An old wooden crate whose paint had long faded
Sat in the musty crowded basement
Filled with miniature trains collected over a lifetime
Long untouched and neglected
But it wasn’t always so
Some of my fondest Christmas memories include those trains
I remember Dad bringing in the wooden platform that had a tree stand mounted in the middle of it
The Christmas tree would be brought in and put in the stand
Suddenly filling the house with the scent of pine
I can still see Dad sitting on the floor next to the tree
Putting together the train tracks that circled the tree
Forming a large circle around the outer edges of the wooden platform
Usually there were two tracks – an inner and an outer one
So we could run two trains at the same time
Dad would hook up the transformers
And carefully place an engine on the track
As the dial of the transformer was turned up to the first notch
I hear the low buzz of electricity surging into the tracks
Electrifying the little black engine
I can still smell the hot electrical transformer
A smell both acrid and exciting at the same time
The train would slowly come to life and begin to inch along
Then Dad would turn the transformer dial another click and the engine would start to chug around the track
I remember the thrill of the train moving those first few inches
The excitement that we had put everything together and it worked
My brothers and I would help Dad set up the village under the tree
The Plasticville houses and parks
The trees, ponds, bridges and tiny little cars and trucks
Carefully placing the firetruck in front of the fire station
And the ice skater on the little pond
There were trestles that straddled the track
It felt like a story book village that we would make come to life
And then we got to add the train cars and cabooses to form a long train
Tankers and coal cars and passenger cars
Watching the engines pulling the cars behind them
Disappearing behind the Christmas tree and emerging on the other side
My joy was complete when everything was set up and I got to be the engineer
Controlling the train going round and round the decorated Christmas tree
Eventually my brothers and I grew up and moved out
And Dad got older
For several years Dad put some of the trains up for his grandsons
Each year there were a few less train cars and a few less village houses
But eventually it got to be too much for him to do even that
There were no more trains at Christmas time
The trains were relegated to the large wooden crate in the damp basement
Some broken and some just dirty and dusty
Where they sat dormant for years
Not exactly forgotten
More like a ghost from Christmases past
A distant joyful memory flickering in the subconscious
Several months after my Dad passed away
I was wandering around a hobby shop when I came around an aisle
And came face to face with a train display
I was instantly transported back to when I was a child
Helping my Dad with his trains
I could distinctly smell the hot acrid transformer
Even though the trains in the store were asleep on the track and not powered on
My eyes filled with tears thinking about my Dad and his trains
When I got home, I immediately called my Mother and asked her if she still had his trains
She said yes and I asked if I could have them
Again the answer was yes
The trains were still resting in the old wooden crate in the basement
The box was much worse for wear and had been wet off and on over the years
I didn’t trust the bottom not to fall out with all the weight of the trains, tracks, transformers and village
I took three large gray Rubbermaid totes and filled them all
Placing the totes in a storage unit for more than a year
Last week I decided to sort through the totes
Lovingly removing the engines and transformers
Wondering what I would do with all the track that has a light coating of rust on it
I drove to Jeannette to visit the Train Shop
The little shop that has been there for fifty years
The little shop that Dad probably frequented many times
The owner carefully tested each of the engines
Feeding the little red engine power first
And I heard the amazing sound of the wheels spinning
Probably searching for their track
Two of the four engines work and one can easily be repaired
A few of the transformers work but are old and may not be safe any more
But I can buy a new one without guilt
I just hope it still smells the same as the old transformers did
One of my favorite little black engines was left for repairs
With the promise of being brought back to life in a few short weeks
As I left the Train Store and drove through Jeannette
I first passed the gray duplex where my Grandmother lived for a few years
Which always makes me a little sad because I miss her so much
Fifty years have gone by and I still feel the loss deep in my heart
A few minutes later I passed the cemetery where my Grandma and my Dad are buried
Alongside my Grandfather and Great Grandparents who died before I was born
A knot formed in my throat
And a memory came to me in that instant
Not long before my Dad passed away
I remember him telling me about the night his father died
Dad was only seventeen at the time
He told me that he had visited his Dad in the hospital
And he sat there and talked to his Dad for hours
Then Dad and his best friend Paulie drove around until it was late
Normal teenage boys cruising in their car in the 1950s
And the next morning when he woke up he found out his Dad was gone
The lump in my throat turned into tears streaming down my face
Missing my Dad and my Grandma and the rest of the family I never got to meet
My work on the trains has just begun
For me, It is a labor of love
I can’t wait to set up the trains and the village again
And watch the train engine merrily chug around the track
And when friends see them
I will proudly declare “These were my Dad’s trains”
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