superbuickguy
Explorer
THE WANDERERS # 72
HEADLINE: THE WANDERERS
SUBHEAD: CARL AND EMMA MEET FOREST GUMP?
BYLINE: BY RICK SIEMAN
We join them now as they're driving The Whale at night, with six lights cutting an arc through the moonless dark. Carl sucked down the last dregs of a warm Vernors ginger ale, took a healthy bite out of a plug of Red Man chewing tobacco, stifled a belch with the back of his hand and reached for the multitude of controls and switches on the dash. "You think we got enough lights on, Emma?"
Emma looked up from reading her copy of True Romance Quarterly. "Well, it's a dark night. How many lights do you have on now.?"
"Hardly anything at all. I got two Hella 100 watt pencil beams, two 100 watt Don-A-Vee fog lights and two 135 watt PIAA mid-range driving lights. Maybe I ought to put a few more on. Tell me when you think there's enough light, will ya?"
Carl reached over to the dash and flipped a toggle switch. "OK. That's two more Explorer long range pencil beams."
Carl's stubby finger moved another switch to ON. A near-blinding burst of light shot through the inky-black night. "Wow! Those six KC driving lights sure added some power."
Emma rubbed her eyes. "Six? How many lights do we have all total? And why do we have so many different brands of lights?"
"Oh, we have 24 lights all total. And the reason I got all these different kinds is that I got deals on some of 'em and some of 'em I just like real well."
"But why so many?"
"Well, I got a set of lights for most any situation. If I'm goin' slow off road, I have eight lights that illuminate close up and wide. If I'm drivin' on a deserted highway at night, I flip on eight long range pencil beams and eight mid-range driving lights. And every once in a while, I just flip 'em all on and it's like daylight. Here, lemmee show you."
Carl reached over and clicked a whole bank of switches. The entire road and the sides of the road ahead lit up like a football stadium! Dozens of light-crazed bugs made a bee-line for the light show and immediately splattered their tiny brains out against the windshield of The Whale.
A thick layer of dead bug-juice quickly covered the windshield. Carl flicked on the wipers and the bug juice immediately turned into a tapioca-like substance. In a mild state of panic, Carl hit the windshield washers and cleared a visual path.
"Dang, Emma! There's no way you can appreciate these here lights out on a regular road with kamakazi bugs out there in herds. Let's pull off the next dirt road and wander around a bit. Then you'll really see how good these things work. It's been a long time since I did any night time off-roading, anyway, and I never had a chance to try those eight new lights up on top."
A few miles later, Carl saw a likely turn-off and took it. It was a nice little two-track dirt road with a fence on one side and a small stream on the other.
Carl got out and thoroughly cleaned the windshield with a squirt bottle, before the bug juice on the edge of the windshield dried like 3M weatherstripping cement.
Back in the cab, Carl flicked all the lights on and smiled broadly. "Hey, take a look now, Emma. All 24 lights are on and you can see for a mile straight ahead and a hundred yards off to each side of The Whale."
Sure enough, a veritable blaze of intense white light shot out from The Whale and turned the landscape into something that looked like a white sandy beach at high noon on the equator.
Carl drove cautiously at first, then picked up the pace. "Lookee here, Emma. I can go as fast as I want to because I can see even clearer at night with these lights than I can in normal daylight. Ya see, all of the bumps and rocks and sharp edges are clearly outlined."
The speedo read 35, then 40. It inched up to 45, then 50. Emma squirmed nervously on here seat. "Carl? Are you sure you want to go this fast on a back country dirt road at night? There's no telling what might pop on the road."
Carl laughed. "What are you expecting, somebody out here doing some landscaping at nine o'clock at night?"
Just as he said that, a small motorized lawn mower rolled out under the fence and flipped over upside-down and landed in the right hand track of the dirt road.
Carl never had a chance to even touch the brakes, as the mower landed ten feet in front of The Whale. There was a loud clanging sound, followed by a hiss then the unmistakable flap-flap-flap sound of a tire gone flat.
"Ohhh, jeeez! What kind of a crazy nut-case would lose control of a lawn mower this time of night?" Carl's question was answered when he looked over at the sign on the fence. It read: "ILLINOIS STATE HOME FOR THE BEWILDERED".
"Great. Just great! I get a flat tire right next to a nut farm!"
Carl got out started changing the wasted tire. The Hi-Lift jack got the front end up in the air after Carl loosened the lug nuts. He turned the hubcap over and used it like a bowl to hold the lug nuts as he removed them.
