UNDER THE PLATFORM
I am proud to say that I am an entirely
ordinary man. And I was an ordinary man because ordinary things happened to me.
Now that the extraordinary has been visited upon me, I am in danger of becoming
extraordinary myself. You might consider me an ordinary man in an extraordinary
situation, or you might consider me an extraordinary man who has mistaken the
extraordinary for the ordinary.
Whatever you call it, I am a man with a strange story to tell.
And that strange story began on an
ordinary day; or, what I mistook for an ordinary day. And, all things
considered, it was a day which does not deserve to be called a day. After all, a day can be anticipated, and
prepared for. A day can be counted upon to act just like any other day. A day
is reliable and secure. A day does not,
nor should it ever, compel you to question your sanity. And a day does not interrupt the steady pulse of a life.
Days are parceled out in egalitarian
fashion, no day longer than the rest, and all of them the same for an eternity
of eternities. But this was a day which
disturbed what, until then, had been a symmetrical arrangement of punctuality
and dependability. It was the fly in
the ointment, as it were. And, so,
rather than call this day a day, which would be to credit it with a distinction
it ill-deserves, I will regard it as an ordeal; it was the crack in an otherwise
unblemished sidewalk, over which I would have to step to get to the other side.
But this was more than just a customary crack. It was a morass which has
engulfed me quite remorselessly, and from which I may never fully extricate
myself.
I may call it an ordeal, a crack, a
morass, a fly, and possibly a whole host of names; but I shall never refer to
it as a day. But before I describe how
this non-day consumed me, I might offer you a blueprint of how this day should
have transpired.
Every weekday, barring the odd national
holiday, I commute by train into New Amsterdam, and to the office where I've
worked as a certified professional accountant for the last fifteen years. Each
morning, I catch the 7:44 train from Middlebury. It's a fifty minute trip which
brings me to Union Station just after 8:38. It's then a ten minute jaunt
(including the obligatory five minute wait) by subway to the station across the
street from the office where I set up my own practice seven years ago. You
might be familiar with J.B. Sutton and Associates, though the name is something
of a misnomer because I have no associate but for a part-time
secretary/receptionist by the name of Molly, with whom I maintain a
relationship of the strictest professionalism. The work load is tremendous,
especially now that I've acquired a professional reputation for being
knowledgeable, reliable, diligent and thorough, and, by and large,
irreproachable. And I pride myself on giving my clients no cause for complaint.
But I tackle the bulk of the work myself for fear that no one else could be
quite as committed to approximating my high level of precision. The reputation
of my practice is at stake, after all.
From the time I unlock the front door to
my office at 5 minutes to nine, to the time I lock the front door at 6:00 p.m.
(not including the one hour of lunch during which my office doors remain
securely locked) I put in a full eight hours, setting aside 1 hour to indulge
in a Wall Street Report and a packed lunch, of a sandwich (the contents of which
depended on the day of the week: Monday - Ham, Tuesday - Chicken, Wednesday -
Salami, Thursday - Tuna and Friday - Turkey) and a piece of fruit (also
depending on the day of the week). Some of my more meddlesome clients (who
appear unable to restrict their questions to matters of business) will ask me
why a self-employed man such as myself would adopt such a rigid schedule; but I
explain, without revealing my irritation with the question, that the success of
my practice and the confidence of my clients depends entirely upon my
self-discipline. I will invariably conclude the matter by further explaining
that unless the quality of my work is in question, we should let the matter
drop from consideration. And so the
matter drops until another meddlesome client attempts to pry into my private
affairs.
And to my clients, I am a never-ending
source of puzzlement. But my professionalism will never yield to their attempts
at familiarity. But if they want the benefit of my expertise, they would be
wise not to overtax me with questions about the precision of my schedule. I
haven't the time to ponder frivolities, nor have I the time to consider the
merits and demerits of my modus operandi. Yet, as disciplined as I endeavor to
be, I am still not quite the model of perfection which I took the new Amsterdam
Transit (NAT) system to be. And I will
occasionally find myself behind schedule because of clients who believe that
time waits for all men. But the NAT waits for no man. No one is so important
that he can expect to delay the NAT by even a fraction of a second. Many a men
and women will curse the NAT for failing to wait at the station for them; but,
then again, many more are thankful for such reliability. At the risk of
appearing ludicrous, I must admit that the NAT has inspired me to be as
uncompromising with myself as the NAT was with the denizens of the sprawling
metropolis of New Amsterdam.
And the trains which constitute NAT are
never late; nor are they ever early for that matter. I have so much faith in
the precision of the trains that I will often reset my watch according to the
arrivals and departures. It is an unfailing constant in my life -- and maybe
the only constant -- and if there is one thing which could affirm my faith in
the perfectibility of human affairs it's the NAT.
When I close my doors at six p.m. sharp, I
will have just enough time to travel by subway and to pick up a dinner-to-go
from the local diner before catching either the 6:34 p.m. from New Amsterdam
Union Station, arriving in Middlebury at 7:20 p.m., the 6:37 p.m. arriving at
7:35 p.m., or the 6:40 p.m.arriving at 7:45 p.m.. If I choose to eat my
makeshift dinner at the station, instead of on the train, or if I've been
compelled to keep my doors open for another ten minutes or so, because of a
delay at work, I might still have enough time to take the subway train to Union
Station and to catch a quick bite before hopping on either the 7:03 p.m. train
arriving at Middlebury at 7:49 p.m., or the 7:06 p.m. arriving at 7:52 p.m., or
the 7:15 p.m. arriving at 8:19 p.m.
