Dad gave us a lot of advice about cars. How to drive them, how to crash them if you had to, and how to repair them. And he always shook his head at scenes with cars that crashed and burst into flames on screen. He said that only happened in the movies
Well, that may be true, most of the time. But not always. Not when it is my car, at least.
Dad dabbled in used car sales from time to time. The peak of his car sales coincided with my coming-of-age as a driver. Most people fantasize about their first car. I had so many first cars I can't even remember them all. There was a step-side Ford pick-up, and a gorgeous purple '53 Chevrolet (we called it a "Ziggy car" because it was rounded like the cartoon character) with a tube-type radio that still worked, and several others that for one reason or another were bought and sold before I ever got my license.
But then, there was my real first car - a white, 1979 Chrysler Cordoba. I hated (and dearly loved) that car. Dad and I had a deal: if I made a certain score on a certain standardized college entrance exam, he would buy me a new car. Well, I blew it. I missed the magic score by
one point. When I found out my score, I lost it altogether right there in the guidance counselor's office. Never mind that the score was high enough for college, I wasn't getting a new car. I was inconsolable. I cried all the way back to my dorm. Then, I called Dad. I was sobbing by the time I told him my score - and he couldn't stop laughing. You see, he explained, he was always going to buy me a new car, but he wanted me to have a goal - he wanted me to try my best. So he had picked a number he thought I didn't have a chance of making - as motivation. I was furious for about 10 seconds, and then I realized I was getting a new car.
Dad took his time finding the perfect car, and just before my senior year, he bought it. It was beautiful, it was perfect, it was half the size of my Cordoba. The only repair it needed was a new headliner. So, I followed behind the car from Dad's Tire Shop to Columbus, to a rather seedy-looking shop that was supposed to do a good job - when they came to work at all. No one answered the door that day at the shop. I was not about to leave my precious car there unattended. One of Dad's all-time favorite "
Grease Monkeys" had driven the car to Columbus, and now we started our caravan home. Not long after we got onto the highway, the car started overheating. He slowed down, rolled down the windows, and turned on the heater. The car continued overheating. We pulled off the highway. Dad's mechanic took a look under the hood, and we decided to leave the car on the side of the road and go get what we needed to tow it back to town.
I saw Dad come out the front doors of the shop as we pulled into the turn lane. Dad was shaking his head. I was out of the truck before it was in park.
"Daddy, we've got a problem."
"Yeah, we do."
"No, Daddy. Listen. The guys didn't answer the door at the upholstery shop, and I was just going to take it back some other time, but the car started to overheat, and we tried everything we knew to do, and we looked under the hood, but we decided just to leave it on the side of the road..."
"I know."
"Huh? Daddy, how could you know?"
"Tiff, if you didn't like the car, why didn't you just tell me?" By this point, he was struggling to maintain his composure.
"Daddy?! What are you talking about? I love that car."
"Well, Girl, I've got some bad news." Dad proceeded to break the news to me that moments (possibly even seconds - I've always wondered if we would have seen it if we looked back) after we pulled away from the car - it burst into flames. Burned up. To a crisp. Toast. The Highway Patrol was able to read most of the VIN, and they contacted the manufacturer of the car - in Detroit (DEE-troit to hear Dad say it). They provided the original purchaser's name, and the highway patrol was able to reach the original owner's son - who happened to be the friend from whom Dad had just bought the car. Dad's friend provided the officer with Dad's phone number, and the officer informed Dad of the events which transpired after I left the car. And, I might add, all of this took place in well less than 20 minutes. (Remember, this was 1989 - they did all of this without the internet, or even cell phones!)
To add insult to my injury, my Foreign Language teacher was driving by and took pictures of my burning car (she didn't know it was mine at the time) which ran on the news that night and maybe even in the paper the next day.
I couldn't believe it. Dad couldn't either. He had searched for and found the perfect car, and it was gone. And he couldn't believe that we didn't notice that the car was about to be engulfed in flames before we left it. He was fishing for an explanation for what had happened - grasping at straws, really. He asked if there was any possibility that someone had been smoking in the car and that this whole fiasco was the result of a carelessly discarded cigarette. I was indignant. I think I even raised my voice when I explained that no - no one had been smoking, and for that matter there was emergency phone money in the ashtray, and if I had known that the car was about to burn up, I would not have left those two quarters!
End of discussion. Dad was convinced. He knew it was the truth. I would not have left money (even fifty cents) in the car unless I intended to be back for it.
And, though we'll never know now, I suspect that Dad was the one who put the two quarters there in the first place - just in case.