FRESH
YARN presents:
The
Week of Rental Car Disasters
By Charlie
Anders
August 1992,
the Phoenix air could boil your blood -- it was a record heat wave according
to the papers, and the absolute worst time to do anything delicate and
familial.
Shuttling
between our motel and all our other destinations, Mom and I went through
rental cars like home fries. I drove, because she had too much else on
her mind. I was 21 years old, had only just gotten my driver's license,
and hadn't yet made peace with the steering wheel.
My mom and I were still learning to relate as adults, a process that inevitably
led to some tension and weirdness. Driving her around was a role-reversal
that confirmed our new alignment. I'd chauffeured her some while I was
getting my license, but this was different.
We were in
Arizona to have a court cast aspersions on my grandmother's mental state.
My mom's mother had been on the Alzheimer's slide for years, and hardly
ever seemed to know us. But now my grandfather was dead and Mom needed
to be named Grandma's guardian. Otherwise, Grandma wouldn't get Grandpa's
military pension. And there was some obscure threat that the Army might
name its own guardian for my grandmother. I pictured a tough drill-sergeant
type trying to make her do push-ups in the nursing home.
The second
day, we went to the attorney's office and he explained to us the process
of legally invalidating someone's brain. When Mom and I went out to the
car, neither of us could talk. We just stared at each other. I tried to
think of something comforting or at least normalizing to say, and couldn't.
Then I just put the car into gear and backed out of our parking spot.
The car jacked
way up and then crashed back down, and there was a brutal thunk.
I had backed
over the big concrete divider that punctuated our spot. It was crunching
into the undercarriage of the car. My mom and I talked about it for a
moment and decided the only thing was to back the front wheels over the
divider as well. The divider smashed against the car's innards all the
way, before we finally reached the front wheels and managed to climb up
the sheer concrete face. And then another thunk, from the front wheels.
The car drove
okay after that, but we kept hearing funny noises, and we didn't want
it to break down in the desert somewhere. So we took it back to the rental
car place and mentioned the noises, but not the driving-over-the-barrier
thing. They gave us a different car.
The next day we went to visit my grandmother in the nursing home, on the
fringes of a massively sprawling retiree-only suburb called Sun City.
She'd long since passed through the uninhibited, breezy stage of Alzheimer's,
and seemed permanently in the weepy, angry phase. She had a walker and
was running away from the nursing home staff, who wanted to give her some
meds. Her hair was dirty and frazzled, and her eyes were red.
Grandma had
been a dancer when she was young, but her parents made her give it up,
and she became a teacher. And then an Army wife, traveling all over the
place with Grandpa. She'd been a staunch Lutheran, the kind of person
who never spoke ill of anyone regardless of how much they deserved it.
Right after
our first nursing home visit, the air conditioning on our replacement
car died. At least this one wasn't my fault. We had appointments and stuff
to take care of, so we had no choice but to drive around for half a day
in a tandoori oven. Mom and I were both freaked out about Grandma, and
a steering wheel too hot to touch didn't make things any better.
Neither of
us talked much, we just stared out at the shapes the air made over the
tar, and the weird pastels of the desert on the way back to Phoenix. My
mom and I talked about how the desert sunset looked like the tackiest
velvet painting you ever saw - but it was real, it existed in nature,
and there was probably no way to capture it in art without being trashy.
I was waiting
for one of us to lose our shit then, but neither of us did. We are probably
two of the least stoic people you'll ever meet, with a breaking point
somewhere below marzipan when it came to stress, and we both somehow managed
to keep from screaming at each other.
We accomplished this mostly by preserving the silence. The radio was full
of the Republican Convention, Pat Buchanan announcing we were in a culture
war and we had to take back our country like the National Guard facing
down the LA rioters. So we turned it off, which left us with no sound
but the wind through our open windows, and the perpetually blaring horns
of the Arizona drivers.
We managed
to get the car back to the rental place, where they gave us no grief about
needing another car. They hooked us up with another car -- I can't remember
what kind of car we kept getting, but I think they were all Geo Prizms,
the American auto industry's attempt at copying Japanese cars -- and we
rolled back towards our motel.
