A Ride on the Wild Side
He was a well dressed man who was a bit late to catch his
morning train to Chicago. He arrived at the station just as his train was
leaving.
He checked the schedule. The next train did not stop at his
station. And the next one would be about an hour later. That train was a local
that made all the stops so at best he would arrive at the office an hour and a
half later than normal. He thought through the three appointments he would miss
with a feeling of dismay.
Suddenly he had a very resourceful feeling. There was a slow
moving freight train on the second track. If he could hop on board, get off at
the next station upstream, catch the express – the one that would blast through
his station – and get downtown just a few minutes late.
As soon as the man got on the flat car of the freight train,
the engineer got the signal to proceed at normal speed. As he passed the
station where he planned to get off, the train was moving way to fast to even
think of jumping off.
It was a fall morning. The temperature was about 35 degrees
and the sun was shining. The pin-striped suit and the navy trench coat (without
the liner) had seemed quite appropriate for the simple commute to Chicago. But
as the speed of the train began to increase the clothing proved totally
inadequate.
The train he had chosen was primarily made up of trailers
carrying mail to the West Coast. That meant this was the “hottest” train on the
east-west line. Every effort was made to keep this train moving at the maximum
authorized speed.
This train would run most of the trip between 60 and 70
miles an hour. That point if not the reason for it became painfully obvious as
the train passed his intended station and shortly thereafter, the last of the
commuter stations. Any hope of getting off the train faded and for the next
three hours he experienced such intense pain from the cold wind that he lay
huddled in a heap, desperately praying that the train would get wherever it was
going and stop so he could get off.
After the train rumbled over the Mississippi River Bridge,
it began to slow considerably. This was the place where the next crew would
take over.
He had enough presence of mind to realize that the train was
now moving slowly enough that he could get off. But he did not factor in the effect
of the cold on his legs. So as he left go of the train, his legs gave out and
he tumbled head over heels on the rocks and gravel of the track bed. He lost a
shoe. His suit was shredded. And he was bleeding from dozens of cuts and
abrasions.
That is how the Clinton, Iowa police found him a few minutes
later. They had been waiting for him to get off after receiving reports from
passing trains that there was a vagrant on one of the cars. The looks of this
guy confirmed their impression. They arrested the man and put him in jail.
He kept trying to tell his story to the officers. But with
each telling, his story sounded more bizarre and unbelievable. He finally
convinced them to let him make a phone call to his wife.
But she was even more skeptical than the officers. No one
she knew would ever do something that stupid. Her level headed, easy-going,
never take a chance husband was clearly not the person she was talking to. She
hung up on him.
The dejected man returned to his cell.
A few minutes later, however, his wife called back. She had
called his office and discovered that he had not come into work. In fact, one
of his co-workers had seen him walking from the parking lot as the train left
the station.
They called the man to the phone and his wife was finally
convinced that the man, in fact, was her husband.
Now, she had to find out where Clinton, Iowa was. He had
driven their only car to work, the kids were coming home from school in another
hour, they had a parent/teacher meeting that evening. A trip to Clinton, Iowa
was clearly not in her plans.
But around 5:00, she was in the car headed across the state.
I only wish that I had been there to witness the reunion.
Over the next several weeks, the story grew richer with each
telling.
One morning in the vestibule of an inbound train, a banker
was telling the story to a few of his friends. They laughed at the poor guy’s
misfortunes and tried to guess the reaction of their wives to such a phone
call.
One man, who had been quiet through out the telling of the
story, finally said, “I don’t think that is funny at all.”
The banker looked at him with a perplexed look on his face.
Finally, the look changed to one of understanding. Softly, he said, “It was
you, wasn’t it?”
The man slowly nodded.
And the Public Address System announced our arrival in
Chicago.