|
Losing
Time
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or -
How,
Despite my Best Efforts, I successfully U-hauled from Chicago to Palm Springs
by Depending on the Partially-Remunerated Kindness of Strangers
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| CHAPTER
THREE: THE TRUCK THAT SANG BLEEDS TO DEATH |
| When I was a teenager
I read a science fiction novel by Anne McCaffrey called "The Ship That
Sang". It describes a future where the brains of people with
severe physical handicaps are removed from their bodies and implanted in
spaceships. The brains are connected to all of the ship's systems
and they can control all of the ship's functions, as well as communicate
with the ship's crew. In this case, the personality of
the woman who was put in control of the ship remains intact, and she expresses
herself by singing through the ship's speaker system. I can't
remember much else about the book, but I believe that things end
rather messily. I mean, it would have been a very boring book
if everything had gone along just swimmingly, wouldn't it?
U-haul trucks can
have personality, too, but this is usually not such a good thing.
The person in the book adjusted well to her role controlling the spaceship,
and had a full and satisfying relationship with the rest of its crew.
Unfortunately, U-haul trucks which have had enough time to develop a personality
are almost always malevolent and sadistic. Perhaps this has
something to do with being repeatedly abused by uncaring strangers who
just use you and discard you in some distant place once they've finished
with you. I confess to having done this myself, to a brand
new U-haul truck on its very first foray into the world. Somewhere
in West Virginia I accidentally put this poor innocent truck into reverse
while doing 60 or 65 miles an hour, with my Nissan 300 on a trailer on
the back. Accident or not, I vividly recall to this day seeing
a large cloud of blue smoke in the rearview mirror as the back wheels locked
up. I retained control, coasted over to the side of the road,
and on its third attempt the gallant, injured truck managed to start up
and took me without further complaint to Chicago. Goodness
only knows what evil I planted in its heart that day, and what vengeance
it wrought on subsequent drivers.
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The
truck I left Chicago in definitely had personality - far, far too much
personality. Coincidentally, she sang too. OK,
she didn't actually sing, what she did was whistle. Loudly.
This seemed to have something to do with having a driver's door which was
so bent that you could see sunlight where it was supposed to meet the doorframe.
It got so bad that I eventually wound the window down, because even loud
white noise was preferable to the infernal unending whistling.
The thought of over 2000 miles of such torment was already starting to
get to me before I'd left the Chicago city limits.
The whistling, though,
was a minor inconvenience compared to the outright disobedience.
I didn't notice this at first, but after I left the safe confines of the
Chicago freeway system, it occurred to me that the truck's headlights weren't
working. As long as I was on well-lit freeways I couldn't tell
that the lights weren't working, but by the time I got onto the rural parts
of interstate 55 I noticed that the lights were coming and going.
They'd go on for a while, then fade and go off completely.
If I pressed the high-beam control on the floor with my foot the lights
came back on, or so it seemed. Then they'd go off again and
no amount of high-beam control trickery would make any difference - but
turning the light switch off and on again would bring them back.
For a while. Then nothing would help, not high-beam controls,
not light switches, not even swearing and cursing. There seemed
to be something horribly familiar about this situation. "Turn
the headlights on, Hal. Turn the headlights on please, Hal.
Turn on the headlights, please.".
The plan was to get
out of Illinois and down to St Louis that night, but even with my type-A
personality I couldn't ignore the fact that driving some tons of steel
at speed along a pitch dark interstate wasn't a smart thing.
I pulled off the freeway at the small town of Lincoln, only halfway to
my intended goal, and checked into a motel for the night.
In the morning I
set off, stopped off in St Louis to see its giant arch, and then crossed
the remainder of Missouri on interstate 44 without incident.
I crossed over into the state of Oklahoma and, since I needed fuel for
the truck, pulled off the interstate at a town called Wellston.
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Wellston
had once been a one-horse town, but I think the horse must have died quite
some time before I got there, and now all it had was a gas station.
I'm sure they're very, very proud of their gas station and would severely
injure anyone who did anything to threaten it. My truck obviously
sensed this and seized this opportunity in the only way it knew how - by
haemorrhaging large quantities of red fluid that looked disturbingly like
blood. Actually, I didn't notice that there was a problem until
a local woman pointed out that I was losing brake fluid. I
tried to move the truck out of the way while I still had brakes, but it
wouldn't budge.
