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Ignition

It is a cold, rainy Saturday in June and I’ve waited long enough. I wrote the check, I figured out the paperwork, I got the insurance, I found someone with a trailer.

I don’t know how much this is going to cost me, or how long it’s going to take, but it’s time to start.

We stand around for a bit in the driveway of the house on Mitchell where the car has lived for the last quarter century. I wonder if it will be sad to leave, or glad to see the sun again.

We clear away some of the stuff that’s been stored around the car and Annette finds the keys to the lock on the gate.

The man with the trailer pulls up in the largest Ford truck I’ve ever seen. He will also be the mechanic who gets this car back on the road. This is the first time we meet, in the driveway there at the house on Mitchell. He seems nice enough, talks a good game and works cheap in the hours around his day job. He doesn’t flinch when I ask if it would be okay if I follow him back to the garage so I know where the car will be. “I was going to offer,” he says. “I’d want to know, too.” “It’s not that I don’t trust you,” I say. He nods. And I do trust him.

I’ll find out later that he has his high school car neatly tucked away in his shop and he’s every bit as sentimental as I am.

He patiently puts three of the four wheels I bought from a guy on Marketplace onto the car. The fourth will have to wait until we find the lock for the lugs on the only wheel that still exists from this car’s former life. In minutes, the car is off the jackstands for the first time in a very long time.

I get into the drivers seat and the others push the car out of the carport. White enamel flakes off of the gigantic steering wheel and onto my jeans. Replacing that wheel shoots to the top of my to-do list.

I follow my new friend and my new car to Warren, just south of St. Helens. I205 to 84 to 5 to 30 and then a left turn into a little strip of farm country. There are cows across the fence and we find a tiny frog in the gravel near where I park the Jeep. This seems like a nice place to come back to life after a long time in suspended animation.

We poke around at the car a bit more and I find the thing to unlock the lug on the oddball wheel, safely tucked into the glove box with a stack of old registration and insurance papers and a couple cassette tapes. I don’t want to leave, but I don’t really know this man and it seems weird to loiter here. Over the coming weeks, I’ll make at least a half dozen trips here where I hand off mail-order car parts and he shows me something else that needs to be fixed before I can take her home. Somewhere along the way, she becomes less “Carrie’s car” and more mine. I thought it would take a lot longer.

August 4, after several near misses, I go to pick her up and bring her home.

***

New gas tank installed. New fuel lines run. New fuel tank sending unit installed along with new fuel filler hose and fuel pump. New fan shroud and radiator installed. New front seat lap belts installed. All locks and ignition rekeyed. New ignition switch installed. New timing chain. Carburetor rebuilt. Heater core replaced. Thermostat and spark plug wires replaced. So many hoses and gaskets replaced.

New steering wheel installed.

And a handwritten list of the things that will need work next.

***

“You don’t have a horn. Or a parking brake. And you have to hold the stick up for the right turn signal. It will blink, but you have to hold it up. Once you unlock the door with the key and open it, you can’t press the button again or you’re going to have to crawl out on the passenger side. The alignment is off, so you need to get that looked at. And the brakes? Go ahead and use both feet. You can’t expect to run right up on somebody and still be able to stop. If it leaks too much, bring it back. Press the gas pedal down a couple, three times before you turn the key.”

A few weeks later, after the alignment has been sorted and I’ve had a few miles behind the wheel, I will lock myself in the car and then will flood the engine when I try to restart it. I was warned.

 
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Posted by on September 24, 2025 in Uncategorized

 

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Part three: A whole trunk full of ghosts and a car full of ants

I’d spent hours mapping out a route that would take me to all the places I hoped to visit but once in the car, the map was inaccessible and we were at the mercy of Zombie Steve Jobs. Mapped route gone, I picked stops one by one, hoping I was remembering them in the right order.

And that’s how I wound up in Oakland and the site of Heinold’s First and Last Chance Saloon at 9 a.m. on a Sunday morning.

Heinold’s is a really small bar located at the edge of Jack London Square a short walk from the San Francisco Bay Ferry terminal. They’ve been around for 140 years, the slanted floor a reminder of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake. It was there that Jack London once bought a boat and became an oyster pirate.

As long as I can remember, there’s been a Jack London thread running through my life. When I was very little, someone gave me some sort of abridged kid version of Call of The Wild. We made regular trips to Jack London State Park in Glen Ellen when we visited relatives in Napa. I don’t remember if the book or the first visit to the park came first. They’ve just always been.

When you go inside Heinold’s, it’s dark and small and the floor really, really does slant though, strangely, the bar top was level. Everything about it is incongruous with its location. It’s like someone dropped a large container of History Lesson/Time Machine next to a farmer’s market.

Back in the car, at the mercy of a maps app that clearly wanted me to go in circles all day, I headed north, but the wrong north so I ended up crossing the Golden Gate Bridge twice to get back on track to Glen Ellen. Looking at the map now, I can’t tell you for sure how I got there, just that the late summer had turned most everything shades of California tan.

