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Category Archives: Discovery

The Best Job Ever

03 Wednesday Apr 2024

Posted by Chip Hewette in Discovery, Personal Growth

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Tags

cars, creative-writing, family, love, writing

I think I had the best job I ever had in high school.

My single mother worked at a real estate company helmed by a strong and independent woman.  Her name was Sue Miller.  Sue was the force behind Frank Wylie Realty, and had become president of the small company.  My mother and Sue became good friends, and as youngsters, we were often in the office while my mom worked the phones or made appointments or researched home values.  Back then, of course, there were only printed MLS books each week, hardbound phone books, and typewriters.  You had to work in an office, there was no such thing as the internet.  So, while we were there, we had to make ourselves scarce and stay out of trouble.

I made my way to Sue’s office, most of the time.  She had a brown leather chair, button-tufted upholstery, armrests, and a high executive back.  Her desk faced the door, and there were bookshelves behind it with a credenza to the left.  I would sit there, imagine myself as an executive, and occupy myself by sketching planes, cars, and guns.  Sue was a person who had a zeal for life, and in her zeal she made things happen.  One day she bought a plot of useless land on the side of Chapman Highway, with no space for any buildings.  The land rose quickly from the small parking lot, being essentially a hillside, and was covered with trees.  To Sue, it was perfect.  Perfect for a water slide!  The only slide in the area was miles away, and you took Chapman Highway to get to it.  Sue built a water slide with a concrete U-shaped river down the hill, complete with bath houses and refreshment stand, and for a few years managed to enjoy a break-even existence.  We splashed down the hill on rubber mats often, as we had special membership privileges and no ticket cost.

Sue was single, but cared about my sister and me.  We didn’t understand why we were special to her, but were grateful.  The summer before high school, Sue knew I needed to earn money.  She drove up to our home one day, opened her trunk, and presented me with a lawnmower.  She included everything I needed.  And, with all her rental and commercial property, she had plenty of lawns to mow.  I had to mow a couple of rental house yards that were overgrown, with grass at least two feet high.  I had to mow an entire apartment complex yard with a 22-inch mower.  I think that took me three days.  In her own way, she kept track of the yards I mowed, and every week I kept at it.  That summer, I was traveling to Austria on a summer exchange program, and spending money was needed.  Instead of paying me for each yard, when I did it, Sue banked the money on my behalf.  The week before I flew to Austria, she came to our house and gave me $250.  I had never seen so much money.  It made the trip special, having that money to buy souvenirs and food. Wandering around Austria, I watched the trip leader take snapshots with a special camera that interested me. It was small and so perfectly engineered. Right there in Salzburg I was able to buy a Minolta Hi-matic F 35mm camera similar to his Rollei Trip 35 with half of my lawnmowing money, so I could take pictures while on the five-week trip.  That camera I used all through high school, and I still have it today.  I keep in in a safe place, as it is a souvenir of value.

Sue knew I wanted to participate at Webb School on the track team, and took me to Athletic House on Gay Street in downtown Knoxville for special running shoes.  They were white leather, with three green stripes. Webb School colors.  Adidas.  She even took me out to the school track about 25 miles away for me to try the shoes out.  I think now that Sue was a woman who had a gift for parenting, but was not able to participate as most women did, never getting married, but staying home, and caring for us kids.  Sue’s life was different, and exceptional in its genuine sharing of emotion and passion.

She had a Honda Trail 90, that she mounted to her Winnebago RV.  I learned to ride a motorycle on that Honda. I’m not sure my Mom approved, but it was not much bigger than my bicycle.

Sue couldn’t drive a car.  Sue needed a car.  As long as I knew her, she drove a car that everyone wanted, and no one could afford.  A 1972 Cadillac Eldorado convertible.  Gold, with parchment leather upholstery and a white top.  It looked similar to this one.

It had a 500 cubic inch V8 engine, and front wheel drive.  It was amazing.  To Sue, it was transportation.  She never spoke of the car, never bragged about the car, but she drove everywhere in it.

Sue found a house at 3828 Maloney Road way out off Alcoa Highway, with a pool, overlooking the river.  

There, she had a pool table, a big TV with what at the time was unheard of…a Sony Betamax videotape player.  Sue allowed our Sunday School class to have a swimming party at her place.  At Christmas, we were never sure what to expect.  One year she gave me a Winchester .22 rifle, and another year she gave me a stereo system.  There was no end to Sue’s thoughtful generosity.

And, one day, before the school year ended, she rolled up in that big Eldorado, and drove me to a service station.  It was the Cloverleaf Servicenter.   A Union 76 station.  The gentleman who filled the tank knew Sue, and they talked for a while.  I was introduced to Buster, the owner.  We spoke for a few minutes, and then Sue and I drove away.  On the way home, she said “You’ll start work there on Monday.”

I was thrilled.  Working at a service station?  The young man who for years had drawn racing cars.  The young man who had attempted to disassemble a junkyard Ford V8 engine that my mom gave me to learn on when I was ten years old.  Now, I would be working for real, on cars and trucks.  And making money!

So many memories of that first job flood my mind.  Pumping gas, washing windshields, checking oil, and inflating tires was my main job.  It was a full service station, and we did not permit self service.  Buster was a great boss, and the co-owner Kenneth Cunningham was a superb mentor.  People in the neighborhood drove up regularly, and I learned many by name.  Some wanted a small amount of fuel, while others were “fill’er up!”  Most of the time, they said “put it on my account” and I would write down the amount on a small pad with carbon paper between leaves of paper, then put them in the cash register.  Most people paid with cash.  A few people used a credit card, and we had to “run” the card through the impression machine with the loud rackity-rack sound of the sliding bar.  I stayed busy on the front.  I got to where I could dispense a dollar amount of fuel just by listening to the pump meter click.  People would worry that I wasn’t watching, but I could nail getting some dollar amount just counting the clicks of the ten cent wheel.

Our pumps looked like this, and the price per gallon setting didn’t have a dollar quantity!

