Watermark
After two transmissions, one small accident, miles of surf
trips, pounds of sand, and a bum’s shopping cart worth of general clutter and paraphernalia,
my little car hit the 100,000 mile mark this evening. When it did, all the
car’s functions immediately locked up. The steering wheel caught into a rigid
position, my brakes and gas pedal stopped working, and the stick slammed itself
involuntarily into neutral. Now with fate completely out of my control, I
watched as the car slowed and directed itself to the side of the road. It was
possessed as if by some unknown source.
When the car came to a rest, the hood popped open with an
audible grunt. I used my last remaining working door handle to step out and see
what had happened. But as I approached the hood it swung itself completely,
into the upright near vertical position, and out from where I thought my engine
should be jumped a tiny bald man with giant watermelon sized feet. He had a
ripped greasy beige shirt on that said in fading cartoon print “Honk For
Honey”, and the blackness on the bottom of those gargantuan tootsies was as dark
as the very pavement I now witnessed him stomping on.
Shocking. But he paid me no interest. Actually, he shoved me to the side (gently) and started jumping near my driver’s side door, seemingly trying to get a glimpse at my dashboard. He was wide-eyed and frantic.
Shocking. But he paid me no interest. Actually, he shoved me to the side (gently) and started jumping near my driver’s side door, seemingly trying to get a glimpse at my dashboard. He was wide-eyed and frantic.
“Here I gotcha,” I finally said when I’d composed myself.
Starting to accept and understand the strangeness of my little human engine.
And I picked him up by the belt loops on his olive Jnco’s and
held him easily at a visual evenness with gauges of my dashboard. He studied
only the odometer for what must have been a good five minutes. Cars passed us
but did not stop to question the event. People are busy. We looked like two
aliens fresh off the mothership, taking a fresh inventory of the source of
human locomotion.
”Well,” I heard him say after those minutes silently hoisted in the air. I thought I heard his voice crack a little, but I couldn’t see his mostly featureless face. “That’s that. Put me down.”
”Well,” I heard him say after those minutes silently hoisted in the air. I thought I heard his voice crack a little, but I couldn’t see his mostly featureless face. “That’s that. Put me down.”
I did. And as if nothing had happened he began walking back
to what was in all reality his cockpit. A silent, thankless, Captain.
“Wait.”
He continued climbing into the bucket seat I assumed he
created for himself. Just below the seat were two perfectly concentric circles.
He hit a bulbous yellow button, without acknowledging me, and quickly the
hood began to lower. I grabbed it half-way down and held my car open like a clam-shell.
“So, you have been
making this thing go all these years?”
Finally he made eye contact with me. He had a dull passive
face, but giant gecko like eyes, they seemed perfect for someone used to living
in dark cramped surroundings and were quite intense.
“Did you just think every car ran like this?”
“Well no…”
“Are you unhappy with my work?”
I felt awful about the idea. How could I be ungrateful?
“No, she’s been driving great actually.” (I lied). “I need
to vacuum the-“
“You paid thirty-seven dollars for this transmission, did
you actually expect a transmission?”
”I guess….” I had to think about that question. The price did seem good at the time.
“I know I didn’t expect a little human to be peddling this
thing.”
”I’m not human,” I heard him say, and then he frantically started pressing the dimpled yellow button again. Caught off guard, I nearly let the hood close, and I felt certain if the hood did close, it would never open again. A coffin of bolts and long flat feet.
But I grabbed it just before it could clamp shut. My tiny
engine looked more exhausted by this development then angry in any way. It was
time to get back on the road.
”Now what?” he said.
”Now what?” he said.
What indeed? Was there anything else to ask or was this a
fairly self-explanatory situation? I’ve seen the Flintstones.
“One more question,” I said. “What do you do when we’re not
driving?”
“I write,” he said and I saw him shoot a glance over to the
button again.
“Wait, what do you write?”
“All kinds of things. Plays, fiction, I could do long-form
journalism if anyone ever needed it...” He trailed and seemed to relax slightly.
”Have a flashlight in there?”
”Have a flashlight in there?”
He pointed to his huge bold eyes.
“Thought so. Do you have anything I can read? I have a
little website myself actually, I could put it on there.”
He seemed to brighten at this idea, and he began fussing
around in the remaining pieces of what I had thought all this time was an
engine. It was in fact a bookshelf of sorts, simply disguised as a poorly
functioning engine. The small man started rummaging through the scrolls he
seemed to write on in what must have been long-hand form. No space for
typewriters; all function. In every place where important engine components
should have been (oil, belts, radiators, the battery), instead were stuffed
with strange yellowed sheets of long paper held together with gold handles
shaped like dragon heads. They seemed ancient.
”Ah, here, I kind of like this one.”
Here strained himself slightly as he reached over to me with his weak underused arm one of the scrolls. I looked down quickly at the feathery piece of paper. It was blank.
”Ah, here, I kind of like this one.”
Here strained himself slightly as he reached over to me with his weak underused arm one of the scrolls. I looked down quickly at the feathery piece of paper. It was blank.
“This is actually pretty good,” I said, but just as I was
looking back up the hood slammed shut. I don’t know if he heard my critique.
Sitting back down in the driver’s seat, its grey pot marked
cloth peeling and fading, nickels from the 1940’s embedded in the tomb of the
headrest, I found myself feeling guilty about starting the car. Especially
putting the key in. So I leaned forward and whispered into the air conditioning
duct: “I don’t mind if you quit, one-hundred thousand is more then I ever
expected anyway. Maybe you can spend more time writing.”
Nothing in return. At least not for a long few minutes, I sat
in silence wondering if he was just digesting my offer. I’d yet to even get his
name. Finally I heard something muttered from deep within the greasy rusted
confines.
”My story has already been written.”
”My story has already been written.”
And with that the car lit to life with an electric shock,
peeled back onto A1A and flew south like a snowball made with day old sleet. In
the distance bolts of lightning speared the island silently. The check engine
light continued glowing, but I understood it finally, and as the car hurled
down the highway I threw the key out the window and into the humid darkness of
an advancing night.
1 Comments:
Ha ha Great one!! :)
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