I was stepping into an old photo album, one put away long ago. Everything felt familiar, but different. Everything in sepia tone.

The park was not as I remembered it. I remember as a kid climbing on a rock wall and balancing along the top, skipping under shady trees. What I found instead was hot.

I unwound myself from the car and headed up the path to the House of Happy Walls, the stone house where Jack London’s widow lived after his death in 1916. I don’t remember ever hearing stories about Charmian Kittredge London when I was little and, honestly, I doubt they were told then. The house and the museum it holds now are her love letter to Jack. After his death, she traveled widely, promoting his writing and securing translations of his works around the world. Everyone could do with a Charmian in their life: someone who loves them deeply and is exuberant in their support while retaining every bit of their own individuality.

I bought too many books in the gift shop, most of them written by Charmian.

Back in the car, down the hill and into Sonoma. My maternal grandparents both owned small grocery stores in Sonoma when my mom was very little, my grandmother’s just off the Plaza, and my grandfather’s a little farther out. It’s still there, now named the Broadway Market.

Somehow, in nearly 50 years of holiday and summer visits to wine country, I had never been inside the store. What better time than when I’m tired, hot, and haven’t really eaten in recent memory.

I took pictures of the outside and the inside and my mom tells me it looks much the same, though it’s more of a convenience store now. Where there once was a butcher’s counter, they now make sandwiches that have won awards for best deli sandwich in the valley for the last three years.

As soon as I opened the door, it was like being hit by a bus. It was like every family ghost showed up there to greet me. I was not prepared.

***

I was five when my grandfather died. I remember him as a wiry, bald man in a plaid shirt who played hand after hand of solitaire on the screen porch at the house in the desert. He was the first to tease you and the first to smile so you knew he was just teasing. He had a cabinet full of old, rusty tools and coffee cans full of nails. He would go every morning down to the cafe to get his newspaper and drink coffee at the counter with the regulars. When I retire, I will be exactly like him.

Before he was my grandpa, he was a truck driver and a WWI vet. In the 1940s and ’50s, he was a grocer. He met my grandmother when she was working in a diner in Long Beach and he would stop in for a piece of pie. My Aunt Vivian was brought into the family when he stepped in to shut her abusive husband down. He didn’t dance, but he’d take my grandma to all the dances because she liked to. Every woman in his world was royalty.

And there I stood in his store. The tears were immediate, followed quickly by the embarrassment of being the crazy crying woman in the convenience store.

“This is because it’s too hot out,” I think. “This is because I’m tired,” I think. “This is because I forgot how to feed myself at regular intervals,” I think and order a sandwich from the deli counter, wiping tears away with the heel of my hand like a toddler.

The lady at the register asks me if I’m okay and I answer with something along the lines of “I feel like I saw a ghost. Do you sell t-shirts with your logo on them?”

I take my sandwich (that weighs as much as a small child) and my soda, get in the car, turn the wrong way and take about four miles to go one mile to the Sonoma Plaza. Two times around the square to find a parking space that will accommodate the mile-wide doors on my racecar.

I found a little spot next to some sort of monument. It’s one of those monuments that’s something you’re just supposed to know about, so there’s no plaque or signage to tell me, an expat Californian, what it might be.

The sandwich is full of olives. I sit there, looking at this monument in this circle of shrubbery and I think about people I’m missing and about all the years we would come north into wine country for holidays and anniversaries and how we used to watch the hot air balloons land in the field across from my aunt and uncle’s house, a house my grandfather helped build. And I cry because there are too many people from that time that are gone and too many others I doubt I’ll ever see again. The passage of time feels heavy and here I am, crying in this park with this sandwich full of olives and now there are ants all over the place and two men on the other side of the circle are looking at me like I clearly don’t belong here and, really, I don’t. I’ve been gone too long.

I head back to the car, but a storefront catches my eye and I go into this little kitschy candle-and-tea-towel store that I’m sure used to be a hardware store a dozen lifetimes ago. I buy a candle with a sticker labeling the scent “Sonoma” and somehow, the lady at the register clocks me as a local and complains to me about the tourists who have crowded the town for most of the summer and will be here through the fall wine tour season.

The car has become a safe place by this point in the trip. Everything is weird and everything is emotional and a little bit different than I remember, but the car is a source of comfort. The candle goes into the trunk with Charmian’s books.

The next stop is Napa, to my aunt and uncle’s house. They’re both gone now, but my cousin lives there. I’ve sent her a couple cards to let her know I’d be in the area, that I’d like to stop by or meet her for coffee. There’s been no response.

When I was last there, fifteen, maybe eighteen years ago, I experienced the “it’s not as big as I remember it” sensation. This time, it seems even smaller. I park in the driveway near the side door that leads into the kitchen. That’s the door we always used. I knock, but there’s no answer. The front door also has no answer. I wonder briefly if this cousin is one who might have an arsenal and wander toward the back patio.