But I still have other options if I choose
to take my time for dinner, either because I'm meeting a client for a business
dinner (though I do make every effort to fit business meetings between 9 and 6)
or if I've chosen to treat myself because of a particularly productive day at
work or to celebrate my birthday (which no one else knows because I never tell
them, ever careful to maintain the delicate balance between a private life and
a working life). And as trains depart from Union Station every half hour
thereafter until 1:30 a.m., I have the option of taking either the 7:37 p.m.
arriving at 8:24 p.m. , the 7:40 p.m. arriving at 8:45 p.m., the 8:10 p.m.
arriving at 9:14 p.m., the 8:40 p.m. arriving at 9:45 p.m., the 9:10 p.m.
arriving at 10:14 p.m., the 9:40 p.m. arriving at 10:45 p.m. , and so on and so
forth until the 1:30 a.m. train -- the final train until the first train which
departs at 5:35 a.m. -- which arrives at Middlebury at 2:33 a.m.
And for seven years, I've come to rely
upon this schedule, And though the
schedule may be altered slightly from season to season, it has never given me
cause to question my faith in the NAT. After all, you must be prepared to
modify something to make it more perfect. I trust so implicitly in the NAT --
Union to Middlebury -- schedule that not only do I possess an updated copy at
both home and office, but I carry with me, in my briefcase along with the work
I take home each and every evening, a copy of the trusty text. I do so not to verify
a departure or arrival time (for I know the schedule by heart) but because I
find it reassuring to keep a copy of the schedule in my inner jacket pocket,
flush against my left breast. Not that I am a superstitious person, but I feel
confident that as long as I carry a copy of the schedule with me, NAT shall
never give me cause for disappointment.
And as long as NAT gives me no cause for disappointment, perhaps there's
hope. You might call it a form of insurance, without which I would never
travel. After all, there's an
unimpeachable order in the pages of a train schedule; something grafted onto it
from the order which enshrouds us.
And on this day, which I vowed never to
call by the name 'day', I'd been deceived by the appearance of normality. It
began as any day will tend to begin: I awoke, showered, dressed and sat myself
down to a breakfast of black coffee, oatmeal, and toast. I then drove to
Middlebury station, where I have an assigned parking spot close to the entrance
to the platform; and I caught the 7:44 a.m. train which arrived at Union
Station at 8:38 a.m. I then descended
to the subway platform to catch the F-Train for a three stop trip to the
station just across from my downtown office. I opened my doors at five minutes to nine, leaving me
with just enough time to hang up my coat, sit myself down and contemplate how
best to begin my working day.
As for my working day, I closed an account
with a client who failed to muster up enough discipline to pay me on time, and
I then pored through some voluminous documents for one of my more prestigious
clients (who shall remain nameless as he has acquired some renown in this city)
before sitting myself down to a packed lunch in the privacy of my office. My
assistant Molly arrived in the afternoon to answer phones and to busy herself
with filing work which had accrued since the previous week. I then met with a
prospective client who had been assured of my impeccable reputation and of my
devotion to a faultless work product. And then I devoted the remainder of the
afternoon to perusing the files of several of my lesser clients - though I make
every effort to treat all clients equal, giving no one reason to question the
accuracy of my work.
My
only disappointment was an impromptu visit by a wealthy but foolish client who
came to see how I was doing. I was
ill-prepared to risk my good-standing in the community by asking him to leave
me alone; nonetheless, I was quite put-off by his cloying familiarity with me,
as if I were his friend by virtue of my being privy to his woefully mismanaged
finances, or for dispensing advice as to how he might staunch the steady flow
of financial loss. He and I were
strangers; but he -- let us call him
Mr. X -- chose to delay the course of my work, compelling me to transact
business outside of my customary work hours, to discuss aspects of his love
life which would have been best left in the bedroom. His utter lack of
professionalism was appalling; and he left me no choice but to remind him that
it must surely be time for dinner, at which point he insisted upon taking me to
dinner at a restaurant. And when I
explained that I should first finish my work, he told me to "hang the
work," and call it a day. He
presumed to know what was best for me, even though he hadn't the slightest
notion of how to organize his own affairs. He'd devoted his life to making a
hash of things, and he evidently cared as little for my life as he did for his
own. He didn't give a toss.
But to refuse him dinner would have been
vulgar, not to mention imprudent. My professional reputation was at stake and,
besides, Mr. X was still wealthy enough
to exert some influence among the well-to-do. And he allegedly rubbed
elbows with much of the New Amsterdam elite. A good word from him could make me
the most sought-after of accountants in all of New Amsterdam proper; a bad word
could have put me out of business. So,
as much as I wanted to reprove him for imposing upon my tight schedule and for
attempting to intrude upon my personal life (which I feel obligated, for
professional reasons, to keep private), I agreed to join him.
So we talked, or, to be accurate, Mr. X
talked. And, fortunately, he did the talking for both of us, because I had
nothing to say to him. It was enough that I had to entertain his distasteful
remarks about many of the businessmen it had been my pleasure to assist, not to
mention his claim to have been more then gentlemanly to their lonely wives.
There was no limit to Mr. X's ill-chosen
opinions on everything from the condition of the market to the state of his
fiance's feminine hygiene. The man was a cad, and it was no surprise that he
was squandering what his father must have worked hard to amass. Mr. X was a
disgrace and an embarrassment to those of us with important things to do. He
comprehended nothing of the work-ethic,
nor would he ever. And when he spoke to me of his life, he desired not
helpful criticism but a companionable pat on the back (which I would never do)
and assurance that he was beyond reproach.
But he talked my head off, and I seconded everything he said; not
because I agreed with any of his unpardonable and irresponsible views, but
because I wanted to curtail dinner as much as was humanly possible.