Carl pulled on the tire and it didn't want to come off. So he tugged a little harder.
"Emma? Get out here with a flashlight, will ya?"
"Why would you need another light, dear? You already have 24 of them on."
"Just bring the light, woman. I want to get this wheel off before the mosquitoes eat me alive."
Emma brought big six-cell cop flashlight out and aimed it at the wheel, while Carl squatted down and tugged and pulled like a madman.
Suddenly, without warning, the wheel slid off the studs and Carl fell backwards, holding the big 35 inch tire in a near death grip. His butt hit the edge of the hubcap and the lug nuts shot up into the air and landed in the nearby stream with a plink-plink sound.
A string of very caustic Navy curses filled the otherwise still night air.
"What's wrong, dear?"
"Uhh, nothing much. I just flipped all of my lug nuts into that stream over there."
A strange voice came from over the fence. "Yep. Heard 'em hit. And that stream is four, maybe five foot deep."
Emma spun around and shined her light on a man who was leaning on the fence.
"You didn't happen to see a lawn mower come by here, did you?"
Carl shook his head. "As a matter of fact, I did. That's why I'm changing a tire right now. Some nut case must have been mowing the grass at night."
The man gave a dopey looking smile. "Yup. That was me. They let me cut the grass at night. They say it's good therapy."
Carl looked at the sign and then at the man on the fence and put two and three together. "So you're an inmate here, buddy?"
"Well, yup. But they call us guests. Are you having a problem, mister?"
"A real problem! I just knocked all of the lug nuts from my right front wheel into the stream, so how in the pluperfect hell am I gonna put my spare on and get down the road? You need nuts to hold a wheel on, and even crazy people know that."
The man scratched his chin thoughtfully for a moment, then smiled. "Hey mister, why don't you take one lug nut off of each wheel and use it on the right front. That way you still got four lug nuts holding each wheel on, and this give you four to hold the front wheel on. That should be enough to hold you until you get to a gas station."
Carl's jaw hung slack. "Why ... uhh ... yes, that would work. Say, buddy. I don't understand why you're in here. That's a pretty smart trick."
The man continued smiling. "Ohh, I might be crazy, but I ain't stupid.
HEADLINE: THE WANDERERS
SUBHEAD: CARL AND EMMA MEET FOREST GUMP?
BYLINE: BY RICK SIEMAN
We join them now as they're driving The Whale at night, with six lights cutting an arc through the moonless dark. Carl sucked down the last dregs of a warm Vernors ginger ale, took a healthy bite out of a plug of Red Man chewing tobacco, stifled a belch with the back of his hand and reached for the multitude of controls and switches on the dash. "You think we got enough lights on, Emma?"
Emma looked up from reading her copy of True Romance Quarterly. "Well, it's a dark night. How many lights do you have on now.?"
"Hardly anything at all. I got two Hella 100 watt pencil beams, two 100 watt Don-A-Vee fog lights and two 135 watt PIAA mid-range driving lights. Maybe I ought to put a few more on. Tell me when you think there's enough light, will ya?"
Carl reached over to the dash and flipped a toggle switch. "OK. That's two more Explorer long range pencil beams."
Carl's stubby finger moved another switch to ON. A near-blinding burst of light shot through the inky-black night. "Wow! Those six KC driving lights sure added some power."
Emma rubbed her eyes. "Six? How many lights do we have all total? And why do we have so many different brands of lights?"
"Oh, we have 24 lights all total. And the reason I got all these different kinds is that I got deals on some of 'em and some of 'em I just like real well."
"But why so many?"
"Well, I got a set of lights for most any situation. If I'm goin' slow off road, I have eight lights that illuminate close up and wide. If I'm drivin' on a deserted highway at night, I flip on eight long range pencil beams and eight mid-range driving lights. And every once in a while, I just flip 'em all on and it's like daylight. Here, lemmee show you."
Carl reached over and clicked a whole bank of switches. The entire road and the sides of the road ahead lit up like a football stadium! Dozens of light-crazed bugs made a bee-line for the light show and immediately splattered their tiny brains out against the windshield of The Whale.
A thick layer of dead bug-juice quickly covered the windshield. Carl flicked on the wipers and the bug juice immediately turned into a tapioca-like substance. In a mild state of panic, Carl hit the windshield washers and cleared a visual path.
