I have often been
accused of having more courage than brains; and reliving these experiences on
paper, I find I must bow to an observant public.
My editor (a/k/a
“Attila”), having assigned me the impossible task of covering Deep River, that
thriving metropolis all of one square mile large, was done with me. I left his office with no names, no
addresses, and no leads. The only thing
I knew for sure was the location of this diminutive burg and the telephone
number of the Town Hall.
I decided that the
first thing I ought to do was to call the Town Clerk and get the schedule of
town meetings for the month. At least it
would be something to cover.
Here’s what happened:
“Hello?”
“Hello. Town Clerk, please.”
“This is the Town
Clerk,” the same voice replied.
“Oh, well this is
the Provincial Picayune Gazette reporter for Deep River.”
After her
hysterical fit of laughter subsided, she asked, “What can I do for you?”
“I’d like the
schedule of the town meetings for this month,” I replied.
Following another
seemingly endless guffaw, she asked, “Honey, are you kidding?”
I assured her I was
not.
“Lady,” she
chuckled, “we haven’t had a town meeting here since the garbage truck broke
down back in 1910!”
Seeing that I was
getting nowhere with this human cabbage, I asked to be connected with the First
Selectman.
“Speaking,” she
said.
I rattled off a
list of every official position I could think of, asked to speak to each one of
them. She answered to them all, right
down to dogcatcher and second-in-command of the local flea circus.
Disheartened, I
hung up the phone. But then, like a
thunderclap, an idea boiled up in my brain.
Why not call a resident and do an expose on living inside a small town dictatorship? Or, better still, the pros and cons of living
in a ghost town? Trembling in
anticipation, I located a telephone directory and began flipping pages. I went through that phone book at least seven
times, but Deep River was nowhere to be found.
Somewhat irritated that Ma Bell had seen fit to deny the very existence
of the town I was reporting on, I called the telephone company to inquire as to
what they had done with Deep River; because, if it’s not listed in the
directory, then it surely must no longer exist.
For that matter, things were getting so surreal, that I began to believe
that it might never have existed at all.
The telephone company has an ‘in” on these matters, and their word is
not to be doubted. As a matter of fact,
if the directory is published and your name is omitted, it might be a wise idea
to check your pulse.
When the receiver
at the telephone company was lifted, I prostrated myself in a position of
submission and asked, “May I speak to the Holy One?”
“Do you have
Vatican approval?”
“No,” I answered,”
but it is a matter of the utmost urgency.
I’m sure the Benevolent One will understand, if you will please make an
exception.”
“The Christian
Patriarch understands all. I shall put
you through,” she said softly. And I was
connected with HIM . . . the One in charge of Customer Service.
“Oh, Great Lover of
Truth and Light,” I addressed Him, “Will you suffer to answer a question from a
humble, unworthy servant?”
“Yes, my child,” He
replied.
“Oh, Master of
Wisdom and Keeper of Charity, where is Deep River?”
“Page 23,” He
said. “May the Lord bless you and keep
you and endow you monthly with wealth and an abundance of long-distance
telephone calls.” Then he hung up with a
gentle click.
Awestruck by the
religious experience I’d just been through, I quietly replaced the receiver in
its cradle. No church service had ever
been like this. It was like a direct
line to the Almighty, who, if He were located on earth would, out of necessity,
be the CEO of the telephone company in order to maintain the equivalent measure
of power He enjoyed in heaven.
After considering
whether or not the current CEO could walk across the Connecticut River unaided
by a bridge, I remembered my original purpose and picked up the directory once
again. What had he said? Page 23?
I turned to the twenties. No Deep
River . . . and what was worse, no page 23 – until I looked closer. Page 23 was stuck between pages 22 and 24. I disengaged it and looked upon the Deep
River listings . . .a full half page of them.
The first half was comprised of a listing of Town Offices; all, of
course, with the same telephone number after each one.
A tear trickled
from the corner of my eye as I counted up the population of Deep River . . . on
one hand . . . with fingers to spare.
I did find a
listing for the Boy Scouts of America, oddly enough. With that in mind, I phoned and arranged for
an interview about scouting in Deep River.
I got a Pulitzer Prize-winning scoop about the town’s negligence in
providing the Boy Scouts a place to meet and hold functions. The fellow I spoke
with had been the scout leader for the last 35 years, but didn’t have a whole
lot to do, since no one had joined his scout troop . . . ever.
It was my
considered opinion that if a meeting place had been erected, he would have
moved in there; lock, stock and torn tee shirt.
Anything to escape the rabbit hutch he was presently inhabiting, along
with six dogs and twelve cats, which, if the fragrance filling the house was
any indication, he never let outside.
And the noise! The dogs tore at
the cats and the cats scratched at the dogs until it was no longer possible to
determine which was which, unless you judged by height and amount of blood.
As soon as I was
able, I beat a hasty retreat from the premises.
After I dried my tears and blew my nose on my interview, I drove to the
town garage, punched quarter-sized holes in every tire on the garbage truck,
and poured five pounds of sugar into the gas tank.
There was a town
meeting that Friday at 8:00.
Oh Dear God, this one had me rolling on the floor. I think I've been on the phone with most of those people or their relatives. Thanks Carson, this was great.
ReplyDeleteHilarious! But I can see it. I was once assigned to cover a rural county. Everyone had my number before I could even call them to say hello. Of course, everyone was about 10 people, all with an agenda.
ReplyDeleteI feel like I'm that Town Clerk/First Selectman/dogcatcher/second-in-command at the local flea circus at work sometimes. I don't like to be, but sometimes my job has some really backwards rules.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I particularly liked the experience with the Phone Company. I can't say I've had a holy experience with any kind of phone rep, but I've certainly had demonic ones, as I'm sure we all have.