Yet Mr. X wouldn't agree to parting ways
until he'd consumed five martinis and
until it became too much of a strain to prolong his muddled stream of
consciousness. He agreed to pay for dinner (actually, he insisted); and after
making a few excuses as to the urgency of my departure, careful to avoid his
probing questions about what could have been so urgent, I left him, slumped
over the table, credit card in hand (easily accessible to the would-be thief)
and entirely delirious. It was
revolting to witness a grown man disgrace himself with drink; he was entirely
undisciplined and beyond help.
And as I left, I pondered the most tactful
way of terminating our business relationship; for how could I have anything
more to do with him? But upon reflection, I suppose I should be grateful for
ne'er-do-wells like Mr. X; for without men like him, I might be out of work.
For it has fallen upon me to straighten out what others bend. And if I don't do
it, who will? For men like Mr. X, it's all the same: straight or bent, whole or
shattered into many pieces. What they
break, I fix. But they should have some
respect for the dignity of my office, for the service I perform. Mr. X had so little respect for what I did I
could almost believe he didn't really want me to repair the imperfections of
his life. But I remember feeling nothing more than disgust for Mr. X's total
lack of concern; and I left him to his delirium.
It was 7:43 when I left the Bistro. And I
had just enough time to catch the 8:10 for Middlebury. I was compelled to wait
twelve minutes for an eight minute trip to Union Station; but at such a late
hour, trains were few and far between. And I arrived at Union Station,
briefcase in hand, at 8:06 p.m, giving me three minutes to locate the platform,
race to the train and board it. I had three minutes, barely enough time for a
sprint, but it was feasible, and I embraced the challenge. I bounded up the
stairs from the underground station, three or four steps at a time, and I
entered the cavernous hall of Union Station with only just over one minute to
spare. But it would have been enough.
I gazed up at the monitor to determine the
location of the Middlebury train. But there was no mention of Middlebury on the
screen. And the 8:10 to Middlebury had
apparently been replaced by an 8:10 to Westborn, one city north of
Middlebury. The alteration was slight,
but troubling. For from one mistake can
come a whole pattern of negligence. And
I was shocked that this departure from the customary pattern upset no one but
me. People behaved as if nothing were amiss; it was as if only I could detect
the flaw; but I suppose I was more attuned to the flaws considering that I'd
devoted my life to finding them and mending them, to making life seamless and
harmonious. But others were
oblivious to the threat. The sky could have been falling upon them and they
would stand about as if it were part and parcel of the routine. But this was an
affront to the routine; it was an affront to all expectations; and it was an
affront to the schedule which I carried about in my coat pocket. It was an
affront to me and to everything I believed in.
And it worried me because someone was playing fast and loose with the
schedule.
But there was no time for me to ponder
what went wrong, or who could be blamed. And I made a mad dash toward platform
seven. I scuttled down the stairs, down
a lengthy corridor, and down another short flight of stairs until I reached the
guarded entrance to platform seven.
While I rifled though my coast pockets to find my train pass, I peered
over the guard's shoulder towards the platform; but I could see no train. I assumed that, by some miracle, the train
had not arrived and that punctuality had been disregarded on this occasion due
to the impromptu modification in the NAT schedule. But when I did find my pass (which I'd placed in the wrong pocket
due to my hasty departure from the office with Mr. X), the guard wasn't the least bit interested. I
had to shove it into his fist before he deigned to glance at it and return it to
me as if it were no more valuable than the lint which lined the insides of my
pockets.
"You've got the wrong platform,
buddy," he said.
I hesitated. "Wrong platform," I
queried.
"That's what I said," he
responded.
"But. I don't understand."
No response. The ill-tempered guard
appeared preoccupied with his own thoughts.
"The monitor said platform seven for
the train to Westborn," I added to fill the silence and to justify my
presence.
"Yeah," responded the guard.
"But your tickets for Middlebury. You want the Middlebury train, not the
Westborn train."
"But they're right next to each
other." I explained. "Wouldn't the Westborn train stop at
Middlebury?"
And then the guard spoke to me as if I
were hard of hearing. "This is the Westborn train; you want the Middlebury
train."
"I don't understand."
The guard chose not to recognize my appeal
for clarification.
"Is there anyone else I could speak
to?"
"If you've got a problem with it,
take it up with the complaint department upstairs. I'm just telling you like it
us, 'kay buddy?"
"This doesn't make sense."
Again he ignored me.
"Do you know which platform I
need?" I asked.
"Sorry. All I know is you've got the
wrong platform."
The guard turned away from me as if to
forestall further questioning. I
suspected that the Westborn train would have stopped at Middlebury, but there
was no one else to hear me out; and the guard was too bulky and too
ill-tempered for me to willfully contradict his claims. I hesitated, to
contemplate how I might appeal to his better nature; but then it occurred to me
that his nature would probably get no better.
I glanced at my watch; and by that time it
was already 8:11 p.m. If there were a Middlebury train, it would have left
already. And so I shrugged off the
guard's casual insolence and returned to the central foyer.
I turned to the monitor and discovered, to
my dismay, that there was a Middlebury train, and that it was scheduled to
depart at 8:15 from platform 11. My watch, which was neither a minute too fast
nor too slow, read 8:14; and so I spun about and plunged into the stairwell.
By the time I arrived at platform 11,
which, as luck would have it, was the very last platform on the first floor,
and a good two-minute run from the central foyer, I could see no train. My watch (which I'd adjusted to coordinate
with the scheduled departures and arrivals of NAT trains) read 8:16; and the guard smiled at me as if
I were the unsuspecting subject of a practical joke.
