Another busy day for HM's Taxi Service. The Pony has undertaken an endeavor which required a court hearing earlier this month, and a subsequent notice printed in the local newspaper. He thought records were being mailed to him, a form from which he would need at the newspaper. Since almost two weeks had elapsed, with no documents, The Pony decided he should check with the source. A phone call is not his style. So we loaded up the truck and moved to Beverly... WAIT A MINUTE! That was the Beverly Hillbillies. WE loaded up T-Hoe, and headed to the county courthouse.
I was a bit apprehensive. The courthouse is over in Bill-Paying town. It sits in a square of one-way streets. I know my way around. I spent a year on jury duty, you know! But parking is at a premium around the courthouse. There's an annex across the street, with a parking lot behind it. But in case you are extremely unobservant, you know that THE PONY IS ON CRUTCHES with a broken ankle.
"I hope we can find close parking, Pony. If not, I don't know what we'll do. Neither one of us can walk far. I'm pretty sure the street in front of the main entrance is all handicap parking."
"Yeah. And I DO have these crutches. So it shouldn't be a problem."
"IF we can find a space."
I turned onto the two-lane one-way street in front of the courthouse. All the parking spaces were taken. All six or seven of them. WAIT A MINUTE! At the very end of the block. A space was open! I pulled in. Backed up. Straightened T-Hoe. Tried to get closer to the curb. I'm not used to parallel parking on the left side of the road.
Oh, no. Here came a white-haired woman, motioning for me to put the window down. The Pony waved his crutches. And then the woman said,
"You still have about 10 feet, dear. To back up and get out of the crosswalk."
"Oh. Thanks! I couldn't tell how close I was. I don't want to block that car in behind me."
Whew! Close one! Then I had the stress of standing street-side watching for traffic while The Pony flung open T-Hoe's large door, to slither down over the running board and onto his crutches. We made it to the sidewalk. Then headed for the handicap ramp, rather than the 10 wide concrete steps.
SWEET GUMMI MARY! We might as well have been hiking up the switchbacks of Pike's Peak! The concrete handicap ramp zig-zagged. I bet it was 100 feet long. 50 up the first ramp. Double-back, and 50 up the second ramp. Getting into the building required walking by pillars with toe-catchers. The round pillars sat on square concrete bases about 1 inch high. I know, because of course I caught my toe on one, and almost went down.
"Pony! Watch out for this concrete base. Don't hit it with your crutch!"
There were two sets of automatic sliding double doors. Then a cordoned off area to funnel you into the metal detector. I'm no stranger to a metal detector. I went through one when I was in prison. FOR AN INTERVIEW, people! The first guard said, "Empty your pockets into a bin." All I had taken in were my keys in my pants pockets, and my folded money and debit card in my shirt pocket. They didn't need THAT! I put my keys in a bin, walked through the detectors and got back my keys.
"Um. Do you want me to go through anyway? With my crutches?"
[Which are metal]
They did. The Pony set off the alarm. The second guard came over and waved a wand all around The Pony's midsection and butt and private area. The Pony passed. On we went to the window of the Circuit Clerk. Where The Pony discovered that NO paperwork was on its way, because the publishing of the notification had to come first. Then the newspaper would send the Circuit Clerk documentation, the order would be finalized, and THEN a copy would be sent to The Pony.
We had to sit on a bench to rest The Pony's cramping good foot. Then back down Pike's Peak, and into T-Hoe, and off to the newspaper. When we had hiked down their ramp, the door had a sign saying the office was not open to the public. Huh. Good thing a dude came over with a key and unlocked the door and let us in anyway. At least they didn't have a metal detector! I don't know why they were closed to the public. It wasn't a mask thing. Nobody inside was wearing one, and there were no signs demanding it.
We were ushered to a desk, after a short wait, and the guy typed in stuff off the form The Pony had with him. I paid the fee with my debit card, since The Pony had conveniently left his stuff in T-Hoe. Believe me, I have an itemized bill ready, after the medical items and this trip.
After that, we headed to gas up T-Hoe, pick up Chinese food, procure my magical elixir, and stop for scratchers. Not a winning day for that, but the food was good. With leftovers stashed in FRIG II.
I'm glad The Pony could navigate the labyrinthe (spelling?) in order to get into the building. And I'm glad he got wanded and not probed...
ReplyDeleteI planned on Chinese Food one day this week after reading and seeing your garlic chicken. I thought I'd go out and buy new sneakers and get Chinese on the way to the bus stop to come home. none of that happened because we went into LOCKDOWN! Now I have to eat what's in my freezer. Garlic burgers and chicken schnitzels.
ReplyDeleteSioux,
ReplyDeleteI imagine The Pony would have kicked up his heels and taken off like he had two healthy ankles, had a probe been attempted!
***
River,
Oh, no! I briefly heard a snippet about your lockdown. If I remember correctly, you are also forbidden to talk to a neighbor, even if you're both wearing masks! If I heard that right, it's a level of tyranny that would not be tolerated in Hillmomba.
Of course, you can't believe everything your hear on the news. For example, we DO NOT have piles of corpses from people dying in the street. The news touts CASES every day here, but in Hillmomba there's not been a death from the VIRUS since May 11. When I checked yesterday, we had an average of 4 CASES per day. Which could mean a positive result, with no symptoms. I'm pretty sure the prisons, state agencies, and nursing homes are still testing employees and residents twice a week.
Your freezer appears to be well-stocked. And you won't get a bad leg...
We are allowed to talk to neighbours as long as stand 2 metres apart and wearing a mask is not necessary, but we can if we want to. Masks are mandatory on public transport and in public places such as shopping centres etc.
ReplyDeleteRiver,
ReplyDeleteI must have missed that detail, since I was doing something else (munching on my crap sandwich, perhaps) and only halfway paying attention.