XI
My Domesticated Automobile
I HAVE said that I left Millington happily working over his
automobile when I went to the Country Club that afternoon. When I returned he
was still working away, and so well had I wrecked his car that all his
repairing seemed to have made not the slight est impression on it.
"John," he said brightly, "you certainly did
a good job. It will be months before I have this car in any shape at all, I am
sure. It is going to take all my spare time, too. I mean to set my alarm clock
for three, and get up at that time every morning."
It is always a pleasure for me to see another man happy, and
at half-past two the next morning I was waiting for Millington at his garage
door. He came out of his house promptly at three, and joked merrily as he
unlocked the garage door, but the moment he threw open the door his face fell.
And well it might! The dished wheel had been trued, the crushed hood had been
straightened and painted, a new cylinder had replaced the cracked one, and when
Millington tried the engine it ran without a sound except that of a perfectly
working piece of well-adjusted machinery. Millington got out of the car and
stood staring at the motor, and suddenly, with a low cry of anguish, he fell
over back ward as stiff as a log. Mrs. Millington and I managed to carry him to
bed, and then I returned to the garage. I was not going to desert Millington in
his adversity.
After the doctor had visited the house, Mrs. Millington came
out and told me that her husband was still in a comatose state, due to
brain-shock, but that he kept repeating "Sell it! Sell it!" over and
over, and she was sure he must mean the car. She said that while she would hate
to part with the car, and give up all the pleasure of starting for Port
Lafayette, she feared for her husband's reason if he continued to receive such
shocks, and she was willing to sacrifice the car at a very lo\v price, if I
insisted. She said I had not, like Millington, become habituated to hearing a
knocking in the engine, so the lack of it would not bother me, and that owning
a car that repaired itself over night was what most automobile owners would
call a golden opportunity.
I suppose if I had come home and said to Isobel: "My
dear, I have bought an Asiatic hyena," she would have been less shocked
and surprised than she was when I entered the house and said: "Well, my
dear, I have bought an automobile."
Isobel is of a rather nervous disposition, and driving
behind Bob, our horse, had tended to eliminate any latent speed mania she may
have ever had, for Bob is not a rapid horse. Of course, Isobel drove the horse
at a trot occasionally, but that was when she wanted to go slower than a walk,
for Bob was what may be called an upright trotter one of those horses that trot
like a grasshopper: the harder they trot the higher they rise in the air, and
the less ground they cover. When Bob was in fine fettle, as we horsemen say, he
could trot for hours with a perpendicular motion, like a sewing machine needle,
and remain in one identical spot the whole time. He could trot tied to a post.
Some times when he was feeling his oats he could trot backward.
I suppose that when I mentioned automobile Isobel had a
vision of a bright-red car about twenty-five feet long, with a tonnage like an
ocean steamer, and a speed of one hundred and ten miles an hour one of the
machines that flash by with a wail of agony and kill a couple of men just
around the next corner. But Millington's automobile was not that kind. It was a
tried and tested affair. It had been in a Christian family for five years, and
was well broken. Nor was it a long automobile; it was one of the shortest
automobiles I have ever seen; indeed, I do not think I ever saw such a short
automobile. "Short and high" seemed to have been the maker's motto,
and he had lived up to it. He couldn't have made the automobile any shorter
with out having cogs on the tires, so they could overlap. If the automobile had
been much shorter the rear wheels would have been in front of the fore wheels.
But what it lacked in length it made up in altitude. It averaged pretty well,
multiplying the height by the length. It was the type known in the profession
as the "camel type." When in action it had a motion somewhat like a
camel, too, but more like a small boat on a wintry, wind-tossed sea. But, ah! the
engine! There was a noble heart in that weak body! When the engine was in
average knocking condition, one knew when it started. In two minutes after the
engine started the driver was on the ground; if he did not become dizzy,
sitting at such a height, and fall off, the engine shook him off.
But, if Isobel did not take kindly to the idea of owning
Millington's automobile, Rolfs seemed glad I was going to buy it.
"You won't be everlastingly asking me to take a little
run up to Port Lafayette," he said. "For years before you moved out
here Millington bothered the life out of me, and I cannot bear riding in
automobiles. I hate them worse than that hired man of yours does. How does he
like the idea?"
I told him, rather haughtily, that I did not usually consult
Mr. Prawley when I bought automobiles. Then Rolfs said he thought, usually, it
was just as well for an ignorant man to consult some one, but that he knew
Millington's automobile was a good one. He said he knew the man that had owned
the machine ten or twelve years before Millington bought it. He said that every
one knew that machines of that make that were made in 1895 were extremely
durable. He said he remembered about this one particularly, because it was the
period when milk shakes were the popular drink, and his friend used to make his
own. He said his friend would put the ingredients in a bottle, and tie the
bottle to the automobile seat, and then start the engine for a minute or two,
and the milk would be completely shaken. So would his friend.
Rolfs asked me to let him know when I brought the automobile
over from Millington s. I had no difficulty in doing so. When I ran that
automobile the only difficulty was in concealing the fact that it was arriving
anywhere and in getting it to arrive. Often it preferred not to arrive at all,
but when it did arrive, it gave every one notice. Isobel never had to wonder
whether I was arriving in my machine, or whether it was some visitor in another
machine. Under my regime my machine had a sweet, purring sound like a
road-roller loaded with scrap iron crossing a cobblestone bridge. When the
engine was going and the car was not, it sounded like giant fire-crackers
exploding under a dish pan.
"Isabel enjoyed these little moments exceedingly"
The very day I purchased the car and brought it into my yard
Mr. Prawley came to me and told me he had a very important communication
to make. He said his poor old mother was sick, and he would like a month's vacation.