It
was around this time that we discovered the corned beef hash. I don't
remember the name of the diner that saved our sanity, but it was near
our motel on the outskirts of Phoenix. It was old-school, with a long
counter and greasy yellow wallpaper. And it had this amazing corned beef
hash, it was warm and salty and basically the purest expression of comfort
food in the physical world. I had never eaten corned beef hash before,
and I've never had any as good since then. We resolved to eat that hash
at least twice a day for the remainder of our visit.
The next
day, we had to go to the courthouse for the guardianship proceedings.
I was driving again, and I was trying not to dwell on how weird this was,
and my grandmother's dirty hair, and all the hassles the attorney had
warned us to be ready for, and how to keep my mom from freaking out, and
also ---
I swerved
left into oncoming traffic. My mom screamed and I started to brake. There
was a semi barreling down on us. And then, when we were already halfway
into the opposing lanes, a green left-turn arrow flashed into life, and
we had the right of way that I'd somehow decided already belonged to us.
Miraculously, nobody had already started into the intersection, or they
would have rammed us. When we got to the courthouse, I let go of the steering
wheel very slowly and then breathed at the top of my lungs.
I think I'm
good in a crisis. I'm just not a good driver in a crisis.
After all
the lawyer's warnings, the court proceedings turned out to be pretty straightforward.
The judge more or less rubber-stamped the power of attorney and guardianship,
and the Army didn't object to anything.
We went back
to Sun City to sit with my grandma, even though I wasn't sure why. She
wouldn't remember our visit, and we wouldn't get to communicate with the
parts of her that had meant something to us. But we went anyway.
This time,
Grandma seemed calmer, probably because the nurses had medicated her.
We sat on folding chairs in the little patio at the center of the rest
home. She stared into space and made nonsensical stabs at conversation,
and it was almost worse than seeing her weep and run from her pills. It
was like she was already mostly somewhere else, except a small part of
her grudgingly rested in the shady courtyard.
We had no
more traffic scares that day, mostly thanks to luck. Sun City's drivers
come in two kinds: the ones who've worked hard all their lives and now
nobody is going to stop them from driving 80 miles an hour, and the ones
who are in no hurry and always go 20 miles per hour. You can't slow down
too much, or the speed freaks will crush you, but you have to be ready
to hit the brakes the moment you see a sedan (or golf cart) almost standing
still in the road.
Back in Phoenix,
I felt exhausted and sore in my load-bearing muscles, as if I'd been carrying
instead of sitting. I was maybe a lost penny away from melting down, but
I was also hyper-aware of the need to keep from upsetting my mom. She
just looked drained past the point of having anything to give.
That's when
we stopped at a drug store to get a few things, and I locked the keys
in the car. With the engine still running.
Even in the
late afternoon, the sun was still kicking our asses, and I just looked
at the car and listened to the hum of the engine. My mom swayed on her
feet, as if snake-bitten in the desert. She could start screaming or just
pass out, and I wasn't sure which would be worse. I steered her to the
air-conditioned drug store, and looked around for a pay phone.
The sun did
another gaudy desert fade. Our plans for our last evening in town eroded
with each passing minute. At least it was no longer so hot that you felt
like you'd been spitting for hours. I can't remember what our evening
plans had been, but they probably involved eating more hash and watching
a movie. Something to get our minds off the week we'd had.
A Sherrif's
Department car cruised through the parking lot, and a cop got out. He
spent 20 minutes trying to jimmy the lock with a thin metal ruler-like
object. He said he had tons of experience breaking into cars, but ours
had some kind of newfangled security. I almost called the rental place,
but I was sure they were sick of hearing from us.
The cop finally
phoned for a locksmith, who promised to come sometime in the next hour.
My mom wandered
back from the drugstore. By now, it was fully dark except for all the
parking lot lights. I said I was sorry about this, about all the automotive
mayhem of the past week. My mom was just glad I'd been able to be there
for the whole Grandma ordeal, car crap or no car crap.
Eventually
some guy did show up and charged us a shitload of money for thirty seconds'
work, and we went back to our motel to collapse. Mom and I cemented our
friendship as adults that week, but she never again got into a car that
I was driving.
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