The high-speed rail flew past the place I called home many years ago. It was called the Beeliner back then, a passenger train with different class seating. The nicest was at the back of the train, where the sound of the massive engine wasn't so loud. Then, The dining car was followed by everyday seating and the noise.
I used to stand across the street and wave to the engineer as the mighty Beliner sped past on its way to Niagara Falls, wishing for the day I could be inside looking out. That day finally came when my Grandmother surprised me on my twelfth birthday with round-trip tickets for her and me on the train leaving from the city station and ending up in Niagara Falls.
Climbing aboard, I felt an excitement like never before as the conductor punched our tickets and directed us to take a seat anywhere we liked in the first car, known as the common folks car. The sound of the idling engine was hardly deafening, but Grandma told me it would be much louder once we were underway.
I had a window seat and watched as people said their goodbyes. I noticed some men in uniforms, and I wondered if they were going to war or perhaps coming home. Then the whistle blew a mighty blast that startled both my Grandma and me as our journey was about to begin. With the rhythm of the steel wheels keeping time, the mighty engine slowly gained speed as my world outside the window sped past like a moving picture show.
Granma offered me a sandwich, but I couldn't eat it with my heart beating so fast, so she smiled and said to save it for later. Just minutes had gone by since we left the station, and the whistle blew, sounding our arrival in ten minutes. Keep looking out the window, "she told me." I have a surprise for you. I couldn't imagine any surprise greater than the train ride, but then, as I looked out, I saw my whole family standing there, where I always stood, waiting for the Beeliner to speed past. They were holding a sign they made that read HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MIKE. I pressed my face to the glass, watching until they were out of sight.
We had a forty-five-minute wait until our return trip home, so we visited the mighty Niagara Falls and a sweets shop, where Grandma bought three large candy suckers to give to my sisters and one for me. We heard the whistle blow, so we went back to the train, where the same conductor asked for our tickets, smiling at us as he asked if we'd like to ride in the luxury car. Only a handful of people were going back, as their journeys were taking them to various destinations, leaving several seats open.
As we found two seats, all Grandma could keep saying was, 'Oh my, oh my.'With overstuffed seats and space enough between us to stretch our legs, it was all we could do to speak softly and thank our lucky stars.
My train ride that day has stayed with me all these years. Not long ago, the old train was taken out of service and replaced with a high-speed rail system that traveled at speeds up to one hundred miles per hour. What was once a one-hour ride to the Falls took the blink of an eye to arrive.
I take this train five times a week, and each time at a particular place, I still press my face on the glass, hoping to see my family waving at me as we sped past. And sometimes I picture Grandma and the good times we shared riding the rails together. Come to think of it, one of her sandwiches would taste good right about now.
Mike 2025