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浪漫路曲曲折折
Detour to Romance
Located in the checkroom2 in Union Station as I am, I see everybody that
comes up the stairs.
Harry came in a little over three years ago and waited at the head of the
stairs for the passengers from the 9∶05 train.
I remember seeing Harry that first evening. He wasn’t much more than a
thin, anxious kid then. He was all dressed up3 and I knew he was meeting his
girl and that they would be married twenty minutes after she arrived.
Well, the passengers came up and I had to get busy. I didn’t look toward
the stairs again until nearly time for the 9∶18 and I was very surprised to see
that the young fellow was still there.
She didn’t come on the 9∶18 either, nor on the 9∶40, and when the
passengers from the 10∶02 had all arrived and left, Harry was looking pretty
desperate. Pretty soon he came close to my window so I called out and asked him
what she looked like.
“She’s small and dark,” he said, “and nineteen years old and very neat1 in
the way she walks. She has a face,” he said, thinking a minute, “that has lots
of spirit. I mean she can get mad but she never stays mad for long, and her
eyebrows come to a little point in the middle. She’s got a brown fur, but maybe
she isn’t wearing it.”
I couldn’t remember seeing anybody like that.
He showed me the telegram he’d received: ARRIVE THURSDAY. MEET ME STATION.
LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE. MAY. It was from Omaha, Nebraska.
“Well,” I finally said, “why don’t you phone to your home? She’s probably
called there if she got in ahead of you.”
He gave me a sick look. “I’ve only been in town two days. We were going to
meet and then drive down South where I’ve got a job. She hasn’t any address for
me.” He touched the telegram.
When I came on duty the next day he was still there and came over as soon
as he saw me.
“Did she work anywhere?” I asked.
He nodded. “She was a typist. I telegraphed her former boss. All they know
is that she left her job to get married.”
Harry met every train for the next three or four days. Of course, the
railroad lines made a routine checkup and the police looked into the case. But
nobody was any real help. I could see that they all figured that May had simply
played a trick on2 him. But I never believed that, somehow.
One day, after about two weeks, Harry and I were talking and I told him
about my theory. “If you’ll just wait long enough,” I said, “you’ll see her
coming up those stairs some day.” He turned and looked at the stairs as though
he had never seen them before.
The next day when I came to work Harry was behind the counter of Tony’s
magazine stand. He looked at me rather sheepishly3 and said, “Well, I had to get
a job somewhere, didn’t I?”
So he began to work as a clerk for Tony. We never spoke of May anymore and
neither of us ever mentioned my theory. But I noticed that Harry always saw
every person who came up the stairs.
Toward the end of the year Tony was killed in some argument over gambling,
and Tony’s widow left Harry in complete charge of the magazine stand. And when
she got married again some time later, Harry bought the stand from her. He
borrowed money and installed a soda fountain and pretty soon he had a very nice
little business.
Then came yesterday. I heard a cry and a lot of things falling. The cry was
from Harry and the things falling were a lot of dolls and other things which he
had upset while he was jumping over the counter. He ran across and grabbed a
girl not ten feet from my window. She was small and dark and her eyebrows came
to a little point in the middle.
For a while they just hung there to each other laughing and crying and
saying things without meaning. She’d say a few words like, “It was the bus
station I meant ” and he’d kiss her speechless and tell her the many things he
had done to find her. What apparently had happeded three years before was that
May had come by bus, not by train, and in her telegram she meant “bus station,”
not “railroad station.” She had waited at the bus station for days and had spent
all her money trying to find Harry. Finally she got a job typing.
“What?” said Harry. “Have you been working in town? All the time?”
She nodded.
“Well, Heavens. Didn’t you ever come down here to the station?” He pointed
across to his magazine stand. “I’ve been there all the time. I own it. I’ve
watched everybody that came up the stairs.”
She began to look a little pale. Pretty soon she looked over at the stairs
and said in a weak voice, “I never came up the stairs before. You see, I went
out of town yesterday on a short business trip. Oh, Harry!” Then she threw her
arms around his neck and really began to cry.
After a minute she backed away and pointed very stiffly toward the north
end of the station. “Harry, for three years, for three solid years, I’ve been
right over there working right in this very station, typing, in the office of
the stationmaster.”
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