There were a few memorable characters that came often.  One was a University of Tennessee professor named Bill.  He had the beard, the moustache, the wire-frame glasses, and the attitude.  He bought the first Mazda rotary engine RX-7 we had ever seen, and I managed to spill a bit of gas from the nozzle onto the paint.  I quickly grabbed my red rag from my back pocket, and proceeded to smear oil from the dirty rag onto the paint as I attempted to wipe the gas away.  He said “go be nice to someone else.”

Another frequent customer was “Maypop.”  He was a nice older man, slow moving, and often wore a summer straw hat like a golfer might wear.  He slowed to a stop, asked for gas, and then talked for a long while with Buster.  He always moved with that body motion that suggested he might fall over if he didn’t get his weight centered over each leg, kind of a side to side rocking step.  I asked Buster why we called him “Maypop.”  Buster said that for many years he would drive in on tires that were well worn out, that “may pop” at any moment.  He never wanted to buy tires, so Buster gave him that nickname to remind him of his potential misfortune.  I think I did actually change his tires one day, though.

Another car that one couldn’t miss would slowly creep through the lot to the pumps.  It was so low to the ground, essentially riding on the frame, because its owner kept putting newspapers in the car.  Kelly was a sickly man, pale and white, with long greasy grey hair, pronounced prescription glasses and a pot belly.  He was supposedly a Knoxville newspaper delivery man, and had a route nearby.  Having been a delivery boy some years ago, I recognized the bundles of newspapers in Kelly’s car.  What I didn’t understand is why Kelly kept adding bundles and bundles and bundles to the interior.  The entire back seat was filled to the roof with newspapers.  The front passenger seat was nearly filled.  The trunk was full.  Kelly had only a small space in which to drive.  He was a regular customer, but couldn’t afford much gas.  His car would slowly meander away, down the dead-end street, and I would shake my head in disbelief.  His car would never go over about 10 mph, as heavy as it was.

Many days we had a car drive in, get a little gas, and ask for directions to Interstate 81.  It was so frequent, that we had a speech prepared with the exact mileages to the interchange.  For whatever reason, back then, people without GPS and maps just navigated by feel, and since downtown Knoxville had “Malfunction Junction” of I-40 and I-75, people found themselves on I-75 N trying to get to I-81 N.  We would turn them around, and thank them for stopping by.

Besides working on the front, I did get to work on cars.  Oil changes were commonly required, in those years, and we had a lot of basic maintenance business.  Back then, we had three or four oil filters that covered essentially every cary.  Fram.  PH8 for Ford.  PH43A for Chrysler.  PH30 for GM.  Our parts supplier kept the stock room rack full every week.  I learned to put the car on the rack, “dog it” with the lifting bars, lift it up, drain the oil, replace the filter, and grease the suspension fittings and U-joints.  I also checked the rear axle fluid level.  Back on the ground, I put in the typical five quarts of oil.  Depending on the customer’s budget, we would use Union 76 oil having gold “Super” or red “Premium” or blue “heavy duty” colors.  Some customers wanted Kendall oil, thought to be even higher quality, which came in a black can.  Of course, these were waxed paper containers, with metal disks at top and bottom, and we had to use the oil spout that pierced the top of the can to get the oil into the engine. 

I also learned how to change tires.  Here, I would bring the car in, get it up on the lift, remove all four wheels from the car, dismount the old tires, mount the new tires, balance the tires, and reinstall them on the car.  My personal record was 45 minutes to do four tires.  Back then, the tires were called “bias ply” tires, and were often sized by width and wheel diameter.  F78-14 was a tire for a typical sedan, and muscle cars had tires like a G70-14.

Summers at Cloverleaf were hard work, and it was hot.  Buster had me there from 10 am to 7 pm, every day.  On Saturday, we had to clean the station.  Everything.  We used a solvent called Varsol to mop the concrete shop floors.  I sometimes dampened a red rag with Varsol, as it was useful in cleaning tools.  But, one day early in my career I kept that Varsol rag in my back pocket all day.  The next day I had a chemical burn on my left cheek.  It was not a good day.

Today if we look up the safety info, we can see why that skin burned!  

I wiped down all the sockets and wrenches to get rid of the oil film.  I stocked the oil and filters and wipers and tires and belts.  I hosed out the restrooms, which were paneled in what looked like Tennessee marble stone tiles from floor to six feet up.  And, I hosed down the entire asphalt parking lot, moving every single pebble, rock, gum wrapper, leaf, or trash into the storm sewer at the north end of the lot.  I was out in the sun for hours.

At lunch, I would retreat into the fourth shop bay where no one could see me.  There, I would eat my lunch, that my mom packed.  I don’t know how I ate all the food she packed, but I did.  Usually each day I ate four sandwiches and a thermos container of bean soup.  I couldn’t eat four sandwiches today if I spaced them out over breakfast lunch and dinner.  But, I was worn out and growing and needed calories.  I’m glad she made them for me.  I’d supplement my lunch with a couple cans of Coke from the machine out in the shed, and maybe a pack of peanut butter crackers too.  I worked.

Back in the shop, Jack worked too.  He was not a person that Buster wanted in front of customers.  He was a shorter man, somewhat broad of chest and hip, and his skin was stained a permanent brown from oil and grease.  He didn’t talk, as much as he grunted.  His teeth were rotting away, and his unkempt hair was filled with grease as he often ran his dirty hands through the long hair to keep it out of his eyes.  His uniform shirts were blue, stained with oil.  But, for those really challenging repairs, Jack was the man.  He replaced the lifters in my 1966 Mustang 289 V8 engine one week, doing a complete valve job as well, and the car ran like a rocket afterwards.  Jack was nice, but a person you just didn’t see that often.

In the front three bays, Carl worked with me.  Carl was a very slim man, with short-cropped hair having grey and black colors.  His face was sagging, wrinkled a bit, and his teeth were stained with the nicotine from the cigarette dangling from his mouth.  His uniform was spotless, and he kept it so by thinking carefully about where to place his body around the work.  Often he would drape a red shop rag on the floor before kneeling on that spot, to keep his pants clean.  Carl balanced pumping gas and general maintenance tasks.

