A Night to Forget
The brass-beaded chain was (and still is) ubiquitous in 1976.
Lamp chains. Ceiling light pulls. Key chains. Especially key chains. And the two
inches of brass-beaded chain I was desperate to find on a winter Friday night
in 1976 was threaded through brass grommets pressed into the holes of brown fake
alligator leather which hid the steel case a tiny nail clipper set slid into.
Of more importance than the nail clipper or its case though were the two silver
keys, one oval, the other nearly square. Each bore the Mercury logo and worked
the ignition and trunk of my mother’s 1972 Mercury Marquis.
I’d gotten to Granby Memorial High School later than I
should have that afternoon, rushing to board the school bus which Ma Sokoloski
would drive to Tolland High School. On board would be the boys varsity and
junior varsity basketball teams, cheerleaders, trainers, and coaches. After the
nearly hour bus ride, those of us on the JV would be the first to change from
our away game dress up clothes into uniforms. We played first, then the
important game would follow.
I remember nothing about either game, nor any of the
conversations I taken part in as I sat in the bleachers with teammates and my
girlfriend as the varsity teams competed. What I do remember is the growing anxiousness
inside of me when I became aware that I wasn’t finding the keys to Mom’s car.
Pockets of the slacks I had on? Nope, double checked. Inside or outside pockets
of the mandatory sport coat? Not there. They weren’t in the pockets of Army
jacket that had belonged to my brother-in-law until his discharge and I was
given the coveted coat.
The varsity game ended and I approached Mr. Hauk with dread
before he went back to the locker room with Coach Romano and the team. Mr. Hauk
coached the JV and I felt he might be more sympathetic. Coach Romano probably
still burned at the memory of coming into the locker room of a recent home game
at halftime, his team under performing and there’s Bobby Kalinowski and I still
under the steaming hot water showering down on us, deep in conversation nearly
an hour after our game had ended.
“Mr. Hauk,” I began, “I can’t find my keys. I think I
dropped them under the bleachers.”
Now I understand that a custodian was located after Coach
Hauk informed Romano and the Tolland staff of the situation and about 40 people
stood around watching and waiting to go
on the bus, get back to our school and start their weekends. Then, I just
panicked as the bleachers were rolled into themselves and I scoured the floor
beneath where I had sat carefree such a short time before. I saw gum wrappers,
lost homework assignments, lovers’ notes fumbled into darkness when the young
hands attempted to secretly communicate without notice. No car keys.
The ride back took longer as it had begun to snow while we
played. Now my dread increased as the probability that I had locked the keys in
the car meant I was going to need to call home and Dad would have to come with
the second set and open the car. A call and an encounter I’d just as soon do
without, for there wasn’t an excuse I could conger that would placate Dad.
About an inch of light, fluffy snow covered the cars and the
pavement when we disembarked. Half relieved, I hustled over to the large vehicle,
praying that perhaps I hadn’t locked the keys in the car after all.
Perhaps everything was going to be fine. I brushed the snow from the roof with
my forearm; a scenario I hadn’t envisioned in my most dreadful thoughts became
my newest, worst reality, because hidden beneath the blanket of snow was MARK
AVERY’S LTD! As this realization gripped me and I turned away from his car,
trying to grasp what this could mean, I noticed that the parking space next his
vehicle had significantly less snow on it. A depression of sorts which caused my
spirits to sink even lower, for now I had TWO phones calls to make, the nature
of one altered drastically and the other into unknown territory.
“GAWDDAMMIT, Booth, it’s always something with you, isn’t
it?” Romano wasn’t thrilled with further delays postponing his plans.
The police came and took down the necessary information from
me while I waited for Dad to pick me up instead of unlocking Mom’s car, which
was now reported stolen. I’m sure he was thinking out loud during the ten
minute drive home, reviewing the negative aspects of us being down a vehicle
were going to have on our family life. Somehow it felt worse than getting
yelled at.
As with most bad things that have happened to me in my life,
this was quite short lived and worked out pretty good. Early the next morning,
maybe about 7:30, the phone rang. The Granby police department called to let us
know that Mom’s car had been found. It was stuck in a snowbank in the parking
lot behind Flavor Mount, a small store close to our house the sold fruit from
its local fields and orchards as well as candies, fudge, cakes and beverages. The
working theory was that some kids had discovered it unlocked with the keys
still in the ignition and decided to joy ride. Interestingly enough, it had
more gas in it than when I parked it and some of the other boys on the team
reported their tanks had been siphoned.