NOTEBOOK -- steve marble
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I described my car in painful detail to the guy from the nonprofit
agency.
Brown. Nissan. Sentra. Has a hatchback. Has a ...
“Does it run?
Yeah.
“Tires?”
Oh yeah. Four.
“Mileage?”
I clicked off all six numbers for him.
“Any damage?”
Uh, ouch. Sure, a bit.
Suddenly, I could see it all slipping away. My old car, the one that
seemingly has been falling apart since it rolled off the assembly line in
1987 and first sputtered down the road, rejected by a charity. The final
insult.
The guy told me that not every car in the world is “suitable” to be given
to charity, that he had some people he had to talk with first, see how it
measured up. He’d get back to me. That’s what he said.
I hung up the phone. I envisioned some United Way committee sitting
around a small conference table in a sun-splashed room, doubled up with
laughter as they poured over the description of my car, my feeble
offering.
My car and I have had an uneasy relationship since the start. If it was a
person, I’d say it was that neighborhood punk who’d trip you when you
were running to class, or put a “kick me” sign on your back, or unscrew
the top from the pepper shaker before your salad arrived.
It’s hard to remember when things started going wrong with the car. The
side mirror rattled off one day on a trip to L.A. The glove compartment
-- the entire thing -- fell off one morning on the way to work. The
windshield wipers would flip on when I made a left-hand turn. The armrest
-- one of the few features of creature comfort in the car -- snapped in
half one day, hanging there sadly like ears on a beagle.
At times the car seemed to have a mind of its own. One day it rolled out
into the middle of Harbor Boulevard while I was inside a neighborhood
shop, waiting on a sandwich. I would have been none the wiser had the kid
making my sandwich not glanced up.
“That your car?”
I turned around. The traffic was backed up on Harbor, horns honking,
drivers trying to squeeze past the old Nissan.
Yeah, I said. That would be my car.
Freeways seemed to bring out the rascal in the car. Cruising -- slowly,
as always -- in the traffic one morning, a hubcap shook loose from the
car and went shooting down the freeway like skeet at a firing range,
actually passing my car before it bounced up in the air and slammed down
onto my windshield, cracking it.
One day I gave the car to my son -- passing on the legacy, as it were. I
figured it would get him to school and back and would be such a loathsome
ride that he would never stray very far from home.
It treated him no better. The emergency brake went out, forcing him to
carry a pair of bricks in the trunk to slide behind the wheels so the car
wouldn’t get away from him.
The trunk itself broke one day and would fly open at will. He was on the
high school soccer team and had agreed -- not sure why -- to transport
the soccer balls to practice. But, naturally, they disappeared when the
trunk flew open as he was taking on a particularly nasty speed bump, the
balls bouncing out into an intersection.
One day someone took a rock and finished off the windshield. Ryan said it
was probably the handiwork of surfers in San Clemente who didn’t like
outsiders invading their turf. Me? I think someone just found the car to
be offensive.
And I certainly understood that.
Selling the car was out of the question. A neighbor suggested I give it
to the high school, let the kids in the auto shop class try to make sense
of the thing. But I figured with my daughter just a freshman, I’d have to
live with the knowledge that it was still there in the neighborhood,
lurking. It didn’t seem right.
That’s when the charity idea popped up. Just give it away and hope that
people much wiser and kinder and gentler than I could put it to some
practical use. The car might even be able to redeem itself.
But as I waited for the charity’s car committee to hand down its
decision, I accepted the possibility of defeat, conceded that the car
might get the last laugh after all and be rejected by the charity. My
car, mocking me.
The phone rang on a Saturday morning and a man said that after much
deliberation, they would accept the car. He sounded as if it had been a
tough call -- a hung jury, maybe. He said a guy named Hank would pick it
up the next morning.
I never saw Hank, but by the time I came home from work the next day, it
was gone, the only lingering memory a massive oil stain where it had been
parked.
Acts of charity are fulfilling, cleansing moments when you feel good
about yourself and your ability to help out your brother. Sad to say, I
felt relief. That was all. Pure relief.
* STEVE MARBLE is the managing editor of Times Community News and can be
reached at o7 [email protected] .
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