Meteor Shower
by Ralph William Hawkins
Union Station.
Celebrating ten years of marriage seemed a fitting excuse to
book Acela tickets to the Big Apple. Many months in advance and unbeknownst
to my bride, I slipped onto the web and procured our secret seats. For many moons I had wanted to take this
ride, and now I had my reason.
Everything was set: We’d ride a regional from
No sooner had confirmation hit my inbox than I spotted a blurb in my morning paper: Acelas sidelined. Cracks in brakes. Curses! Cracks in my perfect plans, as well.
I regrouped. A
kindly voice on the phone – kinder even than Julie – worked to keep my secret-anniversary-plans intact,
rebooking us on another ride. Mr.
Gunn’s #98 to the rescue – the Silver
Meteor. It seemed a fitting
remedy for my high-speed disappointment.
We arrived early at Staples Mill to catch our comet from
A kind soul behind thick plate glass received my grief
without acrimony. Did I not receive
his message at my home, warning of the delay? Alas, we had already left for
I regrouped (again), now underway. A lone P40 made quick work of the RF&P, five cars in tow. In the bowels of D.C.’s Union Station, now mid-morning, I perched myself in the vestibule on the point as a crew pulled off the Genesis and tacked on an electric AEM-7. Lights off. Slam! (The aforementioned momentary jostle.) Lights on. And in short order, we were northbound again. We settled into our Business Class seating, complimentary soda in one hand, complimentary New York Times in the other.
Now, prior to
My vehicles of choice had twice been taken out from under
me, but even an unnamed regional commuter seemed to fly like the wind on the
famed corridor to
Two nights and two Broadway shows later, our anniversary celebration drew to a close. The fourteenth platform at Penn revealed another silvery Meteor poised in a southerly direction. We stowed our bags, took our seats, and settled in for our return flight home. A fresh start. This would be a better trip.
Remember: flexibility. No sooner had our movement arisen
from underneath the
From our newfound seats in the lounge car, I nursed a bad habit of eavesdropping by listening to the conductors seated behind me. One was scanning his rulebook for a precise definition on service dogs. I too had noticed the rather rotund lady in our sauna-coach who had boarded holding her miniature canine like a purse. She didn’t look blind to me either. What to do? They pondered aloud.
I decided to leave that ethical quagmire to the professionals. I announced to my bride that I was gong to take a stroll to the rear of the train, see the sights from there. Moving rearward car to car, I entered a vestibule and suddenly realized that the exterior door was wide open! Something about the landscape rushing by at 100 mph gives a man pause. “The children!” flashed through my mind. I had leapfrogged over several loose kiddies on my hike rearward, so I quickly retrieved a conductor to remedy the situation. “These things pop open sometimes,” he remarked, as if that was intended to make me feel better.
From the rear of the train, I spent some time peering
through hazy Amfleet glass, watching the slender
corridor slip away from us at breathtaking speed, like the twisting tale of a
kite. The catenary lines flashed
before me like a hypnotist’s timepiece. I began thinking about
disappointments, great and small, and about how life is full of them.
The sights along the
corridor are not as vital as I imagined they would be. Everywhere, abandoned hulks of
industrial plants. Overhead, aged
Pennsylvania RR electrical scaffolding, peeling with paint. Station platforms in disrepair, major
sections taped off in yellow. The only new buildings I see on the entire line
are prisons. Perhaps a few condos.
The whole scene has a kind of melancholy draped over - -
Whoosh!
The passing of a northbound Amtrak movement – a combined 200 mph meet! – jolted me from my existential moment. Thumpety-Thump. A frog in a crossover turnout delivered a jolt to my vestibule. My hand reached for the wall in reflex. Flexibility, I thought.
Flexibility. Stay loose and enjoy the ride. On my flawless anniversary travel plans have rained meteor showers—cancelled trains, crowded cars, and crippled cooling. But don’t let the disappointments steal your joy. Look for the blessings amid the dissatisfaction. Five cars forward sits the best thing to ever have happened to your life.
An hour later, we sat down to a $45 dinner in the diner. Microwaved frozen chicken, paper plates, canned corn. <Sigh> But then again, I was with my beloved. And we were moving forward.
Flexibility.