The Little House on the Prairie tells the story of a family in the 19th century
who traveled into the wilderness and created a home at Walnut Grove.
Their
journey in a covered wagon seems completely alien to us today. Imagine what
Laura Ingalls would have written about a modern day
journey… My father drove
our covered wagon deep into the wilderness. For lunch, Ma broke out the
Mikey-D’s and when night fell, Pa found a
room for us at the Comfort Inn. I
wonder if our modern journeys across the nation will be viewed in 100 years the
same way we view the Ingalls’
journey.
"I can’t make the school board
meeting," I explained to Dean. "My mother is in the hospital and my van just
broke down."
"I understand," said Dean." You’ll be in our prayers." And
with that, the Board of Christian Education prayed for us at their meeting. I
have never
doubted the power of praying – and the prayers offered by the
board delivered the hand of God to troubled life. My mother’s heart
rate
miraculously snapped into pace so she could come home. And the mechanic
(who couldn’t find what was wrong with our van for the past 8
months)
miraculously discovered what was wrong with our van. Our decision of whether to
rent a van for the trip, buy a new Kia, or repair the van
was decided for
us!
I happily picked up the van on the day we were leaving town, and
expected the mechanic to be as excited about the repair as I was! "Well….",
he
sighed, "We THINK we fixed it. We hope we fixed it." What was this? This
wasn’t the message I expected. We were leaving in two hours! "The van
was
sparking and arching – we fixed that. But the coils are all rusty so you might
have problem from too much resistance. But you’ll probably be
fine. Have a
nice trip."
I tried to ignore how deeply concerned I was from the
mechanic’s reaction because I needed to pack the van.
Linda had packed
nearly all our worldly possession into 37 medium to large sized suit cases. I
had the pleasure of loading the van in a 60mph
wind storm! Regardless of the
challenges, I pushed and I crammed and I got the van loaded. With the kids
loaded into the van, we headed out.
…and twenty miles down the road, I hit a
pot hole and a dash light came on. "Why is the ABS Break light on?" I asked. It
turns out that pot hole
knocked our ABS breaks offline for al hundred miles.
Thankfully, they came back online as we cross from New York into
Pennsylvania.
The second day of our journey was going well as we sailed
down the highway into North Carolina going much faster than the law provided
for.
"What is that smell?" Linda asked as we approached a tractor trailer
pulling a flat bed. "That truck is burning oil – you had better pass!"
I
crammed on the gas and we started passing the truck. As we approached the
tractor, our van was oddly sprayed with water coming out from
under the
truck’s hood. "What the…" I reached for the wipers because I couldn’t see out
the windshield. As I flipped the wipers on, I could hear
Linda yell "No…
don’t turn on the wipers" but it was too late. I had them flipped on high and
they were flapping back and forth before us.
"Why isn’t the water coming
off?" I screamed – trying to keep the van on the road at the incredibly high
rate of speed we were traveling while hugging the
side of the
18-wheeler.
"Because it isn’t water," Linda explained, "It is oil!" That
tractor trailer wasn’t just burning oil, it was spraying oil too. I carefully
guided our van
through the blurry windshield to the next exit – which was an
incredible feat, I must admit, because I couldn’t see anything.
The exit
had an automated car wash, so, we pulled up to the console. The console was
blurry, scratched and difficult to read. I consider myself to
be fairly
computer literate – in fact; I’ve tried to make a career out of it. But I could
not get that console to take my credit card nor cash. After fifteen
minutes
trying to cram my ten dollar bill into the machine, there were three or four
cars in line behind me. I couldn’t back away from the car wash
because of the
line that had formed, and I couldn’t go forward due to a gate blocking the car
wash that waited for me to pay. What could I do? I
was stuck!
I
entered the gas station to find a line that stretched around the store. When I
finally reached the cashier and explained the situation, she said I
needed to
buy the carwash from her. Why didn’t they have a sign that said that? By the
time I returned to the car wash, there were seven cars in
line behind us and
I could tell by their single fingered jesters they were upset at a stupid
northerner – I just hoped it wasn’t me (since I was the only
northerner in
sight). We went through the car wash with high expectations our windshield would
be clean, but as we pulled away, the car wash
hadn’t cut through the
oil!
