Sunday
The hot morning sun hit me in the face as I stepped outside the cool hallway of our apartment building in central Hamburg. It was a warm Sunday morning in August and past 25 degrees Celcius already.
We were late, much too late, as we had hurried down the stairs to the street where my yellow BMW Cabriolet was parked at the curb. It was 6:49 to be exact and I had promised my ex, Andreas, to deliver our soon-to-be six-year-old, Miranda, at the marina in Travemünde by eight. I'd woken up a little after half past seven, after having turned off the alarm on my phone an hour earlier, and realized that I had no time for the shower I badly needed. I quickly woke up Miranda, got her dressed and sat her down with one of the müsli bars she likes so much. I know, not the healthiest breakfast, but the fastest. And very popular.
To drive from the city centre of Hamburg to Travemünde in 70 minutes is, give or take, humanly possible, provided there is no construction work or other delays. I was standing behind the car in my blue cut-off jeans, my brown FC St. Pauli hoodie, and my old flip-flops with the remains of chipped-off neon green polish on my toenails, throwing the bags into the trunk as I heard Miranda's high-pitched, innocent voice behind me:
"Mami!
The wheel looks funny!"
I looked at the left front wheel of my beloved BMW, which happened to have a flat tyre.
"Schei
ß
e!"
I yelled, stamping my flip-flop on the pavement so it flew off.
"We're not going to make it in time,
Liebling.
I will have to call
Papi
to tell him that we're late," I said, while simultaneously trying to get hold of the sandal with my toes.
"Will
Papi
be mad at us?" Miranda asked, sounding genuinely worried.
"No,
Schätzchen.
He'll understand," I lied, knowing Andreas well enough to realize that he is the kind of guy who would like to start the yacht voyage to the archipelago of southern Denmark with his daughter and his new girlfriend (ten years younger than me) just in time.
In the pocket of my hoodie, I found the pack with my last two cigarettes and lit one. Then, exhaling smoke, I considered our options and what to tell Andreas. I figured I needed to change the wheel as quickly as possible. Taking a train would take much longer.
And it's not that I was afraid of changing the wheel. I had done it, once, many years ago. But when we, twice, had a flat tyre during our marriage, I happily stepped back and let Andreas do the work. So you could say I was out of practice.
I was looking through the glove compartment trying to find the manual -- the original from the 1970s when my vintage BMW left the factory in Bavaria -- as I heard a man's voice behind me.
"Oh... you have a flat tyre," the voice said.
I turned around and discovered that the deep male voice belonged to an athletic young boy who looked like hardly out of high school. He was dressed in black running shirt, tight shorts and Nike shoes. And very handsome with his harmonic features and curly blond hair.
"Yes. Thanks for the information!" I said, way too unfriendly, and took a greedy hit from my cigarette.
But my harsh tone didn't scare him off.
"Can I help you?" he asked politely.
"Yes. We have to be at the marina in Travemünde in one hour. I don't know if you can change a wheel in one minute," I said sarcastically, blowing out smoke as I spoke.
"Oh. You're going on a sailing trip in this fine weather?" he conversed.
"No.
She
is. I'm just delivering my daughter to my ex-husband and his new girlfriend."
"You're not supposed to say 'she' about somebody if she can hear it,
Mami!"
Miranda corrected me and took a step forward to introduce herself.
"I'm Miranda," she said, and nodded toward the young man, having learned the lesson of not shaking hands in the age of Covid-19.
"I'm Lothar," he nodded back with a smile.
The was a brief silence, which I broke by saying:
"And I'm Sara."
I smiled at the young man for the first time and continued:
"And we are in a hurry. So I would really appreciate it if you would help us with the wheel."
"I would. But you're not going to make it to Travemünde in an hour."
"I know. But then we'll be late. There's nothing to do about it."
"Yes. There is."
"What do you mean?"
I took another drag from my cigarette.
"I could drive you. I have a car."
"What? Here?" I said, exhaling a plume of smoke.
"Right down the street."
He pointed down the cosy street in the heart of the St. Georg neighbourhood where I had taken over my mother's apartment when she passed away in the middle of my divorce. For a second I considered the dangers of getting infected with the Coronavirus by entering the car of a complete stranger. Then I thought of my impatient ex Andreas and jumped at the offer.
"Oh... Thank you... I will pay you of course."
"No need. I have nothing better to do this morning anyway."
"Well... then... thank you. Let me just get the bags."
I put the cigarette between my lips and took our bags from the open trunk of the BMW. As I was locking my car, Lothar grabbed our bags and started walking down the street. Miranda smiled and took my hand as we followed in Lothar's footsteps.
He led us to a dark green, worn-out 1990s Opel Astra, parked riskily in front of a gateway.
"You're from Stade?" I asked, pointing at the STD license plate.
"Yes originally. But I live in Hamburg now."
"Then you need to have your car registered here," I said in a tone that became far more condescending than I wanted it to be.
"I know. I just took it over from my parents this week."
I butted out my half-smoked cigarette and threw it into a waste bin. The moment it dropped, I realized that I had now only one left in my pack.
I helped Miranda into the back seat of the remarkably vacuum-cleaned old Opel and sat down in the front seat on Lothar's right hand side. He asked me for our exact destination, found it on his smartphone and programmed it to show him the way.
"You know... this is so kind of you. Thank you so much for taking us!" I said as he turned the key.
"You're welcome! I'm sorry you have to go in this old wreck instead of your vintage BMW cabriolet. But this is the best I can do," he shrugged.
"We're just so grateful for your help. Aren't we, Miranda?"
"Yes,
Mami.
Do you think we'll be there on time?" my daughter asked from the back seat. I looked at my phone and tried to prepare a good answer.
"If we're lucky," Lothar cut in before I managed to say anything.
"It's a very nice car, your BMW. It must have been expensive," he said in my direction.
"Actually I inherited it a couple of months ago."
"From your parents?"
"No. From a... former... employer."
"Oh. He must have liked your work."
"I guess he did."
"What kind of work was that?"
"Well... I was... a model. For a very short time. Many years ago."