"Did I miss it?" I queried, hoping that the schedule might have
made an exception for me. I ransacked my pockets for my ticket.
"Left ten minutes ago" was the
reply.
"But it's scheduled to leave at
8:15?" I remarked as I continued to search my pockets.
"Well, it's ... what time is
it."
"I glanced at my watch.
"8:17"
"Well, you would have missed it
anyway."
"But it said 8:15," I protested.
"Why would it come early?"
" I don't know. Trains come when they
come."
I couldn't imagine a more inadequate
answer; but it was my impression that he thought himself clever for having
arrived at such a pithy encapsulation of the inexcusable situation. He grinned at me as I continued to search my
pockets for the pass. It was nowhere to be found. But I set aside my search to educate the slack-jawed yokel about
who things worked.
I pulled my schedule from my coat pocket
and held it out to him.
"Have you ever seen one of
these?" I remarked.
The guard stepped back. I'd confounded him
and his smile vanished. He said nothing.
"It's the New Amsterdam Transit
schedule. And does it say trains come when they come? Does it?"
Still no reply. He took another step back
as I held the train schedule before him.
"If trains came when they came, then
what would be the point of having a schedule? What would be the point?"
"I don't know" was his feeble
reply.
I attempted to show him the error of his
ways; but he did not appear to comprehend my concern. No doubt, he was shocked
that I would question what he mistook for the way of the world. As if good
things would ever come to those who waited, to men like him.
And then it was my turn to be shocked. I
remembered handing my pass to the guard at platform seven; but I didn't recall
taking it back from him. I raced from
one end of the corridor to the other. But when I arrived at the entrance to
platform seven, the guard was no longer there. He'd been replaced by another
guard (not yet eighteen as far as I could tell) who appeared to be just as
amused with me as the guard from platform 11.
I'm sure I must have appeared a bedraggled mess; and I could feel the
perspiration drip from the tip of my nose. But that could hardly be reason to
mock me with their toothy grins.
I approached the young man.
"Do you know where I can find the man
who was working here not ten minutes ago?" I stumbled over my words from
being out of breath.
The young man's grin broadened.
"He's not working now," he
replied.
"Yes. But where is he?" I asked, finding it extremely difficult to
conceal my impatience with his obtuseness.
"I don't know." The young man
grinned again.
"What do you mean you don't know?
Where do you go when you finish your shift? Hmmm?"
No response. The young man smiled broadly.
"Look. Is there a lost and found? You
see the guard, the one here before you, has my pass. He forgot to give it to
me"
"We don't have a lost and
found," he explained as if it amused him to watch me dangle.
"You don't have a ... um ... just
tell me where the employee-only area is ... I'm sure he's still here."
"Oh, but you can't go in there. It's
for employees only. You'll have to go to the complaint department. You could contact them by mail even."
"No. No. No. Listen to me. I want my
pass now. I want to go home. I just
want to clear up this mess and be on my way."
"The complaint department," he
attempted to say; but I interrupted him.
"I'm not going to the complaint
department." I said, raising my voice to a controlled scream. "I want to find the guard who was
working here. I'm going to get my pass
from him, and then I'm going to go home. Do you understand ?"
The young man's grin vanished and he
stepped away from me just as the other guard had done.
"Could you tell me his name, and I'll
go find him," I asked.
"I can't help you," remarked the
young man.
"What's his name?" I asked.
"I can't help you," he replied.
He insisted on pleading ignorance.
"You just told me he wasn't working.
You must know who he is?"
Silence. The lad was perplexed that I
could even ask him such questions. The other guard was no longer there; and the
other guard, therefore, ceased to matter, at least as far as the slack-jawed
young man was concerned. My reasoning began to frighten him, and so I had to
abandon my efforts. He must have been a half-wit, after all, and he probably
understood nothing of what I was saying. What could he know of the heretofore
undeviating punctuality of NAT; and what could he know of my apprehension at
the thought that the delicate balance of things had been upset; and that there
was nothing left to believe in, not even the reliability of the NAT schedule?
How could such a blockhead comprehend the nature of the calamity?
And so I pressed on. I would find the
answers upstairs. After all, how could everyone plead ignorance. Someone was
bound to help me; and, bolstered by that thought, I ascended the stairs.
I approached an information booth and
attempted to claim the attention of a plump NAT employee, who was too occupied
with her crossword puzzle to give me even a moment's notice. And when she deigned to look my way, she
gawked at me as if I were deranged for even attempting to claim her attention,
for having a question, and as if my request for information somehow implied
that I was unworthy of receiving it. But I asked anyway.
"Can you help me?" I began.
"I've misplaced my ticket. You see I gave it to one of the guards
downstairs and, well, he appears to have made off with it. Not suggesting he
stole it, it's just that he forgot to give it back to me. And so I wondered if
you might happen to know how I might find him?"
"What's his name?" was her icy
reply.
"Well, that's just it. I don't
know. He was kind of ... beefy looking,
like a boxer. A bit sullen..."
I was trying to be helpful, but she cut me
off. "I'm sorry, but if you don't have a name, I can't help you." She
turned from me. It was my turn to be struck dumb. "Have you tried asking
the guard who replaced him?" she added. "He should know."
"But he doesn't," I exclaimed,
all patience lost. "Doesn't anyone know anything?"
"You don't have to raise your voice
at me," was her pusillanimous reply. And then she turned away.
"I wasn't," I replied . And then
I believe I even apologized to her.
"I'm sorry, but I just want my ticket
back."
"Well, that's no reason to snap at me
like that," she explained as if I'd just hurt her feelings. "I'm only
trying to help."
