Murphy Rides Shotgun, part 2
Well, it was miraculous, five minutes later my wife came downstairs in a beautiful black dress, with perfectly coordinated pearls and earrings. She was ready. At least I thought she was completely ready. She was dressed to kill. And she was ready to go. My son was ready. My daughter was ready. It was only 9:45 AM and according to Mapquest it would take 2 hours and 44 minutes to get there so we had actually a minute to spare.
Mapquest, however, has times based on a utopian, no traffic, no rest stop, and no road construction universe. I had to admit the first half-hour through New Hampshire was close to that. There was traffic and it was moving very well at ten miles an hour above the speed limit, and that velocity kept up even going through the one urban area where the limit dropped to 50 mph. This meant that all the traffic, and I mean every car was cruising along twenty-five miles per hour over the limit. I believe that posted speed limits must be only a suggestion. We flew down to Massachusetts. Then we hit the non-utopian real world. Now, one would think that on a hot summer Sunday most traffic would be headed to the beaches and since we were going in the opposite direction, we would have the road to ourselves. However I think that the Commonwealth has a law that requires 75% of vehicles to be on the road at any one time so we were part of a vast slow westward migration. Any time we gained, in New Hampshire was lost and a good bit of time we hadn’t gained went by the Massachusetts wayside.
We then opened up as we crossed the Connecticut border. (Connecticut doesn’t have such a law). We actually were able to cruise quite handily down from Northern Connecticut through Hartford. Much of this can be attributed to the astute judgement of me, the driver. There was the temptation to use the high-speed express lane for cars with more than one passenger. But, having driven thousands of miles of single lane travel in NH, I remembered a little known corollary of Murphy’s law ‘If one is on a no passing highway, one will attract in front of them a vehicle going ten miles an hour below the posted limit’. Sure enough. There was a line of cars in that lane going 50 mph behind an ever-so-cautious elderly couple in a Coupe De Ville. I was congratulating myself on this bit of genius when my wife said. “ I need a bag to go with this dress, so if you see someplace…” See someplace? Cruising on an Interstate at 75 mph there is little chance to see a quaint little boutique on the side of the road. I nodded, and continued.
We reached the exit for our destination at 12:47PM. Not bad at all. And it was along a shopping strip. This was indeed the height of Serendipity. We drove past the restaurant where the party was being held and my ever-astute daughter had to point out the people entering with the words “Oh My God, Mom. You are so overdressed.”
My jaw dropped. The center didn’t hold. The bottom fell out. I turned to my wife and she said, “Turn in here, there is a Marshall’s and a Kohl’s.” My daughter informed me that she needed lip-gloss. Why she didn’t need it before now is one of the mysteries I am looking forward to having answered in the afterlife. She also informed me that she had a headache and needed migraine medicine. There was also a supermarket in this glorified strip mall. I did as instructed. I dropped my wife at Marshall’s, and my son and daughter at the supermarket and parked. Lo and behold, ten minutes later they were back. My wife was impeccably attired in what was probably a several degrees more casual dress, (it was still in the ‘dressy’ category to me), And daughters lips were probably much more glossy than they had been. I use the photographic method of judging lips, either matte or glossy, which apparently is too crude a standard. I turned to daughter. “Did you get migraine medicine?” I got the “do you expect me to do everything” look, and so I re-entered the supermarket for the medicine. After marveling at the casual laid-back method of the cashiers I emerged and entered the car and pulled out. We arrived at the shindig at precisely 1:15PM and since it was a typical Italian affair we only missed the hor devours. Not bad. This meant we still had the antipasto, the salad, the pasta, the prime ribs with potatoes and vegetables, the cake with coffee and the pastries with espresso. I considered it a triumph.
