I
saw a train wreck.
It
was everything I thought it would be. The blowing of horns,
the screeching of breaks, the twisting of steel, the breaking
of glass, the quiet aftermath, all textbook.
A tractor-trailer hauling roof shingles had stalled on the
crossing. I saw the train and I saw the truck. I looked at
the train again and I looked at the truck. My head kept bouncing
back and forth between the two until I stared straight ahead
at a train wreck. I couldn't miss it.
I had driven up to Northern Virginia on the sly. One bad turn
deserved another in my relationship account book and I took
off after work, met my rainy day girl and was driving the
2 hours (or three full listens to Tom Petty's "Full Moon
Fever") to make it just in time to punch the clock. I
was sleep deprived and jacked up on Jolt cola and Mountain
Dew. I jumped out of my skin due to the overload of caffeine
and floated above. I was staring at the top of my head as
well as hers now and I saw it all. I saw her and I saw me.
I looked at me again and I looked at her and my head kept
bouncing back and forth between the two until I stared straight
ahead at a train wreck. The calling of names, the screeching
of tears, the twisting of words, the breaking of promises,
the quiet aftermath, all textbook.
I turned to the trucker standing beside me and asked tersely,"How
do I get around this?" He told me. It was a lot of back
tracking and back roads. I thought I would never get back
to where I shouldn't have left in the first place. And when
I did get there it wasn't the same. I saw a train wreck.