were, most often, three or four feet from one another. Made conversation a little difficultāand ātoo much like workā (quoth Valerie).
That had been fine with Jason! Just the fact of beingāwith this wonderful young womanāwas providing him, with an abundance of happiness! Of pure pleasure!
How could he haveāpossiblyāwondered, whether one of her progeny couldāve participated, in those ghastly Tate/LoBianco butcheries?
On Saturday, the distaff member, of the bicycling crew, had advised her male counterpartāon two different occasions (and, he thought, much too loudly)āhe was free, to ride behind her. āThat wayā¦ you can look at my fanny! I know that youāre dying to.ā She had been wearing shorts, on that occasion. Theyād seemed significantly tighter than the norm. Our Boy āknew betterāāthan to even attempt to explore her motives. His obvious philosophy was to, simply, ārelaxā¦ and enjoy itā.
The outing, on the following day, did not require that Valerieās suggestion be repeated. The young man hadāimmediatelyātaken up his, to-the-rear, position. The shorts had seemedāevenāa ātad tighterā! He was, after all a young man!
Meanwhile, back at The Olympia, the couple was watching the teamsāas they were going through their colorful warm-ups! Skating, for the most part, in gigantic circlesāat their end of the rinkāeach member, of both teams, took practice shots, usually lobbing the puck, softly, toward their teamās goaltender.
Another surprise, for Jason, was his first glimpse of the Blackhawksā early-forties uniforms. This was, of course, before one, of the teams, was requiredāfor television purposesāto be decked out in white.
The Chicago uniforms were all black! As opposed to the red jerseys the present Blackhawks have wornāfor decades! The Indianhead logo seemed to be the same. From the balcony, it was difficult to judge if that was absolutely true. Mainly, because the 1942 symbol was much smaller! And the, more-regal-looking, head of the Indian had been
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