I borrowed the gas
station manager's cellphone and, since I'm proud to say that I've never
used one before in my life, I asked her to explain how to use it.
I then called the U-haul emergency number. I told them that I was
blocking 6 out of the gas station's 12 pumps, and that it would be good
to get this situation resolved quickly. She told me that she
was going to send someone up from Oklahoma city, and that it would take
an hour and a half. I told her again that I was blocking 6
pumps (which was true) and that it was causing a snarl-up at the gas station
(which, um, wasn't quite true). Somehow, none of my
brilliant logic seemed to help my case, so I settled in for a wait.
Type-A personality,
right? I couldn't see the point of wasting my time sitting
around, so I grabbed my camera and looked for some photo opportunities.
The first one presented itself immediately - Wellston sits right alongside
the old route
66, famous in song and legend as the road taken by many people before
me who were moving from Chicago to Los Angeles. I got a couple
of photos of the sign and moved on. It didn't take too long
to find other subjects worth photographing, some small but interesting
green butterflies which were hanging on for dear life in a stiff breeze.
I put my closeup lens onto the camera and got some nice butterfly
photos. I then noticed that the U-haul repair guy had arrived,
half an hour ahead of schedule.
He was a fairly young
guy, but already seriously overweight. He said that the problem
was only affecting the parking brakes, and that he'd release them manually
and I could follow him to Oklahoma where the problem would be fixed.
I suggested that a better solution might be for me to get a replacement
truck, given the whistling and headlight problems this one also had.
He said it would probably be quicker to fix the truck than to transfer
the load from one to another, so I accepted his recommendation.
Only problem was,
he couldn't get the brakes released. After about an hour and
a half of fiddling, and consulting several times with home base, he said
that they'd bring in a large tow truck, lift up the back of the U-haul
truck with it, and tow it to Oklahoma, where it would be fixed.
I said that I didn't like this idea at all, since all of my household goods
were in the back of the truck, and would get messed around when it was
lifted. He said there was nothing he could do about it, because
it was company policy. I got on the cellphone again and called
the Oklahoma U-haul office, who explained that only if there were something
major like an engine or transmission failure would I get a replacement
truck. I suggested that an inability to move seemed like rather
a major failure to me, and that I didn't want my stuff wrecked during the
towing, nor did I want to lose yet more time while I waited for the truck
to be fixed - by now I'd been in Wellston for three hours.
Somehow I must have sounded the right note, and she relented and offered
me a replacement truck in Wellston or, more precisely, in Chandler, ten
miles back up the road. So I drove up with the U-haul guy.
Chandler seemed like
a fairly redneck little town, but it was a bit bigger than Wellston and
had the luxury of a U-haul outlet. Before I could pick up my
replacement truck, however, I had to fill in the transfer document to authorize
it. This piece of paper had already loomed large while I was
in Wellston, since my old truck didn't appear to have one of these vital
pieces of paper. After ten or fifteen minutes of digging around,
however, the U-haul guy found one in his vehicle. When we got
to Chandler, however, he realized that he hadn't filled in the mileage
of my truck, so he headed back down to Wellston to get it.
I therefore had a charming fifteen minutes to spend with the mechanic and
his assorted hangers on at the Wellston U-haul.
They started off
by telling me about the shortcomings and foibles of their various relatives,
including a sister who, apparently, was good for nothing except lying down,
and she didn't even do that well. Then, as one might expect
with such people, the subject turned to guns and then to hunting and I
was told it would soon be time to go squirrel hunting, since the first
frosts would kill off the old and sick squirrels. I couldn't
quite make the association, and said so. The guy repeated what
he'd just said, that the frosts would kill off the old and sick squirrels,
as if the connection were self evident. I was obviously still
not there, so he groped a bit deeper for an answer. Well, you
wouldn't want to eat old, stringy squirrels or sick squirrels, would you?
No. No, of course I wouldn't. And it's true
- I really wouldn't want to eat old, stringy, sick squirrels.
Thankfully, I was
rescued from this situation before I or they had run out of amusing and
uncontroversial topics, and I headed back down to Wellston with the new
truck. I couldn't back it right up to the old truck, since
the trailer was still attached, but I got it within fifteen or twenty feet.
