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The Rural Voice, 1978-06, Page 29Coming home, discovering A short story by Ronald Kirby The trees flashed by as 1 looked out of the car window. The train was gathering speed now and with every telegraph pole that disappeared behind me. my spirit floated higher. The lushness of the countryside soothed a craving inside of nie. yet made it even more sharp. Such a contrast. I thought. to the barren filthy junk yards and coal yards we'd gone through only minutes ago. That half hour between leaving Union Station and finally clearing the last of the sooty railyards, had been an agonizing eternity. The depression of it all threatened to overwhelm the joy that we were escaping. 1 hated that city, God. how 1'd hated it. For the five years I'd lived there had become one long, tortuous nightmare. It wasn't so bad the first while. There was an air of excitement to the city that was refreshing to a smalltown boy. There was an exhilarating feeling looking at the huge skyscrapers and realizing they had been built by common men; a feeling of awe that two million individuals were gathered together in one place. I enjoyed the nightlife there. The theatre engrossed me and the museums and art galleries provided the kind of sites I'd always wanted. But after a week I began to wander off the main streets, discovering the poverty of the backstreets. Then I saw through the glitter of the tinsel of the nightlife to lonely people among the crowd and the strangers who took over the streets after the "in crowd" disappeared back to the suburbs, to the hookers and drunks. 1 watched the walls of the skyscrapers blacken with soot and wondered if anything would ever be clean again. 1 choked in the heavy, carbon -monoxide of the rush-hour. I walked the concrete and tar until I craved one blade of grass. one tree growing straight and tall that wasn't in a planter box. So the days grew to be like one long toothache, dreading going to sleep at night because it meant getting up in the morning and joining the swarm of ants scurrying along the concrete and into their fifty -storey anthills. Trapped inside, without even so much as a window, 1 lived for the noon hour when I could escape even though momentarily and then for five o'clock when I could join the ants again rushing home. I don't know why I was in such a hurry. 1 didn't enjoy life anyway when I came home to my twenty -storey -anthill, to the little cell of my own with its concrete slab balcony overhanging the city. But finally this morning it got to me. 1 quit the job and sublet the apartment to some friends I knew who needed one. Then I packed two suitcases and headed for the station. In one swift gesture I had severed all ties. The relief was the most powerful feeling.I had ever known, like waking up in one of those dreams where you're falling, falling and just about to hit the ground. The train took so long getting out of the city it prolonged the pain but now I was free. Two more hours and I'd be home in Benedict. The thought did my heart good. Back to the green fields, the tall trees and clear cool streams. Back where poverty meant having a car that was more than three years old and hunger meant not having the money for a hamburger after the movie. It was dark by the time the train pulled into the station. I turned down the offer of a lift downtown so I could walk in the fresh air. My parents had moved out of town recently so I'd have to stay the night at the hotel. That night. clerk Tom Monahan, at the hotel, registered me without recognition. Once I thought I saw him looking at me as if trying to place where he had seen me before but couldn't put his finger on it. It didn't bother me since I had only barely known of him as a child. The room was drab and chilly. What a first view of the town a visitor received I thought. I wasn't tired enough to go to sleep and couldn't stand the dull environment so went downstairs again. 1 wandered into the bar, although I wasn't really looking for a drink. I bought a beer and sat at a little table back in one darkened corner. The bartender was a stranger to me, probably new to the town 1 thought. But the man he was presently talking to wasn't. Jack Mortimer had become a fixture in the town's bar -rooms even before 1 left for the city. Only 29 years old, he had five children at home or had when I knew him before. Jack had a fine mind and back in high school had been considered one of the most clever young men to enroll. But he fell for a girl named Marion when he was in grade eleven and the first thing you knew they had quit school and married and their first child was on its way. His father was happy enough to take Jack into his clothing business. although he had always ennunciated the value of higher education, he wanted his son in the business and was afraid education would give him bigger ideas. The. Mortimer family grew quickly as a girl followed the first boy by less than a year. After the ".qrd came along Jack came to THE RURAL VOICE/JUNE 1978. PG. 29.