He added that he imagined the automobile would last about twenty-nine days. As
he said this his lean, villainous face wore a look of fear, and when I told him
he could have the vacation, he departed, walking backward, keeping one eye on
the automobile all the while.
But the automobile did not behave in the bewitched manner
for me that it had for Millington. It did not repair itself over night at all.
If anything it deteriorated.
Oddly enough, now that the automobile was quite tame,
Isobel, who usually has perfect confidence in me, declined to ride in it. But
frequently we took rides together, driving side by side, she in her buggy
behind Bob, and I in my automobile, and, occasion ally, when the road was rough
and the engine working well, I would drop in on her unexpectedly. But not
always. Sometimes I fell off on the other side.
I found these little trips very pleasant and exceedingly
good for a torpid liver if I had had one and I enjoyed having Isobel with me,
especially when we came to bits of sandy road where the rear wheels of my auto
mobile would revolve uselessly, as if for the mere pleasure of revolving.
Then I would unhitch Bob from the buggy and hitch him to the
automobile, and he would tow me over the sandy stretch, aided by the engine. It
was a pretty picture to see this helpfulness, one to the other, especially when
my engine was palpitating in its wild, vibratory manner, and Bob was trotting
at full speed, while I fell out of the automobile, first on one side and then
on the other.
Isobel enjoyed these little moments exceedingly and often I
had to go back to her, after I had passed the sandy spot, and pat her on the
back until she could get her breath again. She had to admit that she had never
imagined she could get so much pleasure out of an automobile. But it was that
kind of an automobile any one could get more pleasure out of it than in it.
I myself found that after the first novelty wore off
automobiling became a bore. As a method of securing pleasure the cost per
gallon to each unit of joy was too high, in that machine. Riding in my machine
was not what is called "joy riding." It was more like a malady.
"Riding in my machine was not what is called joy riding
"
Of course we never attempted a long tour, like that to Port
Lafayette, which is eleven miles from Westcote, and it was about the time my
tire troubles began that I thought of domesticating my automobile. I remember
with what pride I discovered my first puncture. Every automobile owner of my
acquaintance had tire troubles, and I had never had any, and I felt slighted.
Some times I felt tempted to take an awl and puncture a tire myself, so I, too,
could talk about my tire troubles, but I had a feeling that that would be
unprofessional. I had never heard of any real sporty automobilist punching
holes in his tires with awls; in fact they seemed to consider there was no
particular pleasure in punctured tires. That was the way they talked as if a
puncture was a misfortune but I knew better. I could hear the under current of
pride in their voices as they announced: "Well, I had three punctures and
two blow-outs yesterday. I was running along slowly, about fifty-five miles an
hour, between Oyster Bay and Huntington, when And then the next man would pipe
up and say: "Yes? Well, I beat that. I was speeding a little not much, but
about sixty miles an hour on the Jericho Turn pike last night, and all four
tires And through it all I had to sit silent. I longed to be able to say:
"I was speeding along yesterday at about half a mile an hour, the machine
going better than usual, when suddenly I jumped out and stuck my penknife into
the forward, left-hand tire " I had never had a puncture. I was not in
their class.
But my turn came. I was speeding a little about one city
block every five minutes on Thirteenth Street, when my sparker stopped
sparking. When your engine misses fire there are six hundred and forty-two
things that may be the matter, and after you have tested the six hundred and
forty-two, it may be an entirely new six hundred and forty-third trouble. I
have known a man to try the full six hundred and forty-two remedies
unavailingly, and then sigh and wipe his goggles, and the engine began working
beautifully. And it was only by chance pure chance that he happened to wipe his
goggles. Probably he had not wiped them for years. But after that the first
thing he did when his engine did not fire was to wipe them. And never, never
again did it have the least effect on the engine. That is one of the peculiar
things about an automobile. And there are nine hundred and ninety-nine other
peculiar things, each of which is more peculiar than all the rest.
"I had just taken my automobile apart"
I had just taken my automobile apart to discover why the
engine did not work, and the various pieces of its anatomy were scattered up
and down the street for a block or more, and I was hunting up another piece to
take out, when I noticed that one of my tires was flat. I had a puncture! I
suppose I would have thrilled with joy at any other time, but just after a man
has dissected his automobile is no time for him to thrill. He has other things
to amuse him. I have even known a man who had just discovered that his last
battery had gone dead to swear a little when he discovered that two tires had
also gone flat.
It was when I was pumping up that new inner tube that I
decided to domesticate my automobile. It seemed to be a shame to take such a
delicate piece of machinery out on the rough, unfeeling road, and I remembered
that Rolfs had told me of a Philadelphia friend of his who had half
domesticated his automobile. Rolfs said that once, when he was foolish, he had
ridden half an hour, out to his friend's farm, and there the automobile was
jacked up and a belt attached to one of the rear wheels, and in less than five
minutes the car was doing duty as a piece of farm machinery, running a feed
cutter. Rolfs said it was great. He said it was the only time he ever felt
satisfied that an automobile was getting what it deserved. He said that all the
men had to do was to keep the fodder-cutter fed with fodder, and that it kept
two farm hands busy. He said I ought to get some fodder and cut it that way and
stop being an obstruction in the public highways. He suggested that I get some
wood and saw wood with the automobile, or get some apples and make cider. He
suggested a thousand things I could do with the automobile, and not one of them
was riding in it.
I had tried riding in it myself, and after owning it a week
or two I decided it was just the kind of automobile that was meant to do
general household work. So I domesticated it.
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