______ 7 ______
I was already wearing my windbreaker and drinking a cup of coffee when Hans abruptly banged on my door at exactly seven thirty the next morning. He was wearing bib overalls with a light grey jacket and his infamous Caterpillar ball cap. He looked exactly as he had the first time I had met him, thirty five years earlier. Now at seventy five years of age and retired he was still active and enjoying life which I was glad to see.
"Mornin' Tim, all set?" Hans asked.
"Morning Hans, You bet!" I said, locking up the condo.
Hans then led me as we went down the three flights of stairs, through the palazzo and out the security gate of the condo. When we reached the parking lot we approached a nineteen seventies Chevy half ton truck which was a faded powder blue in color. I had owned many such old work horses similar to this one over the years, complete with the same assortment of varying sized scrapes, dings and rusted fenders all resulting from a long life of rough service and blatant disregard. Walking toward the passenger's door I also noticed that vehicle had new tires and that the truck was still fitted with ALASKA license plates. After seating ourselves in the cab, Hans started the engine, which from the sound, I identified immediately as GM's little two fifty in-line six cylinder or "Stovebolt Six" as it was often referred to. Hans threw the gearshift into reverse gear and we began to back away from his private parking space.
It doesn't get any simpler than this, I thought as I sipped my coffee. The forty year old truck didn't look like much and it wouldn't go very fast but it was built with such simplicity that anyone could maintain the truck and keep it operational for mere pennies a day. It didn't surprise me that Hans would be driving such a vehicle; the truck was noteworthy for its reliability and was extremely easy to find replacement parts for also. That's the Hans I had always known, no frills just what worked. Ford, Chevy, Dodge, he didn't care as long as it worked.
As we began to pull out of the parking lot Hans pointed to the glistening white lines separating the condo's parking spaces.
"Figured you'd already be out there repainting those stripes Tim" Hans joked, obviously in reference to Andrea Millhouse's crusade at Friday night's condo meeting.
Without mentioning Andrea's name I said "Pretty lady but I wouldn't want to go home to her every night."
"Naw, hell no." Hans said in agreement as we got under way.
It was good to spend some time with the old guy, I thought, as I continued to sip my coffee. Hans and I had worked on many jobs together and to be completely honest, Hans wasn't the easiest guy to work with at times but we had always liked each other and there had been some laughs here and there along the way in our history together too. Today we were going to go play and for guys like Hans and me this meant looking at iron and rubbing elbows with other people that spoke "Truck", as we ourselves did. It was a man's equivalent of going to Nordstrom and probably had held some degree of therapeutic value for men ever since the creation of the wheel. For better or for worse, it was ingrained in us and we couldn't change even if we had wanted to.
"Is that white car, in your parking space, yours Tim?" Hans suddenly asked me now as we drove.
"Yeah, picked it up yesterday for a song and a dance. Used rental car, I'm pretty happy with it Hans." I replied as I drained the last of my coffee.
I then told Hans the whole story of locating the car and then purchasing it.
"I rented one just like it when Susan and I went on our last vacation together. They're nothing fancy but they have a pretty good track record and the gas mileage is insane. Just a little run-about but they're fun to drive, easy to park too." I elaborated.
"Oh, yeah I guess they would be. You knew we lost Stucky the other day didn't you Tim? Neighbor found him slumped over behind the wheel of his car in the driveway." Hans said, changing subjects.
"Yeah I heard about it from Mickey Walsh right before I got on the plane for Vegas, too bad. How old was he?" I asked.
"Eighty one, I think those damn kids killed him with a broken heart, especially that one boy in the pen." Hans said.
Stucky or Burt Silgan, as was his name, had worked with us until his retirement in two thousand five. I felt bad about losing Stucky, he'd always been a gregarious guy to work with and possessed a seemingly endless supply of dry political humor which most of us enjoyed.
"That little gal, Karen, she your girl now, Tim?" Hans asked, changing subjects yet again.
"I'm working on it Hans, got a dinner date lined up with her." I replied, which wasn't actually true...yet.
"Glad to hear it boy, she's a pretty girl." Hans said.
"She's a hard working little shit." I said in earnest.
My phone suddenly pinged, alerting me of a text message then. Taking the phone from the breast pocket of my windbreaker, I swiped the screen to discover that Karen, herself, had just sent me a text message that read "Look at us cowboy!" There was a photo attached with the short text message which depicted Patti, Lisa, Karen and Andrea Millhouse standing abreast and leading four saddled horses directly behind them. The ladies were wearing heavy clothes and smiling widely into the lens of the photographer. Distant mountains and Joshua trees were in the background of the photo along with recently constructed buildings which were made to look like an old authentic western town like the ones seen in countless Hollywood movies. The ladies looked absolutely stunning in the photo and appeared to be enjoying themselves immensely. Obviously they were most likely spending the entire day at a local dude ranch on the outskirts of Salt Lake City someplace and having some girl-time together for which I was glad, as all of them were very hard workers - at least Patti, Lisa, Karen were.
What the fuck is Andrea Millhouse doing there? I wondered.
"She just texted me." I said to Hans, trying to sound as if Karen and I kept in touch routinely.
I quickly texted Karen back then with "AWESOME photo I LOVE it! With Hans looking at trucks See you soon Amiga and hello to the three gunslingers youre with XoXo Have fun!" I included a smiley face emoticon and pushed 'send'.
I felt the truck slow down and as I looked up, Hans bounced the vehicle over a patch of dirt and pulled up to a gas pump at a rather dumpy filling station.