This is my first attempt at a story, and also my submission for the "
A Song from My Story, a Story for My Song
" challenge. Perhaps in a bit of a deviation from the norm, the ballad on which this is based isn't exactly what one would call "romantic," "sensual," or... y'know... "entirely sane." But I hope what I pulled out of this catchy little novelty C&W single will at least be a little humorous.
A special thanks to my delightful and talented beta reader, without whom I could never have gotten this whipped into proper form.
***
Well, the Chev' got stuck and the Ford got stuck,
Got the Chev' unstuck when the Dodge showed up,
But the Dodge got stuck in the tractor rut,
Which eventually pulled out the Ford...
-Corb Lund
Do you ever hear a song on the radio and wonder how, exactly, a songwriter who, to the best of your knowledge, has no connection to you whatsoever manages to write a song that was lifted, with
frightening
fidelity, from your own past?
Yeah, happens every day, right?
So, I was headed to the local home-improvement warehouse maybe two, three days ago to pick up some lumber and hardware, maybe a little paint, and possibly look at some new kitchen cabinets and a new mailbox. And pick up some bug spray.
Oh, and a can of, uh, PVC cement.
Okay,
actually
, my wife and I had been cooped up in the house together for a week and I was just desperate to get.. the... fuck... out.
For a couple of hours, anyway.
So, I'm driving down the road and this great little classic country lick starts playing. I'm a sucker for a great little classic country lick, so I cranked it up. Turns out it was this goofy little novelty song from some Canadian kid, about getting trucks stuck in the mud and the hilarity that ensues.
I almost had to pull over to the side of the road. I was frantic. "How the
hell
did....?" It was
picture
perfect. I mean, the names were different, but otherwise...
I held my breath as the end of the song got closer. Was the little Canuck bastard going to tell the whole sordid
tale
?
He didn't, much to my relief. That was probably for the best. Otherwise, it probably wouldn't be playable on commercial radio.
***
A word of advice: do not
ever
let anyone know that you own tools and are proficient in their use. As soon as your friends and family find out that you know your way around a table saw, torque wrench, soldering iron, or pipe cutter, you will spend the rest of your natural days helping them rewire the flux capacitors on their Mr. Fusions.
If you're handy, man, keep that shit to
yourself.
I hadn't learned that lesson, so on the Saturday in question, I found myself out in the middle of a south Georgia peanut field, underneath a hastily-constructed pole barn, trying to resurrect an Army-surplus generator that my friend Reg had purchased online from some lunatic prepper.
It was at times like this when I was
so glad
that I'd spent my youth helping my old man out in his workshop instead of picking up girls, drinking illicit booze, and holding up drug stores. Who needs to have fun in their youth when they could be learning how to rebuild a lawnmower engine?
Reg intended to use the generator to run tools for his attempt to build a cabin on this sad little plot of dirt. With aspirations of becoming a certified-organic farmer, he was planning to build a small cabin down here, raise high-priced produce, and retire young amongst the gnats and mosquitos.
Of course, I knew Reg - the cabin would be abandoned after it was no more than a foundation in a couple years' time, and the only thing that would ever be planted on this land would be a few sad little tomatoes and possibly a bell pepper or two.
But, in the meantime, I'd use my considerable skill in repairing useless junk to at least give him some light to
not
work by.
I'd gotten there at about 8:30, about twenty minutes ahead of a rain shower that parked itself overhead and looked as though it was planning to stay for the rest of the day. We stayed under the only-slightly-leaky roof of the pole barn and proceeded to dismantle the gennie.
It wasn't a bad morning; I wasn't terribly well-versed in diesel engines, but it didn't seem all that complicated. By eleven, I had the motor running pretty well, but the generator was, disappointingly, not generating. We talked and joked around while I tinkered, drinking beer and telling lies. About noon, our buddy Charles showed up, bearing a fresh sixer and his neverending supply of filthy jokes.
I was just thinking that I had figured out the problem and was trying to figure out a way to fix said problem when the day got suddenly much, much worse.
I'd love to say that it was because I'd accidentally shorted two wires together and we'd all been horribly injured in a freak explosion, but it was actually much worse than that.
Mandy showed up.
Mandy was Reg's sister, and she and I had roughly the same relationship that a mongoose has with a cobra - bitter animosity, tempered with a strong dose of mutual disdain.
I looked up to see her ridiculous little Audi coming up the path leading through the pine trees. She pulled it into the shade at the edge of the clearing and got out, opening an umbrella as she made her way towards the pole barn.
I rolled my eyes and gave a small internal groan before turning my attention back to the part I was trying - unsuccessfully - to remove.
"Hey, sis," said Reg, as she walked up to where he and Charles were standing, watching me fight with the balky piece of equipment.