Fifty-nine hours. That’s how long it will take Edward to get to Saskatoon. A short ride
into Toronto, then a transfer at Union Station for the long trans-continental
haul. On Monday morning he dresses in his best suit and walks to the train
station. He smiles at the strangers he passes, trying to take his mind off
Annie, but her presence is with him wherever he goes.
Before
Annie passed away in February, she made him promise he’d go to Saskatoon for
his cousin John’s seventy-fifth birthday on October fifteenth. Immediately
after her diagnosis, Annie began worrying about Edward being on his own. He’d
wanted to have children, but Annie never did, so it was always just the two of
them.
“Promise
me you’ll go and surprise John for his birthday. You can join him for whatever
he has planned,” she said.
“But I
haven’t seen him since we went to Saskatchewan for the family reunion. That was
over ten years ago,” he replied.
“Edward,
you and John were inseparable when you were young. You know he and Angela will
be happy to see you. Besides, it’ll be good for you.”
Annie
convinced him it was the right thing to do, the way she convinced him of so
many things over the years. That’s why he’s about to get on the train for more
than two days, and arrive unannounced back home in Saskatchewan.
The clock
above the tracks shows it’s time to board. Once in his seat, he makes himself
as comfortable as possible. He briefly thinks he should’ve booked a sleeper car
but knows Annie wouldn’t have approved.
He can
almost hear her saying, “Edward, you can sleep perfectly well in your seat. Don’t
be silly by wasting money on a sleeper car when you don’t need one.”
It’s the
familiarity of Annie’s company he misses most. The way they used to read the
paper together every morning, passing each other a section once they’d
finished. The lengthy discussions that followed, about what Trudeau was up to
or Trump’s never-ending antics. The days are quiet now without Annie’s voice
filling the home they shared for forty-seven years.
Nights
aren’t any better. Most of the time he doesn’t sleep more than three or four
hours. Making the bed each morning is an easy job now, given one side’s always
still made.
After the
first few hours of the train ride, he longs to take his shoes off. He can feel
his feet swelling and beginning to ache, but again he hears Annie’s voice. This
time she’s telling him a gentleman doesn’t remove his shoes in public, so he
restrains himself, much like he’s done so many times over the years.
He and
Annie went to Mexico every winter, even though he longed to visit Vancouver in
the fall. They watched Dancing with
the Stars, not CSI. He ate the Hungarian salami she chose at the
deli, instead of the Genoa salami he prefers. They stayed in Ottawa where Annie
was from, rather than moving to the prairies to care for his ailing parents,
all those years ago. It was his own parents who’d taught him that’s what
marriage is about. Making sacrifices for the other.
The train
pulls into Saskatoon just before four on Wednesday afternoon and Edward takes a
taxi to a nearby hotel. Once in the privacy of his room, he’s eases off his
shoes. His feet are so sore that walking to the washroom to take a bath is an
effort. He never should’ve left his shoes on for more than two days, regardless
of what Annie would’ve said.
After his
bath, he locates the phone book and begins looking for his surname. There are
two listings, one of whom is his cousin John. The other is a woman named
Celeste. Not wanting to ruin the surprise by letting John and Angela know he’s
in town, he dials Celeste’s number, thinking she might be their granddaughter.
She answers on the third ring.
“Hello.
My name is Edward Lanigan. I believe we may be related. Are you John and Angela
Lanigan’s granddaughter?”
“Yes, I
am,” she replies.
“Wonderful!
I’m John’s cousin. I’ve come to surprise him for his birthday.”
“Oh!” she
says. Then after a pause: “I’m sorry to tell you, but he and Grandma are out of
town right now. They flew to Toronto last week to visit family.”
“Ah.”
Edward feels as if he’s falling, with nothing to hold on to. He reaches for a
jocular tone. “So no party then?”
“We
had a party for Grandpa last summer. Really small, “she adds. “Look, I hope you
didn’t travel far to be here.”
Edward
holds his breath for a moment, realizing he’s come all this way for a party
that’s already happened. One he hadn’t been invited to. Now John and Angela have
gone to Toronto, an hour from where he lives, and they didn’t contact him to
arrange a visit.
He feels momentarily foolish for the promise he made to Annie.
What was he thinking, coming all this way without so much as a phone call? Why
did it have to be a surprise visit anyway? He never did ask Annie. He’d just
done as she asked; like always.
“No, I
didn’t travel far at all,” Edward says.
They hang
up and Edward sinks into the bed, yawning with exhaustion. He realizes he doesn’t
feel Annie’s absence quite as strongly here. There are no reminders of her
across the room or down the hall. Soon he falls into a deep sleep and dreams of
the ocean.
The next
morning, he returns to the station and buys a ticket for an earlier departure.
After finding his seat, he sets the Genoa salami sandwich he bought at the
bakery across the street, on the tray in front of him. He then bends forward and slowly
unties his shoes, placing his socked feet on the footrest. A young family is
sitting across the aisle. Edward plays a game of peekaboo with the little boy,
whose mother asks if he’s also headed to Vancouver.
“Indeed,”
Edward says. “I’ve always heard it’s lovely there this time of year.”
Michelle Eaket grew up in Saskatchewan and now lives in Toronto with
her husband and two children. This story was inspired by her distant relative's
cross-Canada train ride in the mid 90’s to surprise her grandparents on their
50th wedding anniversary. She always wondered what led him to make that trip,
so this is her imagined version of a similar journey.
See Brian
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I love this more each time I read it!
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