Kenneth usually worked in the middle bay.  He was the brains of the operation and a co-owner.  Any tune up most often required Kenneth’s expertise.  He could operate the “Sun machine” and figure out just what to replace from the curious signals shown on the screen.  Each cylinder gave a flickering blue line, and he could tell if the car needed points, condenser, plugs, wires, or everything.

He knew everything there was to know about carburetors, and I watched him rebuild them without looking at the parts, just working from feel.  Every once in a while a car came in that couldn’t charge its own battery, and Kenneth would take the alternator and regulator down to Knoxville Generator where he rebuilt those.   He was gregarious, loved to speak to anyone with a story or two to share, and made the entire operation pleasant.  His catch phrase was “I’ll tell you what…” which he always followed with some humorous wisdom.  He chewed a little tobacco, drank Cokes and ate peanut butter crackers incessantly, and made sure I was busy.  There is an episode of Andy Griffith featuring Gomer Pyle as the talkative grease monkey, and cars gathering all around the shop for repair work.  Our back lot was filled with broken cars because people liked talking to Kenneth, and trusted him to do the right thing.  He was our Gomer Pyle.  His wife Kathy worked in the station office, doing the books.  His son joined us also, as he grew up.

Buster was the owner, the driving force, and the decision maker.  He was about six feet tall, a bit overweight, balding with white short hair, and I never saw him without a plug of Red Man tobacco in his cheek and a fresh bag in his hip pocket.  He wiped his sweat off his head often with a dirty shop towel, and kept the shop clean and neat.  He drove the red Ford wrecker, picking up all sorts of vehicles needing our repairs.  He was a WW2 veteran, and told me that he drove the landing craft to the beach and back in the Pacific theater.  One battle he made it back and forth five times.  He also relished in the Navy tradition of crossing the equator or date line, and hazing the sailors who had never crossed with truly gross and disturbing materials.  Buster was the boss to fear, but he was really a soft soul.  He had a buxom blonde girlfriend, without whom he would have been lost.

For about three summers and on Saturdays throughout the school year, I was at Cloverleaf. Every day was routine and different, all at the same time.  I learned a lot about cars.  I learned how to work.  But mostly, I learned about people.  The coworkers and clients each brought such different life stories to me, I couldn’t help but be fascinated.  I realized that I would enjoy working in the car industry, but probably not at a service station.  But, I still have one shirt from those days, hanging in my attic, reminding me of what hard work really is.  You can see where I tore the long sleeves away during the hot summer.

My memories of a classic full service gas station are obliterated as I look at the place today.  It’s the same building, in the same place, but it has been destroyed by the ever-changing world we live in.  The bathroom doors on the side wall are still there…the office windows and front door, and the four bays remain.  But, my station is gone. 

I’ll never forget the day Sue took me here for the interview with Buster, and how her relationships with people were so valuable.  Thankfully lessons from my years at Cloverleaf remain in my heart and head.  I think I’d still like to work there today…if only it were as it was then.

The Old Brown Hat

19 Tuesday Dec 2023

Posted by Chip Hewette in Discovery, Fitness

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Tags

Fitness, pets

“Come on, Zeus!” he exclaimed. ”Let’s take a truck ride!”

Zeus always wanted to go on truck rides. It was his favorite thing to do. Well, besides sleeping next to the fire. The fire helped his aging hips. But a truck ride? Time to go!

Zeus bounded to the door, tongue out, with that excited in and out breath. 

“Wait just a minute, old friend,” he begged. ”I forgot my phone. As usual. Where did I leave that?”

With a press of the Apple Watch iPhone icon, the phone chirped incessantly. It was up in the office. Or maybe the master bedroom. He could never be sure. His creaking knees groaned as he trudged up the fourteen steps. Again.

“I can’t wait to retire!” he muttered to no one in particular. ”Move to a new house. With no more steps. Nary a one!”

The phone was on the bed, where he had laid it when he laced on his running shoes. They were running shoes. They just didn’t do much running anymore. Asics. He’d worn them for years. These were blue, with orange trim. Running shoes, but good for walking Zeus.

With shoes on, he slipped on a saddle-tan Carhartt jacket, with the blue fabric insulation. In the pockets he found leather gloves. Taking a step towards the front door, he stopped, turned, and went back to the closet. There, on the shelf, was his old brown hat. As cold as the day had turned out to be, he grabbed it. It fit him well, after so many years. In the cool December afternoon, the hat would be nice.

“Let’s go, big boy!” With that, he opened the door to the truck. Zeus looked at him, and cocked his head sideways just enough. ”Okay, okay, I’ll help you up.”

Zeus was about 85 pounds. It depended on the season, and how much exercise they had in the cold Virginia winters or hot humid summers. Zeus was a GSD. Being a GSD, he had that strong sense of duty, of purpose, and was so very bright. Being a family pet seemed almost a waste of such innate character and talent, but for Zeus, being that pet became his duty. He was exceptional as a pet. And, now, after twelve years together, with a touch of typical arthritis, Zeus needed that life of ease.

He folded the single seat up, making a low spot for Zeus to get into the truck. Zeus put his front paws on the truck floor, and looked back.

“I’ll lift you up the rest of the way…hang on.” And, with his long arms, he reached down for Zeus’s back legs and boosted him up on the floor. Zeus bounded up on the double seat, covered with his favorite old blanket, and nearly grinned.

He eased the truck forward, over the big curb at the end of the drive. With the heavy duty suspension of a three-quarter ton truck, every bump jarred the driver and passengers like a linebacker smashing into a running back. He had wanted the heavy duty truck, for towing, but of late, there was little towing to do.

In the mid-afternoon traffic, he found his way to that second-hand sporting goods store. He needed to buy covers for his set of golf club irons to protect them from banging together as they jostled in the bag as the cart careened around the cart paths.

“Wait here, Zeus,” he asked. ”I’m just going to the store for a minute. I’ll open the sunroof for you, just enough.” Zeus followed him every step of the way, as he swung around the corner of the parking lot and into the store.

There, while looking for the covers, he chanced to look at the rack of used putters. He already had three putters, but none of them worked very well. It was probably the putter, he told himself.

