Railiroad Train To Heaven – Part IX
Dec 28th, 2009 | By Dan Leo | Category: Railroad Train To Heaven, Series | 451 viewsNow that I have each day absolutely and completely free from indentured servitude to that great iron beast The Railroad, I wonder at how awful my life was, with five days a week dominated by work and going to and from work and recovering from work. Now I wake each morning in my tiny attic room, I stretch and yawn, another glorious day of idleness awaits me.
Each day teems with adventures great and small.
Cousin Bert and his wife and two of their children have completed their dubious vacation and have gone back to their red brick life in Lawncrest, but for some reason they have left the eldest son Kevin here. Yesterday he surprised me by actually inviting me to come with him to the shop on Washington Street where he buys his comic books. So off we went. It’s a cigar store among other things, and there’s a cigar store Indian in front. I’d never been in there before. It was dark and cool, and there was a pool table in the back part. I stood with my hands in my pockets as Kevin went intently through the rack of used comics.
A round old man with bald head and a cigar in his mouth and thick spectacles on his nose stood behind the counter.
“Is that your boy, pal?”
“Well, no,” I said. “He’s my cousin’s son.”
“Nice kid. Quiet.”
“Yeah, he’s quiet,” I said.
“Not like some of these snotnoses around here. They got no respect. They don’t care about nothin’ or nobody.”
“Yeah,” I said.
“Animals.”
“Yeah,” I said.
“Scum. An atom bomb falls on ‘em it’ll serve ‘em right.”
“Right,” I said.
“It ain’t like the old days.”
“Yeah,” I said.
“Punks,” he said.
I stared out the open door at the bright street. For just the slightest moment, I felt on the verge of one of those attacks I sometimes have, where I feel as if I’m somehow a ghost in the world, separate from physical reality; but I used my familiar method to gain control of myself, i.e., I concentrated my attention on something in this physical world, in this case a copy of Look magazine. There were people in the magazine, or pictures of people, and words, and by forcing my attention on them I somehow felt my being settling back within my corporeal host.
Finally Kevin came up with a bunch of comics. He had already laid a stack of ones he was returning on the glass cigar counter. The old man performed some abstruse formula with pencil and notepad and told Kevin it would be twenty-seven cents.
“Hey, Cousin Arnold,” the lad said, “can ya help me out? I’m a little short today.”
I realized then that Kevin’s invitation was merely a ploy to get me to buy said comic books for him. But I didn’t mind his duplicity. After all, if Kevin doesn’t buy the comic books, then I don’t get to read them either, and as I have said somewhere else in these pages (unless I dreamt it) I have myself become addicted to these lurid fantasies.
I bought his comics and also picked up a carton of Pall Malls at a good price.
And this was only the beginning of my day. What other heroic adventures lay in store? Kevin led the way out onto the sidewalk with our treasure. He examined the comics’ covers all over again as we strolled back to Perry Street.
“You can read one first if you like, Cousin Arnold,” he said.
This was something. Normally of course I had to wait till he was finished with one before he would let me read it.
“Which one do you want?”
“What do you have?”
“Here, here’s a good one for you to start with.”
He held up a Kid Colt. I knew he wasn’t crazy about Kid Colt, and to tell the truth neither am I. He was holding out on the good stuff, The Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, Tales to Astonish with the Ant-Man.
“Okay,” I said. “Thanks, Kevin.”
“You’re welcome,” he said.
He quickened his steps. Now that “business” was over, he was anxious to get back to the porch, to our adjoining wicker rockers, to escape into his little dream world.
And to tell the truth so was I.
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About danleo: "Dan Leo lives and works in Philadelphia, PA, in a slightly shabby apartment in a 169-year-old building. He loves to write and he has many favorite authors, most of whom seem to be deceased, including Marcel Proust, Henry de Montherlant, Richard Stark, Kingsley Amis, and Patricia Highsmith." |
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It does seem like a dream, this “Railroad Train to Heaven.”