Again, I didn't know what to say. I wasn't
sure if she was trying to help me or not. But I didn't know who else to turn
to. "What should I do?" I asked.
"That's entirely up to you," was
her ill-mannered reply.
All patience once again came to an end.
"Where do employees go when they get off work?" I asked.
"I don't know," she replied.
"Where do you go when you get off work?"
I said nothing.
"I'd go straight home," she
explained. "That's what I'd do. Straight home." She sounded upset.
But I'd been pushed beyond endurance to
care about her wounded feelings. "So you could finish your crossword at
home, I suppose," I offered in reply. I was upset, after all. I'd come to
her for information, and I hadn't come to discuss her life. The less I knew
about her the better.
"What?" she bristled at my
taunt.
"Look," I ventured to explain.
"I just want to catch the next train to Middlebury. I'll buy another
ticket. I don't care."
She glanced at me for a moment before
turning to her computer monitor and punching the keys with resentful,
underworked fingers.
"Next train leaves platform three at
8:30." But when she spoke I could
almost hear her stifling a sob. Could
it have been anything I said? I can't imagine how.
I clenched my briefcase to my chest and
prepared to race to platform three, which was, thankfully, just across the
foyer from the information booth. "But what about the schedule?" I
asked. The trains always leave at 8:40."
"I don't know anything about
that," she said. And for the first time, I got a good look at her
face. Her eyes were moist with tears.
But as soon as she turned to me, she again turned away; and with a shrug, she returned to her crossword.
I had no time to ask her about her sad
predicament or to contemplate her indifference to mine. Instead, I careened
toward the ticket booth to purchase a round trip fare to Middlebury.
I was given another ticket, and, within
seconds, I stepped before the guard at gate three who cheerfully assured me
that the train hadn't come yet. I offered to show him my ticket, but he didn't
seem to think it necessary. He merely beckoned me, with a tilt of the head, to
the platform,
And I waited, as minute after minute
slipped away without the least trace of a Middlebury train. And when my watch
read 8:40, I approached the guard, hoping for an explanation to this
unaccountable delay.
"What happened to the train?" I
asked.
And then he chuckled. "Oh, this
train's always late. In fact, sometimes it doesn't even show up." He
chuckled again, clearly more amused by this than I was.
"I don't understand." I wanted to scream some sense into him, but
I restrained myself.
"Oh, nothing to understand. Just have
a seat and take it easy."
But how could I take it easy, knowing that
the train might never arrive?
"But the trains are never late,"
I queried.
"Never late?" he added. "They're always late here;
you must be thinking of the wrong station."
I turned away. But the guard continued. "Nothing much of anything works
'round here; but you've got to laugh; 'bout all you can do here." And the
guard did just that.
And then, as I turned away, I saw him: the
beefy guard who'd pocketed my train pass. I saw him on the other side of the
short corridor which separates the main foyer from platform three and four. And
he disappeared. I ran towards the opening of the corridor, and watched as the
beefy guard stood at the lip of the staircase just before plunging downward.
I followed and dashed towards the
stairwell, and scurried after him. I turned a corner, and entered the main
corridor; but he was gone. Had I conjured him up because I wanted to find him?
Or was he hiding from me? Because I was sure that I was the victim of an
elaborate cosmic joke, and that the staff of NAT were trying to get my dander
up. And they were succeeding.
I tried a few doors, but they were locked.
And then I peered into a few of the platform entrances he would have had time
to enter. But I saw no one. And I was too anxious to find him to notice just
how deserted the station was. How was
it that I could find no one to talk to? Where had everyone gone? I rushed
about, like a headless chicken, for a good five minutes or so; and I had no choice
but to abandon the search. Besides, I remembered that I had a train to catch,
and so I returned upstairs.
I returned to the guard at platform three.
And perhaps someone had written "laugh at me" on my forehead, because
as soon as he saw me and recognized me, he began to convulse with silent
mirth.
I glared at him, as if to remind him that
my predicament was no laughing matter. But he then chose to floor me with the
unpleasant truth. "The train just left," he exclaimed between
giggles.
"What?" I couldn't believe my
ears. "I don't understand."
"That's the thing about these trains;
they come when you least expect them; and when you do want them, they're never
there. You've gotta laugh."
I left him to his solitary merrymaking,
and shuffled back into the foyer. I needed to speak to someone. I needed to speak to someone who could
understand the gravity of the situation.
I spotted an employee wearing an official
NAT uniform: all blue with silver fringe; and I approached him.
"Excuse me," I said. He turned
around and gazed at me as if I weren't there.
"I'm trying to get to Middlebury,
but I can't seem to find a train. And
the train at platform three just left."
"No Middlebury trains leave from
platform three."
I didn't know what to say.
"Can I see your ticket?" he
asked.
And I gave it to him. "You've been
given the wrong ticket. Unless you're going to Sunnybrook."
"No. No. Middlebury. Just Middlebury.
Ah, I was told that my train would leave from platform three."
"Well, then you were lied to,"
was his matter-of-fact conclusion.
I said nothing.
"We never use platform three and the
Sunnybrook train leaves from platform five," he remarked. He studied the ticket. "It says so on
the ticket." He held it to my face, but I was in no mood to read the small
print.
"Or perhaps you misunderstood,"
he added.
"I didn't misunderstand," I
explained. "I heard quite clearly: Middlebury, platform three. Someone's
misinformed and it isn't me."
"Well, I'm sorry," he replied,
"but unless you're going to Sunnybrook, this ticket ain't going to do you
a whole lotta good. " He returned the ticket to me.
"Then I'll exchange it," I said.
