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By
Crystal Arbogast
----- The moonlight embraces the world on
this chilly, autumn night. An automobile winds around the curve of a mountain,
its driver oblivious to the dirt road that descends off the side, and
into a valley below. If the driver had followed the road after clearing
the trees, he would have seen the glow of the burner below; the center
of a sawmill.
----- The chain of the chipper is silent.
A few feet outside of the burner, the night watchman sits by a fire, accompanied
by two dogs. An old tomcat sits apart from them, keeping a wary eye.
----- The watchman smiles at him. He and
the old cat have a lot in common. Both had seen better days. Now, they
kept company and a peaceful vigil over the mill.
----- In the distance, a train whistle can
be heard. Miles away, its voice is a haunting wail until it winds around
the last mountain, into the valley and past. The voice changes then, into
a thundering sound that shakes and rattles the very soul. The earth trembles
as the train rolls by and goes silent in the distance.
----- Light bulbs twinkle on the upper levels
of a building, and the night wind rustles past the vacant floors and out
between the tall stacks of lumber that go on for a quarter of a mile or
so. Along these same wooden hills, the old man moves on, punching time
clocks along the way.
----- He had spent the better part of his
life at the mill; seven nights a week, including holidays. A few stray
dogs had found their way to his campfire through the years. Some had stayed
with him while others had wandered off after a temporary rest. He wondered
how their journeys had ended and hoped they had found what they were searching
for. Old Brownie was one who had decided to stay. Although a reddish colored
retriever, the name seemed to suit him and he became accustomed to it.
The dog had bonded with him and soon began to follow him home, down the
railroad track and returning with him at night.
----- As he passes the last time clock, he
turns to look at the trucks parked in a row just below. A pair of headlights
flicker on and off. The old man smiles in acknowledgement and whistles
for the dogs who have wandered too far. The smaller dog returns to him
and he pats him gently while waiting for his old friend to catch up with
them.
----- By another fire, a young man poured
himself a cup of coffee. As the steam rose and disappeared in the air,
he pulled his coat tightly around his body. He had finished hauling the
hot ash from the burner. The wheelbarrow lay propped against its side.
It wasn't the hard work he minded, although it did take most of the night
in between making his rounds. It was the silence as well as the sounds
that came out of the night that made him uneasy. He definitely had to
get himself a dog. He heard that the watchman before him had a couple
of furry friends. Sometimes, he could imagine that he heard dogs out in
the woods. Wild, perhaps. He also got the feeling that he wasn't alone
when he made his rounds. When he saw or thought he saw the headlights
go on and off in one of the lumber trucks, he remembered the story of
a man who had died working for the mill a year before. The ghost of young
Jim Kennedy was said to haunt the truck he had driven. A bad accident
had taken his life on an icy December evening. The truck looked none the
worse for wear, but its driver had been crushed when he lost control and
slid over a steep embankment.
----- The young watchman was startled by
a nudging from behind. He turned to see the source. He had not seen this
dog before. He seemed friendly enough and looked to be a pure breed.
----- "Hey boy, where'd you come from?"
----- The dog eyed him patiently with his
tail wagging.
----- "What's your name? You hungry?
Wait right there. I think I have part of a bologna sandwich left that
you can have."
----- Excited at the prospect of making a
friend and companion, the young man back stepped toward his lunch pail
while holding his hand up in the air. "Stay right there boy, just
stay there. You'll like this. I promise." He rummaged through the
remains of his lunch and grabbed the piece of wax paper that held his
sandwich. He opened the matted layers and pulled out the bread which had
been squished down into the layer of meat in between. He turned around
with a smile on his face only to see that the dog was no longer there.
The fire flickered into the air and he strained to see out into the darkness
and then turned to the building behind him. He whistled for the dog and
called out to him. "Here boy! Hey! Where'd you go? I've got something
good for you! Be that way, then! This is your last chance!"
----- Sighing heavily, he threw the food
on the ground. If the dog did come back, maybe he would make use of the
stuff and decide to stick around next time.
----- He thought about the old man who held
the job before he came. He was told the man grew old working the job.
His wife had died young, leaving them childless, and he had spent his
lifetime of nights working at the mill. His only companions had been the
stray dogs that wandered in and stayed with him. And, wasn't there a cat?
An old tomcat had supposedly been here for years and disappeared right
after the old man had died. The dogs had wandered off, probably feeling
lost with their companion gone. Poor old animals, he thought. He could
sure use their company on these long, lonely nights. Not that he was going
to stay. He had his eye on a couple of day jobs, as soon as they opened
up. He would bide his time. Breaking his back hauling ash and spending
nights here wasn't the way he wanted to grow old.
----- He looked at his watch and realized
that he needed to make his last rounds. Looking up, he decided that the
stars seemed to shine the brightest right before dawn.
----- The stacks of lumber rose up like huge
beings that seemed to huddle together for comfort in the darkness. The
only sound he could hear was the plodding of his own footsteps as he walked
the distance, punching the clocks along the way. He had to admit that
he felt uneasy walking along the lumber stacks. His eyes would play tricks,
seeing shadows flitting around the corners.
----- The howling of dogs rose out of the
silence. Damn them! Why did they have to do that right now?
----- "Get a hold of yourself, man!
You're not a kid anymore."
----- It made him feel better talking out
loud to himself. The wind struck sharply at his face as he turned the
last corner. He sighed and pulled his jacket tightly against him and turned
back into the direction of the fire. Its glow gave him comfort as his
stride picked up. He wished the dog would come back. Maybe tomorrow night.
----- The early light of morning could be
detected along the rim of the mountains and the young night watchman doused
the fire with the remainder of his coffee. As he stretched tired arms,
a shadowy figure made its way between the stacks of lumber and into the
distance beyond. A faint whistle followed by yelps drew his attention
and he squinted his eyes to see better. The morning mist shrouded everything
and a chill crept up his spine. The figures melted into the morning light.
----- As the first rays of dawn covered the
valley, the atmosphere of the mill changed. In a few hours, the place
would be alive with men. The saws would run and the chipper would carry
the shavings to the giant burner. The ash would build and wait for him
to clear it away the next night. The headlights on the lumber truck blinked
on and off. The night watchman shivered slightly and headed for his car.
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