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WELCOME, WELCOME 2012!!!
1-1-12 5:30am
Well,
Well, Well…it’s the new year and I really haven’t been to sleep – even though I
went to bed about 11pm on New Year’s Eve (that’s right, no champagne or a Dick
Clark Rock in’ New Year’s Eve hosted by Ryan Seacrest).
In the wee hours of
this first day of 2012, I’ll tell you what started my new year…
It
began while trying to fall asleep thinking about why idiots like to shoot off
guns on NYE. Don’t they know the bullets they shoot in the air have to come
down somewhere? Hopefully not in my apartment! Or me, or Berkeley (my stressed,
20lb. cat). So, of course, the blasting began at midnight, and with my eyes
closed, I was awake (while Berkeley jumped off the bed to run and hide)
wondering when a bullet would come whizzing into my apartment, I mean I am on
the top floor, of a five story building, facing the street, coming out of an
‘Indy 500’-like curve, at the top of a fully residential hill.
After
reasoning with myself and calming down – you know, ‘whatever happens, happens,’
– I closed my now open eyes and actually drifted off into a fitful half sleep,
despite Berkeley jumping back on the bed, as I turned over.
THEN!!!
Squealing
tires from a car trying too hard to slow down while driving much too fast
coming out of that Indy 500 curve followed by me steeling myself against the
anticipated incredibly loud and close sound of metal slamming into metal. I’m
now fully awake, fumbling with the cell phone trying to dial ‘911,’ as I look
out my bedroom window. Between the crazy gunshots and this loud crash, Berkeley
is off the bed, running into the living room.
“God,
I hope no one’s hurt,”
I say to myself as I see a mid-size
silver sedan that has jack knifed from my side of the street, coming up the
hill, to the other side of the street, facing down hill, after it has smashed
into the parked white pick-up truck which is now facing the house it was parked
in front of, half in the street, half across the sidewalk.
“Well
Happy New Year to you…Holy shit!” I say aloud.
Two
people in the sedan are talking VERY LOUDLY, one’s trying to start the car and
drive it – away, I presume, but the car is not cooperating. The 911 Operator
has finally come on, after keeping me on hold (it IS New Years don’t forget).
While I give my details and describe the scene, the driver has gotten out of
the car and is trying to push it away, followed by the passenger walking around
the car to help push from an open door.
The
car is not moving.
Their
argument/loud discussion continues – it’s obvious they’ve been drinking a tad.
I hang up with the 911 Operator as someone crosses over from my side of the
street, towards the 2 still fooling with the car. They start gathering up their
stuff from the car as this person approaches.
Where
are the cops and is this guy approaching them the truck’s owner?
No.
He’s not. He owns the car parked behind the truck – or where the truck was
parked before the crash. So, while the sedan folks are busy getting ready to
bolt, our new guest tells them that the police have been called, will be there
shortly, and let’s them know who he is, why he’s there, and where they think
they’re going cause the cops will be here any minute.
I
call 911 again to let them know the “suspects” are about to flee the scene, as
they have now crossed the street away from the accident while one goes up the
street and the other climbs up the hill in front of my building. Where she’s
going I have no idea, you need a key to get inside.
At
that point, sirens and lights blazing, the 1st police car arrives.
As the car stops, the driver jumps out, assessing the situation as the other
car owner tells him what’s happening…
“Those
two across the street are leaving and they caused the accident!”
“Hey
you two! Stop right there!” the officer says, “Where do you think you’re going?”
They
pretend he’s not there and keep on moving away.
“STOP!!!”
He tries again. “Come back here, now!”
They
stop. Partial reality has kicked in. At least they’re not moving away anymore
as they slowly start to cross the street to the officer and the squad car. But
of course not before the one who was headed for my building tries to shove one
of the shoes she’s removed into the officer’s face.
WRONG.
He’s
not playing, and puts her in the back seat of the squad car while the other one
decides she can slip away now, until he tells her to,
“Get
back here and get in the car! Let’s talk.”
With
a full back seat, the officer then turns his attention back to the owner of the
car parked behind the truck. At this point the 2nd squad car
arrives, and everyone is brought up to speed.
After
hearing several versions of what transpired and wondering if I should get
dressed and go downstairs to join the confusion, I decide to stay out of it,
911 has my contact info, if they need another opinion they know how to reach
me. I’m goin’ to bed or am going to try to, considering the flashing lights,
the loud talking with comments from the peanut gallery in my building, the
traffic, and whatever additional foolishness is or will transpire at around 2am
on New Years morning.
I
crawl into bed and get comfortable. Just as I’m ready to finally nod off into
dreamland and after Berkeley has decided to jump back on the bed – that’s 20lbs
of a not light or subtle cat who is none too thrilled at being continually
roused from his reverie this AM.
Oh
my. The owner of the truck has finally arrived and he’s not happy.
He
cannot understand, is incredulous as to how his truck got into the position
it’s in from where it was.
“But,
how? But, how?” He keeps
repeating.
Through
the course of the conversation, it’s discovered that he’s going through a rough
patch – like a good portion of America – and his whole world is wrapped up in
that truck which is still straddling the sidewalk into the street.
“That
truck is everything for me. I ain’t got nothin’ without that truck!! No job, no
money! Nothin’!!!”
His
anger at his situation eventually causes him to breakdown in tears. Watching a
grown man cry is unsettling to say the least. Hearing a grown man cry is
sobering.
“I
just wanna go home!” he cries repeatedly as a friend from across the street who
has come to his aid (could be his wife or a girlfriend) tries to comfort him.
And
of course the two fools who started everything are talkin’ trash from the back
seat of the 1st squad car while the 1st officer is trying
to calm down the truck owner. F--- bombs are flying and the 2nd
officer is trying to shut down the noise from the back seat.
What
a way to start the New Year.
It
can only go up from here: no one got hurt; Tweedeldee and Tweedeldum will have
to pay; the truck owner is actually able to move his vehicle, it’s drivable
despite the front end damage, he parks it further back up the street; and OMG,
I can go to sleep.
Not.
The
tow truck is here to remove the car.
But
what the hell, it’s a new day, a new year, and soon I can go to sleep. I can
sleep all day if I want to, it’s January 1, a Sunday. As I write all of this
down, the sun’s coming up on a glorious day. It’s not unseasonably mild outside
anymore, it’s COLD. We may even have snow soon.
Oh
well. Welcome, Welcome 2012. I’m going to sleep now…if only Berkeley would stop
caterwauling.
Good
Morning!
Pam Thomas
1/1/12
9:07 AM