"No exchanges. All sales are final," he added, quite
casually.
"What do you mean all sales are
final? What if I change my mind? What if someone gives me the wrong
information?" I stepped towards him.
The man turned away. "I'm
sorry," he muttered.
I raised my voice to catch his attention.
"I'm looking for one of the employees here. He has my pass. I don't know
his name, but he works at platform seven; he's heavy-set, dark hair, appears to
frown all the time."
"Oh, you must mean Felix," said
the official with a smile. "Felix Talbot. He's always sulking; that's just
his way." He paused. "His shift isn't over until 2 a.m., so he should
be here. And if he's not at platform seven, he's probably brooding somewhere
for all I know."
"Do you have an employee area?"
I hazarded to ask.
"Yes, indeed. And if you were an
employee you could go in, but as you're not, you'll have to look for him out
here." He gazed at me for a
moment, almost sympathetically, before excusing himself and scampering off down
a stairwell.
I then remembered the young woman in the
information booth who gave me false information, and who must have done so on
purpose. I approached the booth, gazed inside and saw not her but a diminutive
man wearing ludicrous horn-rimmed glasses and a tight, unyielding expression.
"Wasn't there a girl working here not
too long ago?" I asked him.
"Yes, you must mean Hilary."
I nodded.
"She wasn't feeling well, you
see," he assured me as if I were a solicitous friend.
"Oh, because I just spoke to her, not
twenty minutes ago. I think she told me the wrong platform. You see, I lost my
pass and I needed another ticket."
"So it was you," remarked the
man as if I'd just confessed to pulling my sister's hair. He glared at me from behind horn-rimmed
glasses resting on the tip of his nose.
"She told me that she'd had an upsetting conversation with a man who lost
his pass and who persisted in blaming her for it.
"I didn't blame her; I just wanted
her help."
"You hurt her feelings; and now she's
too upset to work. How could you?"
I had nothing to say. But the man
continued his tirade.
"Did you have to tell her she was
worthless; that she did nothing? Did you have to tell her she was lazy?"
I ventured to protest, but he continued.
"How could you be so cruel? Isn't it
enough that she has to sit there and listen to your questions; and you insult
her; just because she's doing a crossword? Have you no shame?"
And as he paused to take a breath, I
interjected. "But she was doing a crossword. I mean what does she get paid
for? She's here to keep me informed, not to play games. And then she can't even
give me the right information." I paused. "You can tell her I meant
every word."
The man glowered at me from behind his
horn-rimmed glasses. "You should be ashamed of yourself." He then
turned from me to push the partition closed.
I was refused information, on account of
my questionable morals; and so I put my faith, once again, in the monitor which
had led me astray in the first place.
The screen informed me that a
Middlebury train would be leaving from platform 17 at 9:00 p.m. My watch read
8:54 p.m., and so I made a run for it.
I descended the stairs at breakneck speed
and raced towards the end of the corridor. I found platform 16, and from all
appearances it was the last platform. I then made for the stairs and descended
to another floor. I'd never known trains other than subway trains to depart
from such a depth, but what choice did I have? And to my surprise, there were
more platforms, beginning from platform 18 and extending to platform 23. But
there was no platform 17 to be found. Could I have read the monitor
incorrectly?
A middle-aged woman with pursed lips
stepped into the corridor from the stairwell; and I approached her.
"Can you tell me where to find
platform 17?" I asked.
She gazed at me as if it had been impudent
of me to even address her. "I'm sorry," she declared. "I really
couldn't help you."
I was about to ask again, when she cut me
off and informed me that she was in a hurry. "I don't have time," she
explained as she scurried over to one of the platforms at the end of the
corridor.
I turned and leapt up the stairs, but two
minutes of frantic searching yielded me nothing. How could they have neglected
to add platform 17, when there was a platform 16 and 18. Was there something
untoward about the number 17? It was already
8:59, but I descended the stairs hoping that I might have overlooked it the
first time.
And then I saw it; and I can't understand
how I missed it the first time. I approached the guard, who appeared just as
mysteriously as the platform and I fumbled for my ticket.
I remembered that I was the proud owner of
a round-trip ticket to Sunnybrook. And
then I saw it; the train to Middlebury was waiting at the platform. A whistle
blew and I hurried past the guard. They could fine me whatever they wished for
boarding the wrong train; but I was fully intent on going home.
"Sir, can I see your ticket?"
insisted the guard. I could have jumped aboard the train, and made an attempt
to elude him; but I chose to acknowledge him. I'd been called to account; but I
pointed to my watch as if to suggest that there was no time for protocol.
The guard extended his arm. "I need
to see the ticket sir."
As I reached for my ticket, I considered
explaining my predicament; but there was no use. After all, he couldn't allow
me to board the train out of sympathy. About all I could do was fume and curse
the day I'd ever set foot in Union Station.
I produced the ticket; the man studied it
and then returned it to me. He said nothing.
And he behaved as if there was nothing he could say I didn't already
know. But I didn't know.
And then I watched as the train began to
slide along the platform. I was furious for this injustice and I cursed aloud
for the guard's edification.
And then the guard turned to me.
"What were you waiting for?" was his question.
I didn't understand.
"You had a ticket; why did you
wait?"
I gazed at the ticket; and I read the
small print: 'New Amsterdam to Middlebury - round trip.'
I was too shocked to do or say anything.
I'd been lied to; and I felt foolish.
