The
Sheet Metal Slave Auction
By Pavlov
Chekov
The
Great Melting Pot. America. Where every
nationality of the globe comes to live in freedom
and peace to pursue the American Dream. The
newcomers soon realize that this vast land, with
its fruited plains and amber waves of grain, is not
easily navigable by foot, rail, or bicycle. Just
try pedaling up the majesty of your local purple
mountain on a ten-speed. And when Amtraks aren’t
derailing, the system is still far too inefficient
compared to wherever our immigrants came from. Europe.
India. China. It doesn’t matter. Passenger
rail service in our country is not good. Try hopping
an Amtrak from Kansas City to Orlando. First,
you’re going through Chicago and then DC and
switching trains a couple of times. Our gleaming
alabaster cities are not friendly to walkers and
our buses are far too infrequent to rely on. We
are not Germany or Japan. Public transportation
is not one of our strong suits. The problem is our
size. This land is just too big. Manifest Destiny
determined years ago that we here in the States would
need a new means of travel. Eisenhower recognized
this and built our wonderful Interstate system. You
want to enjoy real freedom in these United States?
You need a car. A horseless carriage.
And
so it was, in pursuit of money to purchase such a
conveyance, that I found myself driving cars and
trucks at an Auto Auction in Central Florida. I
was working for a temporary staffing service, who
required only my license to hire me for an afternoon
of driving used, repossessed, and otherwise neglected
vehicles through auction bays. The temp service
arranged a ride to the auction for me. I rode
with Keith of Oviedo, a professional water-skier
who had much experience in auto-auction driving and
gave me a quick briefing on what to expect. We were
introduced to our lane leaders, who told us how and
where to drive and what to do if we accidentally
ran someone over. “It happens,” they
said.
For
someone without a car, the experience of climbing
behind the wheel of a Volvo or a Jeep (or anything
for that matter) was a huge thrill. I could taste
the freedom of the road, (or in this case, the parking
lot) almost getting some of these vehicles into third
gear as I navigated the endless rows of cars and
waited my turn to display my ride to the waiting
dealers.
Some
of my cars were sad. A Toyota with a dice gear
shift knob gurgled and sputtered and tried to die
as I crept forward in line. The air didn’t
work. Not a good thing to Florida Used Car Dealers.
An Oldsmobile van wouldn’t start and required
a jump from one of the roving MWBAs (Mechanics with
Bad Attitudes.)
“Keep
it running!” my lane leader barked as I left
the parking spot and got in line.
One
of my cars wouldn’t even take a jump start
and required one of the push vehicles to see it through
the bay. The push vehicles were crusty Ford
Fairmonts with three tires mounted on the grill.
I looked in the rear-view at the push vehicle guy
who seemed oblivious to the whole operation. He
was randomly ramming my bumper when he felt like
it and ignoring my brake lights as I tired to avoid
rear-ending the Mercedes in front of me.
The
pace was frantic as I approached the auction bay
the first time. I was unnerved as dealers crowded
around my vehicle and poked their heads in the windows
or ran their fat knuckles across the vents to check
for the cold air that everyone wants. They asked
what the mileage was. They asked how it drove. And
they seemed to be trying to get run over. Pop
the hood, gun the engine. (Make sure you’re
in neutral when you do.)
Used
car dealers have a reputation even lower than that
of lawyers, ministers or advertisers. They are,
fairly or not, considered to be swindlers and con-men,
out to make a buck and hide the defects of their
wares to unsuspecting buyers. (They don’t
help themselves at all when they advertise.) But
they are in business, and they need to make a buck. It’s
the American Dream they are pursuing. The way you
accomplish that is simple. Buy low, sell high.
Now
imagine every nationality this country has ever welcomed
represented in the form of a used car dealer. I
was driving through a United Nations gauntlet of
guys on cell phones speaking at least ten different
languages. In salmon colored slacks. Rose tinted
glasses. Greased back hair. Gold jewelry. Sure,
some of them didn’t fit the stereotype and
the day was far too warm for anyone in a checkered
sports-coat.
The
crowd got thickest right near the auction bay door
and the heads popped in more frequently.
“Are
those actual miles?”
How
did I know? I was a peon netting three bucks
an hour. “Yes,” I replied, as he relayed
the info into his phone in another language, Kelly
Blue Book open and pages flipping.
The
knuckles kept coming in the window, grazing the vent
to check for air. Mileage and air was all they wanted
to know. And do the power windows work. I tried
to listen to the auctioneer as he rattled in that
bizarre tongue spoken by only a few talented people,
but I couldn’t tell what the cars were going
for. I just watched the auctioneer’s assistant
intently, waiting for him to knock on my windshield,
signaling me to drive out, park, and grab another
car.
We
drivers did this for hours and I was usually in the
next car and waiting in line before I even paused
to figure out what I was driving. I began to check
the glove-boxes and visors as I waited. Loose
change. A winning lotto ticket. You never
know. I remembered the advertisements for these
cars when they were new, before their interiors began
to come unglued and their formerly tight suspensions
and steering got loose and sloppy. I heard one
dealer remark about my Buick Reatta,
“That
used to be nice car.”
The
sun beat on us as we raced back to our lane leaders. The
lane leaders were intense, chain-smoking women, pointing
and yelling and barking orders. My lane leader
seemed to trust me and liked giving me beat up, hard
to drive cars that some of the other drivers were
squeamish about. When I was given a decent vehicle,
the difference at the auction bay door was noticeable. The
dealers would crowd around and get in the way, assessing
this sheet-metal slave and calculating the profit. It
was almost pure lust. The difference in their
reactions to the nice cars versus the ugly ones made
me sympathetic to the wallflower girls at a high
school dance. No one wants me. They all
want the pretty ones.
After
a while I was comfortable amid the noise and hectic
pace of the line near the auction bay and I began
to sell the vehicles to these sales pros. I knew
what they would write on the windshields in florescent
markers under colored flags. I began to speak
to them in those terms, answering them before they
could poke their heads and knuckles in,
“Low
miles! Cold Air! Runs Great!”
They
seemed to take my word for it. This was getting to
be too much fun. I was selling used cars to
used car salesmen.
I
showed off the stereos and revved the engines and
put on a show for this United Nations Assembly of
horseless carriage traders; these sheet-metal slave
buyers who would polish a rim here and seal a leak
there and make a little cash in getting rid of these
things.
As
the sun set and the dealers grew tired, the pace
slowed and we drivers could feel the end nearing.
We filed into the office to collect our time cards
and Keith the water-skier drove me back to the temp
service office. We agreed that it was an interesting
day and that most used car dealers have the reputation
they do for a reason.
I
collected my paycheck the next day. Twenty-six
bucks and change. I’m on my way to someday
owning one of these conveyances. I will be driving
Eisenhower’s Interstates, across these States
United by highways, my destiny manifested in a used
vehicle, purchased warily from some salmon-slacked
guy with a cell phone on his ear. And now I
know what to look for. Cold air and low miles.
Email
Pavlov Chekov
©2007
Radio Free Babylon™, LLC All Rights Reserved.
|