The gate is off the hinges and I call out my cousin’s name. I hear someone talking, but no one answers me.

It’s disappointing. Her mother and mine grew up together, as close as sisters. I harbor no illusion that we will ever be as close, but it would be nice to know how she’s doing, how her life has progressed. It would be nice to maintain some ties to extended family, even if we’re not having those huge Thanksgiving gatherings where the kids have to sit at tables in the family room with my uncle’s taxidermied squirrels looking down on us from the tops of the bookcases.

My next stop is Tulocay Cemetery. This is as close as my family gets to a family cemetery. There are, to the best of my knowledge, three generations of our people buried there. The folks from the cemetery have been kind with my email requests over the years, confirming who we have there and where, exactly, they are, but the maps I have been given do not seem to match the layout once I’m there. I drive in circles for an hour and it’s just by chance that I stop near where my mom’s cousin and her second husband are buried. It’s a beautiful spot, with a stone that is also beautiful, but seems out of character for the decedents. I wish I’d brought flowers.

It’s late Sunday afternoon and I’m surprised by the numbers of people there. Whole families with full cookout gear, gathered around the graves of their loved ones. My particular branch of the family does not do this. Rather, we let our passings happen quietly. In lieu of flowers, a donation to…some organization or other. No services will be held. Please remember us kindly.

I’ve been texting with Angie and my mom all day, updating everyone else via Twitter. Yes, I went to Grandpa’s store. No, my cousin didn’t call the cops on me. Yes, I’m on my way back to San Jose.

I stop at a Circle K on the way out of Napa because they’re rare in Portland. I back the car into a space because I’m never far from my Rockford Files-watching childhood.

Back on the road, I know I can’t just go back to the hotel. There’s been too much. How far is it to Santa Cruz? I’ve got time.

 
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Posted by on April 21, 2025 in Uncategorized

 

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Worlds colliding: A suitcase full of ghosts

This was written in February 2024, before Angie left us, before all the stuff with the car that followed, before the second trip to California. If this note makes no sense now, it will eventually if I every write all the stuff that I need to write to tell the story. The stories.

This is going to be a lot of words, I think, and maybe multiple posts. I’ve been dragging my feet on putting any of it down in writing because it was so much in such a short period of time and, despite it being months later, I think I’m still processing all of it.

I’m going to blame most of it on Angie. And Kevin a little bit, but mostly Angie. And Carrie. Carrie gets some blame.

The last few years, with the pandemic and the strangeness of the world and the epic losses so many of us have experienced, have been difficult and strange. I’m not sure there’s enough psychologists or clergy or medics to help us all through it. But we have each other. Mostly, but for those we’ve lost along the way.

Angie and I have been friends since the sixth grade. Our lives have changed and evolved and, though we don’t talk every day like we once did, I know she still understands me like no one else in this world does. She is my secretkeeper.

She’s had some serious health challenges over the last few years. She first hesitated to tell me because of Kevin and then was more or less forced to because of Carrie. So, when she calls, I drop things and go.

She called in July, not for any sort of emergency, but for a quick trip north to see some of our mutual friends play some songs in a church parking lot in Tacoma. When I put those words in that order, it makes it sound awful, but it was one of the most healing things I’ve done in years. The chance to reconnect with friends from one of my past worlds, to share laughter and music with them, was an absolute gift.

Angie also gave me the opportunity to reconnect with a couple other past worlds with these words: “Joe’s getting married again. In San Jose.”

I immediately started looking at flights.

Joe is Angie’s younger brother and through the transitive power of time and familiarity, mine as well. When we were kids, Joe’s band was always in the basement when I was over at their house. In later years, we would all go to bowling alley karaoke for his birthday or for hers (both in March).

I missed Joe’s first wedding, I think because I was on the road at the time (see above paragraph about music in a parking lot). His second wedding was nothing less than pivotal in my world. It was a wedding from which I have still not recovered.

All this to say: there was no earthly way I was going to miss his third wedding.

Those closest to me know that I am never happier than when I’m planning some sort of trip. I like train schedules and flight plans and hotel reservations. I like maps and rolling suitcases and rental cars. With a second-hand wedding invitation, I launched: flight booked, hotel booked, car booked. Dress purchased. An embarrassing number of shoes packed. A last-minute scramble to acquire a camera. Absurdly early alarm set.

But there was more to this trip than just Joe’s wedding. Last October marked 40 years since I moved with my family from California. I’ve only had brief returns over the years and there were so many places we left behind when we came north. Most of our extended family is gone from California now, too. Our last links to the state are tenuous at best.

So, two birds.

And that is where I left it a year ago, about to tell the story of a return to California, a surprise rental car, and so many ghosts from both a past I remember and a past that came before me.

 
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Posted by on March 7, 2025 in Uncategorized

 

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