He spotted a putter with a white double stripe, and a white half circle. It caught his eye, because it was so familiar. Turning the Ping putter over, he saw the word “Craz-E.”

 That’s why it was so familiar, it was the putter he wanted back when Craz-E The Big Brown Dog was his true and best friend. Crazy as the dog was, he was named Craz-E, on the AKC paperwork. Craz-E would never be forgotten, but Zeus’s friendship was special. His love eased the pain of loss.

The putter looked in good condition. He put a few balls on the filthy blue-grey industrial carpet, and tapped them towards the treadmills gathering dust. The soft face insert made a muted sound, and the balls rolled true and stopped at the about the same distance away. The barcoded price was $49.99. eBay pricing on similar putters was at least $75, so he reasoned it was a good deal.

He waited for the clerk to finish regaling the customer ahead of him with stories of massive 390 yard drives at Top Golf. It was his baseball athleticism, the clerk said, but he wanted some day to be a golfer, after his college baseball was over. The older gentleman smiled as he paid for a putter. His choice was a classic brass blade, with no alignment features, weighting, or shaft curves. Just a putter. Like they used in the 1930s. The man realized he was delaying another sale, and said a quick goodbye to the young man.

He laid the Ping putter up on the counter, where the scanner could see the bar code. It struck him as somewhat funny that two older men had purchased putters within minutes of each other. One with technology. One without. He wondered who would enjoy the next round of golf more.

“I’m back, young fellow,” he smiled at Zeus. ”Let’s find our way somewhere different for a walk.” He looked at his iPhone, and saw that they were near a local university. Perfect. Zeus hadn’t been to this university ever, and that would give him something to enjoy.

The university was a place he frequented years ago. Every couple of weeks, his workout program would meet there, and struggle to complete exercises and run around the campus. The hilly terrain and sidewalks made for perfect exercise torture, by the program leader who insisted he was doing his best for the team. He parked at the same parking lot as they met at 0545 those years ago, and grabbed the leash.

“Come on Zeus! Let’s walk around the lake. It’s around here somewhere.” Zeus clambered down from the seat, to the floor, and finally to the asphalt. His weight made it hard on the joints, and yet he remained young at heart. With a snap of the leash on his collar, Zeus bounded ahead.

“Let’s go this way” he asked Zeus. Without hearing, or without noting that he heard, Zeus made a straight line at nearly a jogging pace towards the pine needle-covered yard under the tall trees. He realized that his trip to the store must have taken longer than he thought, but Zeus managed to be a good boy even so.

Zeus was always a good boy. He didn’t say much, didn’t do much, but was always there. He never complained. He never caused any trouble. Except when there was occasion to dig in the back yard. For whatever reason, the soft earth in the spring time created a digging frenzy. He never knew what Zeus was seeking. But, with a wet towel, the big feet were soon clean enough and Zeus plopped down for a rest inside. He decided Zeuss was still a good boy.

Down the path from the parking lot he went. Zeus wandered from scent to scent. Trying to get exercise was hard, with the starts and stops, but it was Zeus’s time too. He looked at the signs on the campus, trying to remember where the path to the lake was. In a few hundred yards, he saw a marker pointing to the famous lake, and turned left there.

It was a lake like no other lake. In the olden days, the young women and young men resided on opposite sides of the lake. Somehow he didn’t think that stopped much of anything from happening, but it doubtless was a reassuring admission counselor commentary as parents considered sending their precious teenager to college there. Nowadays, the lake was a focal point, and with good reason. It was beautiful, just big enough, and just small enough. He could walk around the lake and feel like he had done something good for his health.

Zeus padded along beside him, on the asphalt that still looked new. Before, it was a dirt trail, some years ago, but with the money of this institute of higher learning, paving it was only a matter of time. He walked along the perimeter, heading towards the bridge.

There, nearly at the far end of the lake was the bridge. It was a unique bridge, with an island in its middle. A gazebo at the edge of the island sheltered those who paused to take in the view. Or, met for reasons only young college kids would understand. Zeus turned onto the bridge, as if he had been there before. In a few steps, he and Zeus were at the island.

“Hey, Zeus…let’s get your picture!” Zeus was always having his picture made. He was used to it, by now. Almost on automatic, Zeus found a spot where he could be seen. He sat, and waited.

In the setting sun, the lighting was just perfect. He asked Zeus to stay, and arranged the leash just so. The leash was always in the picture, and he hated that. On the island, he decided to take the leash off. Zeus wouldn’t go anywhere. He was a good boy. He backed up, away from Zeus who was sitting near the gazebo, trying to find just the right spot for a portrait. The sun was coming from the southwest, and there was only a few moments of that golden glow left. Zeus looked at him, but just when he was ready to take the picture, Zeus turned his head.

“Come on Zeus! Look at me. Look right here. Here, boy!”

Zeus turned to face the iPhone, but quickly turned away. He felt exasperated, but was used to it. Zeus looked back at him, and the shot was perfect. Until it wasn’t.

“Zeus!” he shouted. ”Zeus!”

Whether or not Zeus heard him, he couldn’t be sure. He was sure of one thing…Zeus could still run! In a flash, Zeus had leapt up, turned left, and bounded away across the bridge at a full gallop.

“Zeus!” He grabbed the leash and fumbled with his phone, trying not to drop it. Looking down at the Carhartt jacket he stuffed the iPhone in the interior pocket. and coiled the leash. The Asics running shoes were suddenly very appropriate, as he chased after Zeus.

Dashing as fast as his arthritic knees would allow, he made his way across the bridge towards the wooded shoreline. Coming around the gazebo, another walker was heading towards him, and he had to swerve to avoid a bone-crushing crash. At the same moment, a cold gust of wind swirled across the lake, and his hat flew off. Right into the dark brown water. His hat!

“Zeus!” he yelled. Zeus was still running, headed into the woods. With the setting sun, in the dark woods, Zeus’s deep black and tan coat was perfectly camouflaged. He couldn’t see where Zeus was. And, in that instant, he knew he couldn’t save the hat. Glancing back, he saw it slowly filling with water like a canoe under the rapids of the James River. His hat!

