Nurse the Hate: The Railroad Trestle
There was a railroad trestle that ran over the stream. It had been built during the FDR Public
Works Program era in the early 1930s and harkened back to that time when things
were built to last. Thick beige
stonework provided sturdy support for the train tracks that ran above it. The structure was two large stone
tunnels, large enough for five men to walk down it shoulder to shoulder. Even in the heaviest rains the creek
would never fill the tunnels completely, but in the Spring it would produce a
lively current. A perky waterfall
was created by the flow of the creek through the trestle. Small colorful trout would feed under
the falls, gliding gracefully in the deep pool.
This was a known fishing spot. When trout season began, grizzled men would shake off the
winter and line up shoulder to shoulder to allow the trout to ignore their
baits. No one expected to catch
anything, but everyone felt good to be out of the house after the long bleak
winter. Occasionally heated
arguments would break out when lines tangled, but the men rarely came to
blows. After a few weeks, the men
would launch their boats into Lake Erie and forget about the little trout
spot. This left it to the teenage
boys with too much time on their hands.
There were two ways to get to the trestle. One was a twisting path through often
muddy trails in thick woods on a gradual descend to the creek bed. The other was a straight shot, right down the steep embankment
of the train tracks with the coal soot and rocks from the track bed. It was impossible to go that route
without becoming filthy, and there existed the possibility that by descending
that way, too much momentum would be created and you could fall from the top of
the trestle into the creek. This was
a fall of about 25 feet into a small deep pool of water. Ledges of shale jutted out from the shoreline
rocks, so a small miscalculation would be a major injury or possibly
death. This was part of the allure
of the trestle.
As a young teenage boy, it was important to keep your head
on a swivel while in the area of the trestle. This was a known gathering place for some of the roughest
kids in school, boys old enough to drive and smoke cigarettes. Andy and two twin brothers from near my
house would often perform spectacular leaps off the ledge into the water
below. It could not have been any
deeper than eight feet and likely about 15 feet across. There was little margin for error. The boys were aware of their audience
and would make flips as they fell into the pool. None of us would dare speak to those older boys much less
try that jump ourselves. We had
not yet earned the right to even attempt it in the presence of those boys. This was their turf. We would have to wait.
We usually hung out in the creek area below on the large rocks surrounding the creek. If we would hear the tough older kids
coming down the hill, we would hide in the woods until we could assess the
situation. If they were in a good
mood, they would sun themselves on the rock and smoke cigarettes and let us
goof around nearby. If they didn’t
appear in a good mood, we’d disappear into the woods like the Viet Cong.
One time a boy named Scott dared to step over what ever the
understood behavioral line was with these boys. This incensed the two twin brothers that insisted Scott prove he
“wasn’t a pussy” and jump off the trestle. Scott, a well-known pussy, was not in favor of the idea and
tried to come up with any possible excuse to avoid it. The bad news for Scott was that the
brothers were not going to accept “My Mom doesn’t want me to get wet” or “I
just don’t feel like it today”.
They grabbed him and dragged him up the small hill. Scott struggled as they shoved him to the edge above the creek pool. Scott
pleaded with them to let him go.
We all stood below the ledge looking up, afraid to even breathe. Scott started to cry. Andy said, “For Christ’s sake. Let’s let him go.” Scott began to sniffle but relax. He thought he was off the hook. However, Andy had just done this to
make Scott drop his guard. With a lunge he
shoved Scott off the ledge into the water.
Scott never made a sound as he fell off. He must have been as surprised as we
all were. It was obvious though
that he was falling at the wrong angle.
He was going in feet first, but at a slanted jack knife angle. He was too far right. My heart leaped up into my throat. Scott hit the water, and at first it looked like
it might be OK. Scott went
under and then resurfaced. He
looked wrong though. He was pale
and gasping. That’s when I saw his
lower leg twisted at an unnatural angle.
Blood began to fill the creek.
His leg was broken. He
began to scream out in pain. There
was a general panic from all the boys surrounding the creek.
The older boys reverted back to the children they really
were and ran off, abandoning Scott.
Scott’s brother and one of my friends were the fastest runners. They sprinted down the path in the woods to get
help. It was a long way though. Scott floated in the water
and grabbed onto a rock to avoid having to swim. Myself and another boy talked to Scott, trying to tell him
he was going to be OK, though we were just reciting back things we had heard on
TV. Scott was probably going into shock. After a long while, two fishermen
came down the path and pulled him out. Scott was laid out on the rock as they men swore and tried to stabilize the situation. A siren sounded far off. Dust started to appear at the top of the trestle as a paramedic van bounced down the railroad tracks. The paramedics brought a stretcher down and hauled Scott up the filthy hill with a rope. Being boys that
knew someone was going to get blamed for this as soon as the crisis dimmed, and most likely whoever was
standing there, we drifted back into the woods to disappear as they loaded Scott into the van. The lights flickered in the dust and the fading sun of dusk. We walked home assessing our grim chances of avoiding punishment.
My friends and I skated through with little more than angry questions about why we were there. The older boys got in trouble. They then blamed Scott for getting them in trouble, which was
generally agreed upon in the schoolyard.
In retrospect, I think Scott was within his rights to tell the
paramedics and cops who had to haul him out of a creek with a compound fracture
who the person(s) were that had shoved him off a 25 foot fall into sharp
rocks. Yet, at that time, it was
more of a gray area open to great debate. The excitement faded as it always does.
We went back to the trestle after the heat cooled off. Scott was in a cast and it became old
news. The cops had chased off the
older boys. It had become our
place now. We would stand at the
top of the trestle looking down at the creek, replaying again and again what
had happened to Scott. The dare to
jump off into the water became very real once again. I never did it.
If I ever get the chance, I am going to walk that path to that creek side
and take a look at that jump.
Sometimes things aren’t as big as you remember them. I bet this is one of them.
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