Slack Action
Slack Action Jeffery Donaldson It goes through my mind like a train at night, the train my father rode in the night, his mind a train of thought far from where he rode. When I pull into the seniors' home I like to feel the car drift in abeyance(悬而未决) round the last corner, another touch to come nearer, the braking slide into parking easements and an end. Forty-two years he leapt among the tracks, nights, to cobble(修) things together, shuffling boxcars and flat cars, dealing their lengths part way into sidings -- join and hinge(铰链,枢纽), muster and release -- climbing the ladders free of his uncouplings. It took some sorting out. He listened hard for the word come down from the Dispatcher. Too heavy now for the staff, he has to wait for the machine that will hoist him, strapped, over to his chair or back to bed again. A sandbag, his sullen mass slumps into the lift and rises sloppy and unresisting. He goes with it staring in disbelief. I am borne here. For us, mother and wife are let go, the love-ties grappled loose in unbroken entanglements, our new solitudes gathering and fanning out. When the sliding door whispers open for me -- in hand his double-double and an apple fritter, unlooked-forward-to, like a pill that you take -- I enter with purpose but am halfway off again. Our family is convergence and divergence(收敛与发散) both. I have a photograph of him in mind, a man in his prime leaning out from the boxcar's ladder, signalling ahead the slow recessions, the gaps and clearances, the thrown switches and coupler knuckles ... ten feet and closing, five feet, good. His grief looks poor on him. Plan was he'd be the first to go -- with drinks and smokes, half by his own wishing -- and Mum's years would ease ahead of him by whole decades. But after Alzheimer's and a kidney ache, her body still shining with something fifty about it went off and left him cajoling his clogged arteries past eighty and beyond. We never spoke of this, but I always imagined those seemingly endless trains he assembled in the night, a hundred cars and counting, how, when the engine pulls up a little and the cars buckle forward in succession but have not yet stopped before the hogger guns it, it must be that all the fastenings along let up in turn and spread fresh gaps throughout. Cars and clusters of cars at once go clutching and unclutching down their length. And I try to picture how, the jolting instress unravelling, their reciprocal momentums would meet and intermingle, the forward push backing into slows, and the slows pulling off pulling forward ahead of their kickbacks and jostles, and you would hear the whole thing down the line at once parting and gathering, the entire train getting on, undecided. But how too, if you really listened for it, there would be single cars hidden in the midst, scudding alone, neither pushed nor pulled, left gentled into hiatus(裂缝), coasting free an instant in the long line's accordion folds' uneasy breathing. A hovering out of waiting, the glide getting on in the inertia(惯性,惰性), itself still moving. He comes to with a jolt. I take in my stride his pantomimed 'Look who it is!' and we embrace, our private journeys sallying up behind us in opposite directions, gently coupling. Not a greeting or farewell, but a staying that is neither between us. He keeps me close, and not to come undone, I tell him what I've been thinking about the train. 'Slack action, it's called,' he says, and lets his arms fall open around me. |