I wanted to slam my briefcase against the
man who led me astray, but I chose, instead to smash it against the wall to my
right. But as luck would have it, the latch snapped open, and my correspondence
flew in all directions. The notebooks merely fell to the floor; but the
loose-leaf sheets (sheets which I'd organized perfectly) took wing and soared
about my head in the general direction of the newly-abandoned train
tracks. As I grabbed for them, I must
have looked like a man swatting at a drove of angry wasps. I was frantic after
all; and I could do nothing to mitigate the damage.
I fell to my knees and bent over to
collect the sheets one by one, to return them to my briefcase, while the guard
gazed at me apprehensively, as if I'd been clutching not at real sheets of paper
but at imaginary sheets. And then I abandoned my task to pull the train
schedule from my jacket pocket. I wanted to explain myself, to assure him that
I wasn't deranged.
"It wasn't supposed to be like
this," I explained as I held the schedule towards him. He backed away from
me. "I don't understand; this wasn't supposed to happen."
I plead with him for an answer. I
challenged him to refute the schedule. But he said nothing before running away
from me, leaving me to crawl about the
ground to retrieve my notes.
I collected most of my notes, at least
everything which hadn't fallen into the trough of the train tracks; and walked
back to the stairwell.
When I returned to the main foyer, I
noticed that the information booth window was once again open and that a third
person, as yet unknown to me, was staring at me. He nodded good-naturedly and then waved as if I were an old
friend. I advanced towards him,
thinking that he might be anxious to help me, and to give me the answers I'd
been looking for.
"Good evening, sir," he
exclaimed, flashing me a smile of gargantuan proportions. "How can I help
you today." This was the behavior
I'd come to expect from NAT employees; but I was still suspicious.
"I want to catch a train to
Middlebury," I asked. "Can you help me?"
"The jovial fellow turned to his
computer monitor. "Well, let's see. Hmm." He punched a few keys.
"Well, looks like the next train arrives at 9:23 at platform 24."
"24?," I queried.
"Yes sir."
"But where is that?" I replied. "I
wasn't aware you had so many?"
"Why downstairs; you can't miss it.
All of the Middlebury trains leave from the lower platforms."
"Not always," I ventured to
explain. "I would always catch my train on this level."
"I don't know anything about Middlebury
trains leaving from this level. Are you sure?"
I chose not to pursue the point. Instead,
I pulled the train schedule from my pocket and set it down on the window ledge
in front of him.
The man smiled "That book won't do
you any good here."
I was puzzled.
"I don't even know why they bother
issuing them," he added.
"But I've been using this for
years," I remarked. "I've had no reason to doubt its accuracy."
"Well, you must have been
lucky," he declared.
"Lucky?" I exclaimed. I couldn't
believe what I was hearing.
"You must have been using it on the
few occasions when it worked according to schedule. You must have caught all of
the exceptions to the rule."
"But it worked every time, without
fail."
He nodded as if impressed by the information.
"Well, then you were very lucky. Very lucky."
"That doesn't make sense," I
objected.
"It doesn't, does it," mused the
man. "But then again, neither does anything down here for that
matter."
"It's not supposed to be like
this," I retorted.
"No it isn't," concurred the
man. And then he chose to wax philosophic. "But what can we do about it?
No point in running around, is there? All we can do is sit down and accept it,
like death and taxes." He chuckled to himself at the hackneyed witticism.
"You sit still and it'll come; no
point getting all het up; there's nothing you can do about it; so you might as
will sit still and wait." He appeared to be impressed with this popular wisdom.
"But the schedule," I remarked,
"it lays everything out so clearly. It simplifies things so nicely."
The man dismissed me with a wave of the
hand. "Yeh, but it isn't simple is it? And not because life isn't simple,
because it is, but because you people always have to go and complicate things,
don't you You think you've got it fixed, but you don't."
I said nothing.
He grabbed my schedule and waved it at me.
"You don't need schedules. It's pointless; it doesn't do you any good.
Like it's going to work because a schedule says it does." He shook his
head disapprovingly. "If it's going to happen, it'll happen; if it isn't,
it won't."
And then he tore my schedule in half
before my very eyes. "You're better off without it."
"Give that back," I yelled. But
he merely dropped the torn halves into a waste paper basket inside the
information kiosk.
"Hey," he replied, as if to calm
me, "I'm doing you a favor. You can't go on believing that kind of
horseshit, It never pans out. Just take care of the here and now. Sit back and
take it all in."
I repeated myself. "Give me back my
schedule, you piece of shit. I'll report you to management." I had to take a firm hand.
"We've been ordered to destroy all
copies of the train schedule," he explained. "It was causing no end
of trouble; people complaining that things didn't run the way it was supposed
to; we don't have a complaint department to deal with it, so we have to get rid
of the schedules."
"Someone told me there was a
complaint department."
The man chuckled. "Not the last time
I checked." He paused to contemplate my evident anxiety. "Hey, I'm
sorry; but that's just how it is. Nothing I can do about it."
I'd been beaten.
I then remembered my lost train pass.
"Alright. Tell me one thing. Can I page somebody? You see I'm trying to
find an employee who forget to return my train pass to me."
"Oh, well, I can page him. What's his
name?" he asked.
"Ah, Felix Talbot, I believe."
"Felix?" he remarked as if
calling the name itself in question. He shrugged and then wrote the name down
on a slip of paper. he then turned away from me and produced a newspaper from
the desk.
"Are you going to page him?" I
asked.
He turned away from his newspaper,
surprised to see me waiting there. "All in due course, sir. When the
messenger comes by, which might be in, let's say, twenty minutes or so, I'll
give him the name and then he'll take it to the appropriate person. Perhaps if you check back here later."
He then turned away from me to peruse his newspaper.