With pounding feet, he kept after Zeus. A branch from a tree had fallen across the path, and he nearly bought the farm, stumbling and leaping and pirouetting in mid-air just to stay upright. There! To his right, up the hill, he saw the familiar bushy tail heading over the top step.

He remembered these steps. They weren’t really steps, more like railroad ties placed randomly up the hillside. No way to just run up them, he had to look at each step carefully, to avoid crashing into the wooden beams. He hated the steps in the days of his fitness program, and with Zeus out of sight again, he hated them more. If only he had stayed in shape!

At the top of the steps he paused to scan for Zeus. There, right on the edge of the path, Zeus stood. His gaze was up, his teeth were visible, and he uttered a low growl. What in the world?

He slowly walked towards Zeus, doing his best impression of a Green Beret soldier creeping up on the enemy. Up in the tree he could see a dark shape. It was pretty far up the tree. Somewhat rounded in shape, in the body.

“Zeus” he whispered. ”What are you chasing?”

Zeus didn’t look away from the shape in the tree. He kept growling, just loud enough to be heard. The shape moved, and the tree bark screeched in response, as little bits of bark fell to the ground.

“Zeus…it’s a bear!” he hissed. ”Let’s get out of here!”

Sure enough, up in the tree was a small black bear. Probably a cub. Probably one of a few cubs. He didn’t want to stick around to meet the mother. Even with Zeus.

“Zeus…let’s go!” he whispered. ”Come on, boy! Let’s go!”

Looking back, Zeus realized he had done his job. He ambled back, keeping a wary eye upwards, but soon took his position beside his somewhat amazed father.

“Zeus…let’s get to the truck.” And, with the snap of the leash on the collar, they were off. Walking quickly away from the wooded area near the lake, they made their way along a service path and around a building. There, just ahead, was the truck, dimly lit under a parking lot light.

With the push of the key fob, the truck lit up and the doors unlocked. Zeus pulled ahead, to the back door, waiting for it to be opened.  He reached down to help Zeus into the truck, but to his surprise, Zeus took one leap up and sat proudly on the back seat. His eyes were bright. His tongue was out. His breath was quick, in and out, and his excitement was noticeable.

“Good boy, Zeus!” he smiled. ”You sure showed him who is boss!” Zeus beamed. ”Don’t ever do that again!”

He walked around to the driver’s door. Something was wrong. Something was missing. His hat! His old brown hat. No doubt by now it was at the bottom of the lake. There were a lot of memories with that hat. What had it been, thirty years? Maybe longer? He remembered wearing it so long ago, with his brown leather jacket, as he mimicked Indiana Jones at a Sunday School costume party. My goodness, he thought. That was a long, long time ago.

The big V8 rumbled to life, and he flicked on the fog lights for extra visibility. Out of the university parking lot, and onto the road to the river, he eased the truck carefully along. Traffic was heavy, at the end of the day, and so many people were out and about for Christmas shopping.

He looked in the rear view mirror, and saw Zeus. Instead of sitting up, like he most often did, Zeus was laying across the seat, nestled in his old blanket, asleep. What a dog, he thought. Twelve years old, and chasing a bear cub up a tree!

He rubbed his thinning hair. It was not styled quite right, after wearing a hat and then running with all his might to find the dog. He smoothed the mix of brown and grey strands out of his eyes, and tried to comb them back with his open fingers as he stared in the mirror, stopped at the red light. He didn’t like the grey. It made him feel really old. 

He heard Zeus from the back seat. It was one of those soft barks, heard in a dog’s dream. No doubt he was barking at the bear again, dreaming of being young again, and full of life. If only dreams could come true.

He thought back to the costume party, when he was young. There, he had dressed like a hero, and all it took to complete the look was that old brown hat. With a smile, he knew what tomorrow’s adventure would be. Shopping. With Zeus. For a new brown hat.

Can A Trip Take Forty Years?

15 Friday Dec 2023

Posted by Chip Hewette in Discovery

≈ Comments Off on Can A Trip Take Forty Years?

Tags

air-travel, airports, travel, travel-tips, vacation

The Big White Truck cruised slowly across town on I-64 to the airport. It was a cold morning, and the heated seats and steering wheel felt strangely good to this older gentleman. No need for speed, as I had plenty of time to make the direct flight from Richmond to Detroit. 

The garage spaces challenged my parking ability, as usual. With four doors, the truck length makes turns and fitting between the lines a chore. I traipsed from the North Garage to the TSA checkpoint with my new OGIO backpack and inexpensive hardshell baggage. Thankfully I was Pre-Check and was warmly greeted by an associate whose fashion choices made me wonder.

At the gate, I realized that I had forgotten to put a luggage tag on the carry-on. At the desk I grabbed one of those paper tags and reached into my shirt for a pen. No luck. I went to the backpack as I recalled setting it up for the trip, putting my two white Shell V-Power Gasoline pens from the recent trade show in those little loops in the front pocket. The ink didn’t flow at first, as I had never used them, but soon enough I had scribbled my info on the tag and returned the pen to its proper place.

The trip up to Detroit was uneventful. After arriving, my colleagues and I worked for a few hours fine-tuning the presentation to a committee the next day, then went to dinner at the usual place. Andiamo’s is one of those go-to restaurants, where service is far above the norm and the plates are flavorful. Being somewhat famous as the restaurant where Jimmy Hoffa enjoyed his last meal, we hoped for the best. Although the drinks and wine were oh so fine, at least one entree was lacking. Three average sized shrimp in a shallow bowl of pasta? For $36? It must be inflation causing deflation in my portion size.

The next day, we gathered for the discussion. Four hours. It was a long discussion. Good thing we had those Powerpoint slides as talking points. Thankfully we learned more than we hoped from the committee members, and we didn’t have to talk through too much data. Test data is boring. But it is what we often do — try new ideas, perform tests, and report on the results. We left the office and headed to a restaurant called Tria halfway to the airport. Uber drivers are everywhere in Detroit, and we had practically no time to get down from the 11th floor to the pickup point where a person speaking very little English met us. ”Five stars?” he questioned as he dropped us off. Clearly he wanted to keep his Uber score high.