Once again, I needed to find someone to help me with the moving, but one
of Wellston's more glaring inadequacies was a woeful shortage of homeless
people - maybe the frosts had killed all of them off. I'd already
asked at the garage in Chandler if there was anyone around who might want
a couple of hours work, which is how I found out about the uselessness
of the lying-down sister, but none of the potential helpers could be tracked
down.
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So
I did what anyone would have done in those circumstances, and asked the
first guy I saw sitting in a car whether he knew anyone who wanted a couple
of hours work at $20 an hour. I think he was a native American
guy. He said he'd do it. Right now?
Yes, right now. Swell! We started moving boxes
over and then the bigger stuff. His girlfriend came out of
the store and he explained what was happening, so she started helping to
move stuff. Then some really old guy who looked like the sort
of toothless old codger dreamed up as a comic foil for Western movies came
over and started moving boxes. I felt embarassed to have him
there, he was so old I thought he might have an apoplexy and keel over,
but he insisted. Then another local woman stopped by for gas
and she started helping. They were moving stuff so quickly that I
couldn't keep up at the other end. In less than half an hour
everything was moved over.
Now the only problem
was moving the trailer from one truck to the other. I was pretty
doubtful about how we were going to achieve this, because these trailers
weigh 2200 pounds (999 kilograms) even without a car on them.
I started disconnecting all of the chains and straps which keep the car
on. The old guy, who was blessed with the very Wild Western
name of Bart, suggested that we leave the car on and he'd get a trolley
jack and move it with that. That didn't sound particularly
plausible to me, but another guy who was smoking a cigar said that would
be a good idea. If it worked then it certainly would be nice
to avoid the hassle of getting the car on and off, so I agreed and Bart
went off to get the trolley jack, while I moved the new truck into place.
Sure enough, it worked a treat and in minutes I had the trailer transferred.
I gave $20 to the Indian guy and $20 to his girlfriend, but Bart and the
local woman wouldn't take anything. They left and Bart packed
away his jack.
Then the gas station
manager came out and asked what was going to happen with the dead truck.
I told her what U-haul had told me, that a tow-truck was meant to be coming
to take it away. She didn't sound entirely convinced or pleased.
Bart then suggested that he'd try moving it. I explained that
I had already tried, and the U-haul guy had tried, but that it hadn't moved.
However, Bart wanted to give it a go and so I gave him the keys.
He climbed in, revved up the engine and tried to pull out, without any
success. He tried a few more times, with no more luck.
Then he put it into reverse and voila! Slowly and unhappily it started
moving while he revved the engine quite high. He kept inching
it out and soon got it out of the way. The manager said that
this sort of resourcefulness was typical of him. Now everyone's
problem was solved, except for the U-haul people. Seemed like
instant kharma to me.
So that's how the
partially remunerated kindness of strangers saved the day for me once again.
I lost five hours in total. People who know me might be rather
surprised to learn that I stayed remarkably calm throughout the entire
episode, since there was really nothing whatsoever I could do about any
of this. I guess I did score a pretty significant victory by
getting a replacement truck despite the visionary policies of the U-haul
Corporation. And it certainly wasn't a total loss in other
ways, since I did get a nice photo of a butterfly and of the route 66 sign,
too. I also had acquired a truck with lights that worked, so
I'd be able to drive into the night and make up some of the time I lost
earlier.
The one thing I really
regret is not getting a photo of Bart and the other people who helped me.
Heck, I would even like to have a photo of the people up in Chandler.
Unfortunately, by the time I thought of it everyone was gone, except for
the guy with the cigar and some guy who turned up after all the excitement
was over. When he found out that I was a New Zealander, he
told me that his son-in-law in Oklahoma city was a New Zealander, and he
insisted that I speak to him. So I got to exercise my newly
found skills with a cellphone once again, and heard a familiar sounding
accent on the other end of the line. So then, there's that
photo above of the guy with the cigar, and the guy on the right is the
guy with the son-in-law from New Zealand, and the guy in the middle is
some guy I don't know at all - but heck, maybe someday I'll also
need him to rescue me from some pickle. |
Chapter
Four: Attacked by Indians
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