Picking Up
                Grandma at the Train 
                by Bill Tope 
                
                    
                        Grandma died in
                        Chicago.  Dad had 
                        her body shipped via train back to 
                        Edwardsville, three hundred south 
                        of the City of Big Shoulders.  We 
                        waited for the coffin to arrive at the 
                        train station on Franklin Street, on 
                        the very edge of town.  Of course it 
                        was raining, which matched our 
                        collective mood completely. 
                          
                        I'm not sure what we expected to 
                        find at the depot.  The coffin--ordered 
                        over the phone by the local funeral 
                        director--was a ghastly, lurid specimen 
                        of funereal craftsmanship, a bronze 
                        monstrosity.  Mom remarked on the 
                        beauty of the death box. I blinked in 
                        disbelief but of course I said nothing. 
                          
                        A worker from the funeral home was 
                        slumped against the hearse, nonchalantly 
                        taking nips from a suspicious looking 
                        amber bottle.  Soon the door of a
                        boxcar 
                        rolled open with a heartrending 
                        screech. 
                          
                        As the casket was off-loaded by the 
                        porters and the man from the funeral 
                        home, it teetered precipitously on the 
                        lip of the train car and  then
                        suddenly 
                        disaster struck. One of the men 
                        handling the coffin said "Shit!"
                        and 
                        with a loud crash the darn casket 
                        tumbled to the ground!  I half
                        expected 
                        to see Grandma spill out onto the 
                        tracks, but it didn't happen, thank 
                        God! 
                          
                        It would have been horrific for my 
                        parents, although I, who had met the 
                        old lady only twice in my nine years of 
                        life, might have been somewhat 
                        amused.  I was perhaps a rather 
                        sadistic little boy. 
                          
                        After at last being laden with its 
                        burden, the hearse sagged wearily 
                        under the weight of Grandma and her 
                        ugly orange casket. The vehicles used 
                        back then were really glorified station 
                        wagons, similar to the ambulances in 
                        use at that time.  It was a
                        Studebaker, 
                        my Dad remarked. 
                          
                        The driver, pausing only long enough 
                        to take a swig from his bottle, made a 
                        beeline for the hearse.. On his way he 
                        tossed the empty bottle through the 
                        open door of a boxcar, where it 
                        clattered loudly. 
                          
                        Dad looked pained--this was his 
                        mother--and he thought we should 
                        commemorate the occasion in some 
                        way--say a prayer, perhaps.  As we 
                        gathered near the open door of 
                        the hearse, now loaded with 
                        Grandma, he began to pray aloud. 
                          
                        But just following "Dear Lord,"
                        the 
                        driver slammed the door on Grandma,  
                        scampered into the driver's seat and 
                        cranked the engine. At the very 
                        moment Dad reached "Amen," 
                        the hearse peeled out with a spray 
                        of gravel and with an effluvium of 
                        oily exhaust fumes. Dad, discomfitted 
                        not at all, smiled and said, "Well,
                        that 
                        wasn't so bad, was it?"  I
                        remember 
                        Mom rolled her eyes. 
                          
                        The train station is gone now; the 
                        railroad no longer stops in 
                        Edwardsville, though Amtrak, when 
                        it first began service in Illinois, did 
                        for several years.  But Grandma 
                        passed long before that, way back 
                        in the 1950s. 
                          
                        Unfortunately, that's not the end of 
                        the story.  The hearse driver, by
                        this 
                        time, was fully in his cups.  On the 
                        way to the funeral home he ignored 
                        a light and gate posted at another 
                        railroad crossing. 
                          
                        Thinking--mistakenly--that he could 
                        beat the train, he drove the hearse 
                        past the signal, around the lowered 
                        gate, and over the tracks, where he 
                        was struck by the speeding 
                        locomotive. 
                          
                        The only good that ever came of this 
                        episode is that the railroad company, 
                        in order to avoid bad publicity or a law 
                        suit, was on the hook for the funeral 
                        expenses--though, unfortunately, the 
                        service was conducted with a new 
                        but now empty casket. 
                         
                         
                        originally
                        published in Little Old Lady Comedy site | 
                     
                 
                 
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