I pulled over to fill the tank up with gas (15 cents off with a car
wash!) but found there was no way to tell the pump I had just had a car wash. I
went
back into the station to face the long line. I waited in line. And
waited. And waited. Finally, I had my chance, "I already bought a car wash and
I
didn’t get my 15 cents per gallon off."
"You have to buy the gas
first," the lady explained in a slow southern drawl.
Behind me,
somewhere in the long line that stretched around the
store, I heard someone
say "Hurry up Yankee." Yankee?
"OK. But I bought the car wash first. I
just want the 15 cents per gallon."
"No, you have to buy the gas first."
She repeated.
The gentleman behind me explained "Friend, it isn’t that
easy." I turned to give him my attention. "She would have to figure out the tax
too."
I turned back to the cashier. "You can keep the tax. I just want my
fifteen cents."
A dollar bill appeared from the gentleman behind me. "I
need to get going. Just take this dollar," he offered.
"Thank you, but,
she owes me a lot more than a dollar," I quickly did the math in my head, "she
owes me a dollar and sixty-five cents." He produced a second dollar
bill.
I could see I was going to lose this argument and I didn’t want to
start Civil War II. "No… thanks. That’s OK." With that, I returned to the
van
disappointed and with plans to quickly hi-tail it out of the
area.
"Don’t get into the van until you fix the windshield," Linda
complained. There were still streaks of oil.
"What do you want me to do?"
I whined.
"Clean the windshield!"
I returned to the gas station to
get a bottle of windshield wiper fluid. As I entered, I could hear the cashier
say "There’s that Yankee again." Fine. I
guess I’m stupid because I don’t
know you need to buy gas before you buy the car wash!
With the windshield
wiper fluid and ample paper towels, I scrubbed the windshield until it was
perfectly clean, and we headed back onto the road.
Ten miles up the highway,
the van started to chug, then kick and buck! The dashboard started blinking like
a Christmas Tree! What the heck! "This
is what the van was doing to me before
we left," Linda explained. "When the engine light is blinking, we need to stop
the van. We need to get off
the road!"
I took the next exit to a town
named Lumberton and guided the van into small mini-mart gas station where we
shut it off. "All we have to do,"
explained Linda, "is wait 10 minutes for
the computer to reset, pray a lot, and restart the van." It sounded good…
actually it sounded like our only
option. Unfortunately, that didn’t
work.
I called AAA and explained the situation and the need for a tow.
"We have five people in our van," I warned because I know we can’t stay in
the
van while it is being towed.
"I am sorry sir. Only two people can
ride in the tow truck," the AAA operator said happily.
"What am I suppose
to do with the other three? Sell them?"
"I am sorry sir," she was
completely not helpful. It was clear our next step was completely in our hands.
We needed to find a hotel for the kids, and
then find a garage for the van,
then find a car rental for us. With our plan set, we executed it. Using my
wife’s cell phone’s internet connection, we
located the hotel, and then used
our GPS to plot the fastest path.
We started the van and as it kicked and
bucked us down the road. I felt like Han Solo in Star Wars flying the Millennium
Fulken while under
imperial attack. "One miscalculation kid and we’ll fly
right into a asteroid field and that would put a real cramp in your day," The
GPS was yelling at
us to turn around. "It must be wrong" I yelled over the
sound of the engine. "The hotel must be just down this road." But after a mile,
when it was
clear we were headed into the wilderness, I turned the van around
and decided to listen to the nagging GPS. Oddly, we found the hotel sat
right
next to the minimart! If we had known, we would have walked the thirty
feet to the hotel rather than try to drive the van two miles.
With the
kids unloaded safely into a hotel room, I then unloaded the thirty-seven
suitcases into the room. I found a garage that could look at the
van on
Saturday. I found a place that could rent us a car on Saturday. And I called AAA
to tow the van.
It felt odd seeing our empty van get loaded onto a
flat-bed tow truck. The van was heading off 38 miles to a garage we never heard
of, to a town
we had never seen, to be fixed by people we didn’t know. "You
know," Linda mentioned as we watched the van roll away atop the tow truck, "It
is
very likely we’ll never see that van again!"
Oh no! I don’t like
where this is headed….
‘Holiday Roooooo oh oh oh oh oh oh oad. Holiday
Roooooo oh oh oh oh oh oh oad.’
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