With so much time to kill, we logged onto a Webex where we listened to a VP share good financial news for 2023. Dinner followed, and this meal was both filling and satisfying. Not wanting to miss the only direct flight home, another Uber driver was summoned. Unlike the first, this fellow was as gregarious as you can be. We learned all sorts of facts about him, from vital statistics, family members, his pet dog name, family hometown, workplaces, favorite combat aircraft, and all in twelve miles. 

The airport came into view, and I let him know we needed McNamara terminal for Delta. To me, this is the new terminal. To our young Uber driver, it was the ancient building that needed a renovation. Rolling up to the departure lane, I remembered my first trip to DTW, some forty years ago. Had I been visiting Detroit for forty years? The Israelites wandered in the wilderness forty years…

We made it through the TSA checkpoint, passing our bags through new CT scanners. I was selected for additional screening and stood in the little scanner where the TSA looked for who knows what. We trundled across the A Concourse and headed down to the tunnel. There, in a mesmerizing mix of muted colors with soft spa music playing, the trip began to catch up to me. In the dark tunnel, with no perspective, I slipped into a fog of “where am I?” Soon enough the escalator beckoned, and we made our way to the end of B Concourse, to await the direct flight home to Richmond. Convenient to our gate was an airport lounge, and I broke out the credit card to buy drinks for us all.

With the flight boarding at 8:50 pm, and arriving in Richmond at 11:09 pm, I wondered how I’d feel the next day. Boarding was typical chaos, with complications from a wheelchair patron being settled at the rear. It was another tiny jet, and as I walked hunched over down the aisle through first class, I stopped in some surprise. In about the third row, all by herself, there she was. What was she doing on a flight to Richmond? Her long brown hair fell across her shoulders, her blazer covered a festive red sweater, and her woolen pants had the sharp crease a Marine Drill Instructor would approve. She was staring into a tablet, through classic gold-rimmed glasses, as she sipped on pre-flight coffee. She was beautiful.

“Sir…sir…you’ll have to keep moving” jostled the flight attendant. I must have been just standing in the aisle, and as I began moving again my eyes couldn’t leave her. Hearing the flight attendant, she looked up. Her eyes met mine.

“I’m sorry,” I stammered. ”I thought you were someone I knew…” She smiled, and returned to her reading.

I hadn’t thought about her in so long. What had it been, forty years? I think it has been forty years. Forty years ago it all started.

 I trudged my way down the narrow aisle, and settled into exit row aisle 13A, hoping my seat mate would be a reasonable conversationalist. No such luck, and I set up the iPad to watch a few downloaded videos. Nothing like watching Matt’s Off-Road Recovery pull a broken Jeep out of the wilderness, viewing a self-defense expert commentary on how to best protect myself from bad guys, and learning all about “The Golden Ratio” which describes a mathematical relationship defining beauty in nature and architecture.

I was glad when the videos stopped playing. We were finally in Knoxville. As people started gathering their carry-ons, I reached down for mine. The hard plastic grip of the handle loop felt familiar, and I brought the Samsonite attache case to my lap. I flipped the two latches and opened the case, to put away my newspaper and the Car and Driver magazine I had purchased at the gift shop. I laughed, silently, as I saw the unused pad of engineering graph paper and my pocket protector there in the case. A few file folders were in the top section, where I had put my itinerary and passes and luggage claim. 

It was a good trip. It was my first trip to Detroit. I couldn’t believe my boss had asked me to join him there, as it was quite literally the third day on my first job. January 2, 1984 I started working as an engineer. My excitement over being employed was magnified by visiting Detroit and Ford Motor Company the very next week. We were to visit the engineer at Ford to discuss the new EGR valve design, which of course I had no idea what that was. My boss, a Hokie from Virginia Tech, just knew I would benefit from being there and listening to the conversations.

In the meeting, which lasted four hours, I met the Ford product engineers, and listened as they outlined their goals. We sketched a few concepts out, and even came up with a new name for the EGR valve, the PFE. I just sat there, trying to be as helpful as possible, and not to screw anything up. My boss and our local OEM representative walked out with me at the end of the long day, and I stopped in amazement. There, covering everything, was six inches of snow. In the time we had been inside the massive EEE building, with nary a window to look out, Detroit weather had moved in and dumped six inches of snow. It worried me a bit, but to our local OEM engineer, it was another day in paradise. He swept the snow off the Taurus and we jumped in for the short ride to the airport.

Now that we were back in Knoxville, I shuffled off the plane with the rest of the business travelers. My wool suit, a muted grey Glen plaid, was more wrinkled than when I put it on earlier in the morning. I straightened up my tie and draped my London Fog trench coat over my arm. The pilot and stewardesses thanked me for flying Delta, and I headed out to the terminal. It took only a few minutes to find my way up the deep red brick terminal hallway, to the baggage claim escalator. Boy was I glad to be home.

“Chip! Chip!” came a familiar voice. I looked up, and there she was. Her long brown hair bounced off her shoulders as she hurried my way, arms wide, with a huge smile. She hugged me for what seemed like five minutes, and I couldn’t return the gesture with my trench coat on one arm and the Samsonite in the other. With a kiss, she released me and exclaimed “You’re home!”

“Suzanne…what in the world…why…how…it is so good to see you…but…”

“I couldn’t let you come home without someone to meet you! It’s a special occasion, your first business trip. In your life! How was it? What did you do? What happened to your new shoes?”

I looked down at my new Alden tassel loafers. I had purchased them for the job interiew a few weeks back, at M.S. McClellan’s. They were perfect for the look, I thought…young hard-charging engineer with a sense of style. I put them on my well-abused MasterCard. At this moment, they were covered with what looked like a sugary white crust, from the soles halfway up the formerly black leather.

“I guess…yes…it was snowing…and we had to dash out of the car at the airport…I must have stepped into the slush from the road right where the snow plow pushed it.”

“Snowing? You’re kidding?”

“No, it just slammed the city as we were in our meeting. Had no idea ’til we walked out to the car.”

“Let’s go get your luggage and then I have a surprise for you.”