"Dang, Emma! There's no way you can appreciate these here lights out on a regular road with kamakazi bugs out there in herds. Let's pull off the next dirt road and wander around a bit. Then you'll really see how good these things work. It's been a long time since I did any night time off-roading, anyway, and I never had a chance to try those eight new lights up on top."
A few miles later, Carl saw a likely turn-off and took it. It was a nice little two-track dirt road with a fence on one side and a small stream on the other.
Carl got out and thoroughly cleaned the windshield with a squirt bottle, before the bug juice on the edge of the windshield dried like 3M weatherstripping cement.
Back in the cab, Carl flicked all the lights on and smiled broadly. "Hey, take a look now, Emma. All 24 lights are on and you can see for a mile straight ahead and a hundred yards off to each side of The Whale."
Sure enough, a veritable blaze of intense white light shot out from The Whale and turned the landscape into something that looked like a white sandy beach at high noon on the equator.
Carl drove cautiously at first, then picked up the pace. "Lookee here, Emma. I can go as fast as I want to because I can see even clearer at night with these lights than I can in normal daylight. Ya see, all of the bumps and rocks and sharp edges are clearly outlined."
The speedo read 35, then 40. It inched up to 45, then 50. Emma squirmed nervously on here seat. "Carl? Are you sure you want to go this fast on a back country dirt road at night? There's no telling what might pop on the road."
Carl laughed. "What are you expecting, somebody out here doing some landscaping at nine o'clock at night?"
Just as he said that, a small motorized lawn mower rolled out under the fence and flipped over upside-down and landed in the right hand track of the dirt road.
Carl never had a chance to even touch the brakes, as the mower landed ten feet in front of The Whale. There was a loud clanging sound, followed by a hiss then the unmistakable flap-flap-flap sound of a tire gone flat.
"Ohhh, jeeez! What kind of a crazy nut-case would lose control of a lawn mower this time of night?" Carl's question was answered when he looked over at the sign on the fence. It read: "ILLINOIS STATE HOME FOR THE BEWILDERED".
"Great. Just great! I get a flat tire right next to a nut farm!"
Carl got out started changing the wasted tire. The Hi-Lift jack got the front end up in the air after Carl loosened the lug nuts. He turned the hubcap over and used it like a bowl to hold the lug nuts as he removed them.
Carl pulled on the tire and it didn't want to come off. So he tugged a little harder.
"Emma? Get out here with a flashlight, will ya?"
"Why would you need another light, dear? You already have 24 of them on."
"Just bring the light, woman. I want to get this wheel off before the mosquitoes eat me alive."
Emma brought big six-cell cop flashlight out and aimed it at the wheel, while Carl squatted down and tugged and pulled like a madman.
Suddenly, without warning, the wheel slid off the studs and Carl fell backwards, holding the big 35 inch tire in a near death grip. His butt hit the edge of the hubcap and the lug nuts shot up into the air and landed in the nearby stream with a plink-plink sound.
A string of very caustic Navy curses filled the otherwise still night air.
"What's wrong, dear?"
"Uhh, nothing much. I just flipped all of my lug nuts into that stream over there."
A strange voice came from over the fence. "Yep. Heard 'em hit. And that stream is four, maybe five foot deep."
Emma spun around and shined her light on a man who was leaning on the fence.
"You didn't happen to see a lawn mower come by here, did you?"
Carl shook his head. "As a matter of fact, I did. That's why I'm changing a tire right now. Some nut case must have been mowing the grass at night."
The man gave a dopey looking smile. "Yup. That was me. They let me cut the grass at night. They say it's good therapy."
Carl looked at the sign and then at the man on the fence and put two and three together. "So you're an inmate here, buddy?"
"Well, yup. But they call us guests. Are you having a problem, mister?"
"A real problem! I just knocked all of the lug nuts from my right front wheel into the stream, so how in the pluperfect hell am I gonna put my spare on and get down the road? You need nuts to hold a wheel on, and even crazy people know that."
The man scratched his chin thoughtfully for a moment, then smiled. "Hey mister, why don't you take one lug nut off of each wheel and use it on the right front. That way you still got four lug nuts holding each wheel on, and this give you four to hold the front wheel on. That should be enough to hold you until you get to a gas station."
Carl's jaw hung slack. "Why ... uhh ... yes, that would work. Say, buddy. I don't understand why you're in here. That's a pretty smart trick."
The man continued smiling. "Ohh, I might be crazy, but I ain't stupid.