The Lightning Keeper

The Lightning Keeper Read Free

Book: The Lightning Keeper Read Free
Author: Starling Lawrence
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experienced a puncture of the rear left tire, the one directly under the iron wheel, or piece of a wheel, that had been loaded into the car just before they left the Bigelow works.
    Looking at the light now, and allowing for the snow, which made the day both darker and brighter, she guessed that it was sometime after four o’clock, an hour etched in her mind by virtue of the whistle blast marking the end of the shift in the furnace and forge. The eye knew that hour in all seasons, and the stomach too. What would she not give now for a cup of tea? She had not eaten since breakfast, and so it was not just the bracing warmth that she imagined but the odor and texture of iced seed cake, a fat slice of it, or a sandwich of any description, even a crust of unbuttered bread. Father had promised her a fine dinner at Delmonico’s as soon as he had finished, had talked Stephenson around to his proposal, and he didn’t imagine that would take very long at all. So if you’ll just sit here like a good girl?
    She had felt a burning in her cheeks when he said that, and had almost made an answer. At any rate she had turned sharply in the direction of this remark and found herself staring into the face of the fellow trying to shift the iron wheel off the seat and out of the car, a well-fleshed, confident, and not unattractive face, which, by dint of exertion against such a weight, matched or exceeded the rising color of her own. There were two of them struggling with the wheel in that awkward space, joking under their breath about how the old fellow could only make half a wheel at a time, and when the man caught her misdirected glance he grinned and even—was she imagining this impertinence?—winked at her before taking the entire burden of the iron onto his flexed knees, turning, and heaving it clear of the car with an explosive grunt.
    Like a good girl…she could make herself blush simply by repeating the words. Her father often spoke to her thus, out of distracted affection, and she did not mind it. There’s a good girl, he would say, perhaps in acknowledgement of a piece of toast. But today she minded very much indeed, particularly as the automobile trip from Beecher’s Bridge to New York City, with the urgency of time and the anxious interruptions of the blown tire, was hardly an opportunity to discuss what would be said, what must be said, to Mr. Stephenson. She had hoped her father would remember that she wanted, and out of no mere vanity, to be included in this discussion on which the fate of the Bigelow works very likely hung. Perhaps she had not spoken loud enough, or been sufficiently assertive? Or perhaps her father simply had not wished to hear.
    It was Harriet who had brought to her father’s attention the item in a trade journal— Iron and Steel News —about the John Stephenson Company’s contract to supply two hundred and eighty-five new subway cars to the IRT.
    â€œIsn’t that the same Mr. Stephenson who once took us to the baseball game?” she asked, putting the magazine by his plate. Yes, he thought that very likely, and a few solemn forkfuls later he wondered how old Stephenson might be getting on.
    â€œGetting on very well indeed, by the sound of it,” Harriet replied, wondering how many wheels each of those many new cars was to have. “You don’t suppose…”
    â€œSuppose what, my dear?” Amos Bigelow was very little inclined toward supposition or abstraction of any kind.
    â€œI was wondering where Mr. Stephenson would get all the wheels he will require. Have you not done business with him before? Was that not why we went to see the baseball?” Of the game she remembered nothing but the fierce roar of the crowd, the pitchers of beer consumed by her father and the jovial Stephenson, and an enormous concoction of spun sugar that had later made her ill. The next day her hands were swollen from clapping so hard and so long in her

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