We hurried down the escalator to the stainless steel sorter, and found my bag. It too was a bit weathered, from being out on the tarmac in the snow. We walked towards the garage to my car.

“Wait, how’d you get here?” I inquired.

“My sister was kind enough to bring me here, so we could drive back together.” Suzanne related. ”She was going back to Straw Plains anyway, so this wasn’t too much out of her way.”

I dropped the suitcase and attache at the bumper, and opened the door for her. The faded grey paint of my 1970 Volvo contrasted with the shiny red vinyl interior, which the previous owner had recently upgraded. I held the truck lid open with one hand while I dropped the luggage into the compartment…one day I needed to replace those lift springs. But, with a new job, and not much money from my short career as a cook at McDonald’s, those would have to wait.

“Guess where we are going?” Suzanne beamed. ”Guess!”

“I don’t know…McDonalds?” 

“Of course not! You are now an engineer, with a great new job, and a traveling man. We are celebrating!”

“We are?”

“Yes, we are. I’m taking you to the Pioneer House restaurant!”

“You’re kidding!” The Pioneer House was a locally famous log cabin family style restaurant with a great steak.

“If we hurry, we’ll just make it. It’s just down 129 on the left.”

The old Volvo’s six-cylinder engine started, slowly, and I shifted the four-speed into reverse. We made it out of the garage, and down Alcoa Highway to the restaurant. With thirty minutes to spare, we sat at a booth looking across the table. Suzanne was still excited, almost vibrating, and I couldn’t imagine why. We ordered, and soon we had sweet iced tea to enjoy while we waited.

“I can’t wait any longer. I just can’t. Here!” And, with a flourish, Suzanne reached into her hobo style leather purse and pulled out a small gift-wrapped box. It was about eight inches long, not too wide, and only about a half-inch thick. The wrapping paper was a deep crimson, and the bow was a thin golden ribbon, tied in a decorative knot.

“Open it!’ 

I carefully slipped the paper from its tape, and unwrapped what must have been a professional gift wrapping job.

“Just open it!” she smiled again.

There, on the table, was a most beautiful box. The word “Cross” stared at me, in gold leaf, centered in that classic black box. I eased the lid off the box, and there was a silver pen and pencil set, nestled in the tray. I couldn’t believe it. I had always wanted to buy myself a nice set, but had no money for such niceties.

“Look close…right near the clips” she suggested.

To my amazement, there on each instrument was the engraved word “Engineer.” Just that word. In block letters, like a draftsman would write on a blueprint. I took the pen out, and gazed at the word. Tears welled up, as I realized what Suzanne had done. Not only was the gift way out of her budget, but she had confirmed in those engraved words my very identity. I was an engineer. Finally.

“Thanks!” I sniffled. ”Thanks so very much. I can’t wait to wear them at work.”

“You’d better wear them at work. I can’t be dating an engineer who actually uses a pocket protector!”

Thankfully at that moment the waitress arrived with my chopped steak and mashed potato dinner. Suzanne had the chicken-fried steak with green beans. As the last of the light vanished, and the incoming planes roared overhead, we talked and talked. It was good to be home in Knoxville, but it was really good to be an engineer, calling on Ford, way up in Detroit…”

Kawump! My head banged against the window of the plane, and the lights came on. What? Wait! Where was I? The plane engines roared in reverse as we came to a taxi speed and rolled up to the terminal.

There in front of me was the iPad, still suggesting the next downloaded video. My earphones had fallen out during the landing, and I grabbed them to stuff the iPad and phones into my new black OGIO backpack on the floor in front of me. It was a long way down to the backpack, in the exit row legroom, but I managed to snag it. With all the zippers and pockets on this backpack, I couldn’t remember just where everything went. I slipped the iPad into the main compartment, next to that monster Dell workstation I had to carry. I found the zipper of the front organizer pocket and opened it for the earphones. Cramming them into the compartment, I couldn’t help but notice the glint of silver steel. What were those? I wondered. 

Unzipping the pocket a bit more, I saw two pens in those two little loops. My head turned quizzically, as I stared at them. Those were my Shell V-Power pens…brand new…right?

I reached towards them. Slim, bright, silver. Black tips. Cross. I drew one out of the fabric loop and looked at it. Engineer. Block letters. Just like a draftsman would make on a blueprint.

The woman from the plane! Was it her? I put the pen back in the pocket, and rushed to get out of the aircraft. I ran up the entry ramp, and jogged towards the main lobby. Was she here?

I checked the baggage claim area. No one. I rushed out to the arrivals area, hoping she would be waiting on her ride. At nearly midnight, only a few cars and a single airport policeman were there. 

With my head down, I slowly found my way back to The Big White Truck. It took a few minutes, as I couldn’t remember which aisle I had parked. But soon enough I was back on I-64 and headed to Short Pump. Forty years later.

Over The River And Down I-95

26 Thursday Nov 2020

Posted by Chip Hewette in Discovery

≈ Comments Off on Over The River And Down I-95

There’s an old song about going over the river and through the woods to grandmother’s house. I think about it when I travel for the holidays. My bride and I headed south to Charleston SC to see my favorite daughter and her dashing husband for Turkey Day.

At the last minute, my favorite daughter asked if we could bring a Christmas tree with us. Of course! The tree is one of those convenient holiday inventions that fits into a bag, and we happen to have one more than we need. So, Engineer Chip decided to find a way to put the tree in the Lexus RX350 boot.

Everything seemed to go well. The bag, bigger than it needs to be (thanks Amazon), nestled into the hatch area. This of course meant that all the suitcases needed to go into the back seat area. Someone brought only one suitcase. A large one. Purple. Someone else brought only one suitcase. A large one. Black. And, a Wild Dunes athletic gear bag. And a laptop backpack. And a camera bag. And a tripod. And…well, suffice it to say that in this family it is not the woman who brings too much gear.

So there it is, all packed up, and we go to start the car. It’s our first road trip with this SUV. I’m looking forward to the ride. I mash the start button. Nothing. The starter solenoid won’t even engage. Now Engineer Chip has a real problem. The battery voltage had been checked earlier that day, and registered 12.2 vDC. Why did Engineer Chip check? Well, it has been starting slowly the past couple of days. But the battery is dated March 2020, and is a name brand. How can it be bad? Now!

