Locomotive to the Past - George Schultz (famous ebook reader .txt) š

- Author: George Schultz
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āWith what things, Mister Garback? What stuff?ā
āYou know what I mean! Exactly what I mean! A whole lot of things! A whole bunch of things! I was really sort of ignoring them, yāknow. Letting them all go! Until this evening! When you got⦠got so deeply⦠into the Frank Sinatra thing! That really began to worry me! The thing⦠about that recording session. That deal⦠with that, whatās-his-name, arranger. How did you know that? How could you know about that?ā
The employee would have to think fast!
āWell, Iāve got a friend⦠from my time, down in Tennessee. Heās⦠uh⦠a nephew! A nephew⦠of Mister Stordahl! When the session took place⦠almost a year ago⦠he wrote me, about it. Told me all about it. Then⦠when I came to work here⦠I got to where I could hardly wait to use it! Use it⦠on the air! When the first record⦠first one, from the session⦠when it got here today, I kicked it around. Should I use it⦠or not? Might be just a tad too soon, yāknow.ā
āA tad too soon? A tad?ā
āThey⦠ah⦠talk funny, sometimes. Down there⦠in Tennessee.ā
āApparently. Thereāve been more than a few times⦠when youāve used words that just seemed to come out of nowhere. Really out of nowhere!ā
āAnyway,ā responded Jasonāignoring his superiorās thrust. āI finally decided, that Iād use the bit. Probably shouldāve run it by you first, butā¦ā
āBit? Run it by me? What kind of talk⦠is that? Run it by me? Bit?ā
āYes, Sir. When it all ended up, I decided to use it.ā He was still not responding, to the presidentās preoccupationāover words!
āTo⦠to use it,ā groused Mr. Garbackāhis tone barely audible. āThe bit, you mean?ā
āYes, Sir. I was⦠you see⦠afraid of being scooped! Scooped⦠by some other disc jockey. On another station.ā
āSome other⦠some other⦠some other disc jockey? Now, where the hell⦠did you get that term?ā The presidentās resolveāregarding vulgar languageāseemed to be unraveling, at least slightly!
āLike I said, they speak kind of another⦠a whole different kind of⦠of language, where I come from.ā
āYeah, apparently,ā replied his bossāhalf-mumbling. āI suppose the same would hold⦠for such a word, as gig! Gig? Gig . . . for heaven sakes?ā
āYes. Yes, Sir. Iām sorry! I just got a little excited⦠when that record showed up. Iāll try⦠Iāll do my best, you know⦠to try and stick, a little more better, with The Kingās English. From now on.ā
āThe Kingās English,ā repeated the poobahāstill muttering, under his breath. It was almost impossible to determine whether it was a questionāor a statement.
Probably neither one, determined Jason. The utterance was from some other category, heād figured. Heād feared! Possibly one that heād be totally unableāto cope with! Probably one heād be totally unableāto cope with! It took all the restraintāto hold in the massive, overwhelming sigh, that was building! Welling upānot unlike some sort of volcano! Deep within the rapidly-unraveling āradio personalityā!
The presidentāfinallyādismissed his employee! After three or four additional anguish-filled, never-ending, minutesāshrouded in deafening silence! Dismissed himāfrom the, thankfully-finished, the devastating, āinquisitionā. But, Jason could tell that he was nowāāon thin iceā.
How thin? Who knew? Who could tell? Certainly not the emotionally-drained young man!
All he could think ofāgoing down, in the elevatorāwas the sainted source, of all his āinside informationā! And the heartbreak that the old man mustāve feltāvis-a-vis the ārelationshipā (or lack of same) between him, and Jasonās mother! How sad! The troubling thought, for some reason, seemedāalwaysāto keep replaying! Hadāprobablyāfor years! But, why now? How incredibly sad!
The thought/hope kept returning: Hopefully, Mary Rose would be the grand (hopefully, the grandiose) sourceāof all kinds of āspecialnessā for him! Well, for both of them! If āhis little girlā was to turn out to be anything like her mother, āspecialnessā would appearāto be a sure thing!
Always that same thought!
Again, please Lord!
THIRTY THREE
June 6, 1944: D-Day! The, widely-anticipated-albeit-scary, first invasion of the European Continent! The first such military undertakingāin six centuries! A staggering, highly-complicated, campaign! Casualtiesāto the Allied Forces exceeded 10,000! Amazing! Incredible! The beginning of the endāfor the āvastly-superiorā, āunstoppableā, ādestined-to-rule-the-worldā, Third Reich!
Two days later: Anotherāmore locally centeredācause, for celebration occurred! Causing no less jubilation, however! Well, undoubtedly, for no groupāother than the Jason Rutkowski family, of Detroit, Michigan! Well, and some of their friends.
Born on June 8th? One Cynthia Rutkowski! Sheād weighed ināat a-pound-and-a-half less, than her older sister! Her cautious statusāwas what would come, in later years, to be known as a āpreemieā! The newcomer had āshown upā two weeks early! Fortunately, she was given a clean ābill of healthā, by Dr. Leonard Kramer, the kindly family physician, of the Rutkowskiāand the Atkinsonāfamilies. He was joinedāin that happy diagnosisāby the Head of Obstetrics, and the Head of Pediatrics, at New Grace Hospital!
Jason, of course, was thrilled! (What else?) He hadāas previously been mentioned (many times)āalways subscribed to Grandpa Piepczykās firm belief, that there has always been āsomething special . . . something very special⦠between daddies and daughters. Always!ā This etched-in-stone fundamental had been staunchly embeddedāwell before Our Hero had actually known the unmitigated joy of fatherhood. However, the one tragic exceptionāSheila Rutkowskiās relationship, with her fatherāhad always been terribly troubling, for the new daddy! But, especially soāsince, first one daughter, then a second one, had ādropped inā!
From the very startāhe had always treasured āhisā now-15-month-old Mary Rose! She was just ārounding into shapeāāas a bona fide little girl, as opposed to having been an infant, for all of her lifeāwhen Cynthia decided to make her ādebutā! Truly, his ācup ran overā! Spectacularlyāit ran over!
As the coast-to-coast jubilation, over the dazzling European invasion had begun to subsideāat least somewhatāāthe outside worldā began to look forward to the November 7th Presidential Election.
The eventāwhat could/would mean a historic fourth term, for FDRādidnāt hold that much intrigue, for the new papa. The event, of course contained absolutely no suspense. He knew that President Roosevelt wouldācomfortablyādefeat Governor Dewey. The only US presidentāto ever serve more than two terms.
For Jason,
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