Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) š

- Author: George Schultz
Book online Ā«Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) šĀ». Author George Schultz
Oh yeah? At a little after three oāclock, in the morningāon his very first night, seemingly secure, in the home of Eric and Susan Atkinsonāheād sat bolt-upright in bed! Frightened! Terribly frightened! Absolutely panicked! Plucked right outāof a rather placid dream! Shocked, he was! To the bone!
Something had painfully intruded a mind-bogglingātotally horribleāthought, into the otherwise-peaceful, nocturnal, mode! The newāthe startling, the chilling, the bone-rattlingāimage had, flagrantly, inserted itself! Maybe he would be subjectedāto the exact same fate, as Reeveās character! Dear Lordāno! Pleaseāno!
Heād set aboutāimmediatelyātrying, mightily, to dispel the horrible āDiscovery of The Coinā scenario! Initially, without much success!
What had he doneāwell, almost doneāearlier, that very afternoon? Had Jason given any thoughtāthe remotest of thoughtsāto the Reeve characterās fate, heād never have entered that glorious Marcus restaurant!
He had not given the slightest bit, of considerationāto the fact, that heād be paying, for that remarkable food! Paying for itāwith money, that would not be minted, for another 55 or 60 years!
Heād shuddered! To the pointāthat the bed had shaken! Three or four times! Had rattledāsubstantially! His body had contortedāfrom top to bottomāagain and again! To, suddenly, realize the truthāthat, maybe, heād really not known just āhow close heād, possibly, comeā. Not at the eatery, anyway. The thought had not occurred to him! Not until now!
Now, however, lying in that wondrous bedāin the middle of an otherwise glorious nightāthe Reeve character-realization had caught up, with Jason! In spades! Had overwhelmingly caught up with him! Had overtaken him! Had petrified him! Retroactively!
Looking back, he felt as though it had been some kind of good luck omenāwhen the cashier, at the hamburger joint, had not noticed the dates, on those singles (those supposed-silver certificates) that heād āpassedā.
Well, actually, thereād been no special reason for her to have screened the money. He doubted that there wouldāve been a memo, circulated among the companyās restaurantsāwarning employees to be on the lookout for bills printed in the 1990s. Or even in the 21st century. He found himself wondering ifāwhoever had checked out the cash drawer, at the end of the shiftāwould ever have noticed. Probably not, he assured himselfāsighing heavily. No one looks at one-dollar billsāfor authenticity. Hardly ever!
Once heād finally managed to calm downāsomewhatāhe realized that, to his good fortune, this was, hopefully, one less worry for him to agonize over! The cold sweatāthankfullyāhad begun to, slowly, dissipate. Thank God!
He nuzzled back downāinto that soft, yielding, mattressāand began to drift back off, to the blissful sleep that was, once again, beckoning.
Thenāwithin just a matter of secondsāheād snapped, wide awake, once more! He hadāgood Lord! Heād paid his dear benefactorāSusan Atkinson! Had paid herāwith five one-dollar bills. Each one of themālike those, at the Marcus restaurantāwould have to have been printed a considerable number of years, in the future. His gracious new landlady had seemed to not notice!
Perhaps this wasāas indicated aboveādue to the fact, that there are simply such overwhelming numbers of one-dollar bills changing hands! In every facet of life! Literally, every second! āZillionsā of them! At all seconds! Day ināand day out! Possibly (probably?) this was such a spectacularly-common occurrenceāthat no one ever really looks, at any singles! Like, ever! He certainly hoped so!
For some reason or another, the lad remembered his grandfather telling him, of a humorous movie, from the early-fiftiesācalled, he was certain, Mister 880. It, apparently, was based upon a true story. An elderly manāplayed, in the picture, by actor Edmund Gwennāhad, continually (and often) counterfeited one-dollar bills. Had done so, for years.
To say that the product was of poor quality would be putting it mildly. The word āWashingtonā had even been misspelled. But, virtually no one had ever noticed. Ever!
Every time the old geezer needed some money, heād simply ārun off a few singlesā. Then, heād buy somethingāfor a nickel, or a dimeāand pocket the change. He would repeat the āoperationāātill all the phony bills, from that particular āissueā, had been passed. The better to live onāfor the next couple or three days. But, he had always bought something. That way, the vendor would, always, realize āat least a little bit of profitā.
Maybe each and every oneāof Jasonās singlesāmight always escape even the most cursory, of inspections. He felt a little bit better. Hopefully, the currencyāthat heād given Susanāwouldāve āslipped throughā! Hopefully! Maybe sheād simply depositāor spendāthe incriminating dollar bills, in the next day or two!
Tens or twenties, thoughāthey would probably be a āhorse of a different colorā. (That had always been one of Grandpa Piepczykās pet sayings. Comfortingly, at the dinner tableāthe previous nightāJason had heard Eric use the very same expression.)
He was thankful that his $10.00 bill had been consideredāone of the āolderā ones! In the late 20th Century, the Federal Governmentāhad undertaken a complete overhauling, of the countryās currency. Jasonās āmemoryā, of the huge project, told him that the tens had been the firstāto undergo the major change.
Fortunately (or unfortunately) the bill, in his wallet, had been one of a vanishing breed! Mintedābefore the ānewā tens had come into being. Jeffersonās picture was still centered on his note! In the same fashionāthat it had been centered for (Jason guessed) many decades. For, maybeāeven a century or two.
On the other hand, this ātennerāāhe was positiveāwould be a dreaded āFederal Reserve Noteā. It was Our Heroās understanding, thatāuntil the sixties or seventiesāall United States currency had been labeled, as āSilver Certificatesā. Would the āReserve Noteā nomenclature be that noticeable? That discernible? To whomever he might decide to give the bill? Had anyoneāin 1942āever heard of a āFederal Reserve Noteā? Would anyone knowāwhat the term even meant? It was āa puzzlementāāas Yul Brenner would emote, in Rodgers & Hammersteinās The King & I, some nine years, in the future.
Whatever the circumstance, his money situation, undoubtedly, boded illāfor the new tenant. Literally, the sum totalāof
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