The
phone wakes Ralph early Christmas morning.
The
Dispatcher tells him, "Ralph, there's a bus load of some kind of monks down
here at the station and their bus has broken down with engine troubles. You're needed here right away."
Ralph
chuckles and asks, "What happened to all the bright young mechanic kids that
the Foreman thinks so much of?"
The
Dispatcher sighs and says, "I think the guy who was assigned here for Christmas
day got a case of the intentional flu.
Look, the monks are foreigners and there's some sort of Washington guy
with then. I know that it's Christmas
day, but if you'll come in, it'll look damn good on your record."
Ralph
thinks of the continuing hints from the Foreman that he may be a bit too old
for a mechanics job. Of course, the Foreman
can't say it publicly, but he has been sniping away at Ralph for some time
now. A good response to an emergency
call will do a lot to stop the sniping.
Ralph
says, "Okay, I'll be in as soon as I can.
However, it's Christmas day and the city buses aren't running. I'll have to walk. It'll take me a while to get there."
The
dispatcher says, "Okay, at least I can tell them that you're coming in. It'll get Washington boy off my butt."
Ralph
rolls out of bed, an exercise that seems to get more difficult every
morning. He doesn't bother to
shave. He goes into the kitchen and
pours a glass of orange juice. He makes
a peanut butter sandwich, saving the sliced turkey for his Christmas supper.
Ralph
dresses and eats, wandering back and forth between the bedroom and the
kitchen. He puts on the heavy clothes
one item at a time, walking back and forth the few steps to the kitchen to eat
and to get him warmed up for the brutal walk to work in the cold outside.
Finally,
he's fully dressed and he finishes the last of the peanut butter sandwich and
washes it down with the last of the orange juice. He puts the glass and the knife in the sink
and then glances out the window.
Outside,
it looks cold, with several inches of snow on the ground, but it's not snowing
right now and he may as well get started with the walk into work.
Ralph
goes out the door and walks through a neighborhood of small houses. There are a few Christmas decorations out,
but they seem to accent the cold dreary day, rather than lend any real cheer to
the scene.
Ralph
has to first wade through the slush on the sidewalk, but he soon gets to the
main street. The awnings in front of the
businesses shelter the sidewalk and it becomes less of a struggle for Ralph to
make his way.
When
Ralph gets to the side street of the bus depot, the sidewalks are all ice, with
the splash of the buses, through the night.
Ralph carefully walks in the street, watching for traffic, instead of
risking a fall on the slippery sidewalk ice.
Ralph
walks in to the depot, through the vehicle door, and he's pleased to note that
the inside of the bus depot seems warmer than outside, because of the shelter
from the wind.
Ralph
makes his way to the Dispatcher's window.
The
Dispatcher brightens as he sees Ralph.
"Glad to see that you made it.
Washington boy has been on my butt all morning. If you can get the bus back on the road, you
gonna be a real hero."
Ralph
says, "Hero I can use right now, what with the labor market and all. Which one is the sick bus?"