I pulled the battery out, and put it in the 1995 F150 floorboard. The battery dealer closest to me would not touch the battery without paperwork being presented. I couldn’t help but think of every WW2 movie where the good guys are on the train and the bad guys want to see paperwork. What would he recommend? Try the distributor. They are only a few miles away. So off I went. A few miles turned out to be at Ashland Road and Pouncey Tract. But, there, like magic, customer service appeared in the form of a quiet young country man. He took the battery, found it to fail the load test, and brought me a new battery in about three minutes. That’s service. What was written by the manufacturer on the battery label — 24 month free replacement — was just what they honored. No papers!

So, new battery in, we headed south. About 90 minutes behind schedule. On the way, I stopped at a major chicken fast food for fuel. For me. And some high quality premium gas for the RX350. At the counter I stood in line for a few moments, and then waited for my wife’s fresh onion rings and my sandwich order. Standing there I couldn’t help but notice other customers. An older lady walked in. She was wearing those cheap fabric shoes, with a printed pattern that reminded me of a baby room wallpaper, skin tight pants stretched so tight, and a black tentlike blouse. Her freshly colored red hair was pulled back just far enough to see her frown as she walked up to the counter.

“How much is a chicken breast?” she asked.

“What?” replied the truly helpful older woman manning the cash register.

“How much is a chicken breast?” she yelled through her mask. The nice counter clerk replied “$2.41 with tax.”

“I’ll have two mild chicken breasts. And two chicken sandwiches, spicy. And a serving of creamed potatoes with gravy. And beans.”

“What?” asked the helpful counter clerk, as she leaned under the plexigas barrier. “The kitchen is making too much noise.”

The lady repeated her order, with some displeasure, and louder. Having two older people with masks on in a noisy kitchen didn’t help.

The order was placed, and the clerk turned to the kitchen and asked when her mild chicken breasts would be ready. “Nine minutes!” yelled the cook. I’m hearing everything, but no one else seems to be able to. “Nine minutes!” came the call again.

“Ma’am, we don’t have plain chicken breasts right now, it will be a while. Would you like spicy?”

The red-haired customer shook her head as if she had been asked the stupidest question ever. She scowled back and sputtered “No! I have to feed them to a dog!”

So, there on the side of I-95, I saw what this current health crisis has done to us. No one can understand each other through masks. Restaurants are running flat out and can’t keep food prepared. The tension of life seems to create ill will that spills out when people don’t get what they want. Even if the nice lady behind the counter is trying her dead-level best to get you on your way, some customers respond in anger. Anger, plain as day on her face, even behind her cheap sunglasses. Why?

Let’s try to remember that we walk this earth at our peril, and by the grace of God we somehow survive another day. When we face challenges, let’s try to be gracious, to remember that we may not have all the facts. Let’s try to respond with kindness rather than ill will. As the holidays are upon us, let’s try to recall better days, and carry that spirit into these harsh times.

Happy Thanksgiving!

An Evening Downtown…

23 Saturday Mar 2019

Posted by Chip Hewette in Discovery

≈ Comments Off on An Evening Downtown…

I went to an art show yesterday, at the behest of SWMBO (She Who Must Be Obeyed).  For the record, I would never willingly go to an art show, because, well, you  know, artists are, well, different.   It was a pleasant enough experience, once we navigated to a decrepit old warehouse in a forbidden part of town where the prudent gentlemen carry large-caliber firearms just in case.  There, we mingled with the casually-dressed cognoscenti in a space where dozens of visual artworks were displayed.  Wine, cheese, crackers, and crab dip were available for donations to the cause.  Sadly, due to a line of storms that passed through Richmond as the show began, all but emergency lighting was out.  We mingled amongst the patrons with the fading light of day piercing the dirty skylights of the warehouse, bathing the colorful art in a grey hue of blandness.

As the awards for the show were announced, we found our artist friend at his displayed photograph taken in Cuba.  He was dressed in a pair of Birkenstock sandals, over black socks splashed with stripes of color, black pants, black shirt, a grey blouse jacket, and a multicolor scarf knotted around his neck.  His shining silver hair and beard were eclipsed by the smile on his face, as he explained the art behind his work to the passerby.  He had been to Cuba with a group, and his photograph differed markedly from others displayed on a nearby wall.  His image included a building and sidewalk, nothing noteworthy by itself, enhanced with a dreamy ocean background that covered the entire frame.  It was a double image, taken in camera, while there in Cuba, somehow.  Most people would do such work in an image editing software, but he had seen the picture in his mind and captured it real time.  Art.

As the evening light faded, we wandered around the space, looking at all the images there.  Some were very realistic, while others were a challenge to understand.  There was three-dimensional art, as sculpture, diorama, or…I don’t know what…a wall hanging collection with a fan propellor, a wire mesh basket filled with smooth river stones, a piece of driftwood, all mounted on a wooden carved S shape.  There were many paintings with wax as an element, adding some texture to the swaths of color.  There were several paintings of faces, some absolute, some abstract, and some anguished. One piece was of a face, made of colored glass beads, each about the size of a caraway seed.  Seeing the blazing light of my phone which illuminated the colorful beads, the artist excitedly came over to share her joy at being displayed at such a show.  Her smile was brighter than a kid’s on Christmas morning.

Each artist had made a statement for their work, stuck to the wall on a little white foam block.  The words attempted to convey the artist’s intent, feeling, purpose, or meaning.

Screenshot 2019-03-23 at 07.24.22 Looking at the art, then reading the statement, then looking back at the art, one could wonder if they all said the same thing.  To me, each statement and artwork spoke of one force, that of creation, bubbling up and exploding in a frenzy of activity finally captured in the objet d’art.  Each piece seemed to carry with it a passion for expression of emotion, of joy in the ability to create.  Each offered to the viewers a window on a soul that wanders the earth marveling at or mourning what the artist observes.  And each piece showed that this life of wonderment and expression would never stop.

I want to be an artist.

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