My
watch read 9:18. Again, I was at risk of missing my train. I hurried to the
ticket counter, purchased a round trip ticket to Middlebury and raced off to
the stairwell. I descended the steps three or four at a time, until I was two
levels below the main foyer, at the bottom of the stairwell. I walked past platform
17, 18, 19 until I came to platform 23. There was no platform 24, as far as I
could tell.
And then I heard the main intercom.
"Would Philippe Talboy please report to the Director's office; Philippe
Talboy please report to the Director's office." The intercom then crackled
into silence.
I briefly contemplated returning upstairs
to inform them that they had the name wrong, and to vent some spleen at
whomever was responsible for the unforgivable botch-up.
But I had a train to catch and a platform
to find. There was no floor below me as far as I could tell; but I approached a
closed door to my right. Upon opening it, I discovered another stairwell which
plunged down several more flights. I descended the stairs and stepped out into
another corridor.
But it would seem that I'd ascended a staircase, rather than descending
into one, because the corridor featured the all too familiar first level of
platforms numbering 9 to 16. When I
returned to the stairwell, which I must have overlooked on my previous visits
to the corridor, I descended the stairs to the corridor which offered platforms
17 to 23. But when I descended even further, I found myself once again on the
upper level corridor: platforms 9 to 16.
How as it possible that the further I plunged, the higher I rose? And how would I find platform 24 if none of
the stairwells permitted me to descend to a lower level?
But there was no time to dabble in useless
conjectures. Even stranger events were afoot. Standing at platform 7, in his
usual spot, was Felix, the beefy guard who'd made off with my train pass. I approached him, prepared to have it out
with him, and to castigate him for disappearing altogether, when I heard a
shout.
"That's him," roared a guard from a platform entrance way
opposite the gloomy Felix. Felix turned
to me and motioned me over. I presumed that Felix was contrite for having given
me the slip (even if it had been unintentional), and that he wished to return
my pass to me.
But when I reached him, the other guard (a
misshapen twig of a man with a
perpetual sneer) grabbed my arm from behind and twisted it behind my back.
"You're coming with me," he
proclaimed as if I'd just been caught me in the act of pickpocketing.
"What's going on here?" I asked,
attempting to extricate myself from the man's excruciating grip.
"For the past hour or so," droned Felix, "you've
been upsetting everyone and distracting us from our work. Ever since you
arrived, trains have gone missing, our complaint department has been besieged
with complaints and nothing has been working the way it should. We can't go on
like this."
"This is ridiculous," I
objected. "What does this have to do with me?"
"You've been causing a
disturbance," remarked the other man with a snarl as he tightened his grip
on my arm.
"You're hurting me," I
exclaimed. But that only prompted the man to
push my arm closer to my neck. Felix grabbed my other arm.
"Don't make this more
difficult," explained Felix in his customary monotone. "We can't have you here. You've
unsettling us."
I ordered them to let me go; but instead
they proceeded to drag me to the stairwell and up the stairs in a most shameful
fashion.
"We're only doing our job,"
explained the other man. "Don't make things more complicated than they
have to be," he added with another tug on my arm.
They hoisted me up into the main foyer
where I attempted to hold myself in as seemly a manner as possible, given that
two men were practically dragging me by my arms.
"I want a refund," I insisted.
One of the men gave my arm another sharp tug. "Don't make this difficult
for us," explained the slender man.
I was pulled towards the exit and
unceremoniously thrown onto the sidewalk. Needless to say, I was infuriated and
crimson red with embarrassment. But
there was nothing I could do. I merely stepped away from the doors, and threw
myself into the flow of pedestrian traffic, eyes downcast, trying to pretend
that nothing was amiss. I took a $50 taxi home and spent a sleepless night
racking my brains for an explanation to these events. I came up empty.
Would it surprise you if I were to tell
you that I returned to Union Station the following morning to find that it was
business as usual: the trains in their prearranged places, coming and going at
their prearranged times? Of course, I no longer had a NAT schedule to confirm
this; but there could be no doubt that all was once again well with the
world. I was fortunate enough to spend
a most uneventful day at work; but it was with some trepidation that I entered
the station the following evening. But I had no reason to be alarmed. I caught
the Middlebury train at the customary place at the customary hour and I arrived
in Middlebury at the customary time.
I located my pass in the lost and found;
but no one knew who'd returned it. I asked about Felix Talbot; but I was
informed that there was no such employee registered with NAT. I remembered the
girl at the information booth, but I never saw her again. In fact, I would
never again set eyes upon any of the NAT employees I met that evening. But I
had too much work to do to give much thought to the events I've chose to
memorialize for your benefit. I'd
pondered the possibility of a lapse of logic; but it simply doesn't seem
possible. After all, why was I the only one concerned about this? One would
think my mental faculties had short-circuited; but there could have been
nothing wrong with my perceptions. I find it best, therefore, not to think on
it, for if it doesn't fit, throw it out.
I must add that I've informed Mr. X that
he had better employ another accountant because I was ill-fit to deal with his
affairs. I concocted an excuse about conflict of interest (and I had worked for
an employee of a competing business, so it wasn't a total fabrication), and so
I managed to eliminate his ill-managed affairs from my workday. As an
accountant, I suppose that ill-managed affairs are my bread and butter. But I
could not in good conscience work for a man who gave little thought to
restoring some discipline to his life. Mr. X was beyond help; and I had a
business to run.
I'm pleased to say that business is
booming; and I might even permit Molly to work for me on a full-time basis. I
suppose I could afford to take on an associate as well, yet I'm not averse to
working an extra hour each day.
Besides, there's always the risk that
an associate won't take as much care with the work as I do. And I'd just
as soon not open my doors to an unpredictable element. I will never again leave
things to chance.