June 10 - 14, 2008
We had purchased
my father’s midget race car sometime in late 2007 from a
gentleman named, Charles Myers, in Omaha, Nebraska.
My dad, Landy, was aware that we bought it, but
didn’t know when we’d pick it up or where it would be
stored. I
spent months looking for a trailer to purchase.
Midget trailers are unique in size and style, so it
wasn’t easy.
Several leads fell through until I was told that Dave
Rumsey of Holland, Michigan had a nice trailer, the same
trailer he custom built for the midget we now owned.
Dave had owned and restored the midget before
selling it to Mr. Myers.
I contacted Dave and made the deal.
Now the problem was getting the
trailer from Holland, Michigan to Omaha, Nebraska.
My brother-in-law Gilbert volunteered, rather
reluctantly, to handle the move, a move that would mean
over 1350 miles.
They completed the move in early June, dodging
several tornados in the process.
In the mean time I had my car fitted
with a trailer hitch.
I originally thought that my friend Gean Okada,
Daniel and I would go to pick up the car, but Gean needed
advance planning and for some reason, only God knows, I
procrastinated.
I talked about having to go, but didn’t make an
issue about it.
I’m not sure why, because I really wanted to get the
car home.
Sometime in early June, maybe a week before we left Daniel
told me that he could get a week off work and wanted to
know if I wanted to go get the car.
I immediately said yes and we picked a date.
We would leave on Tuesday, June 10, 2008.
It wasn’t the ideal time for a trip with gas prices
at an all time high, around $4.50 a gallon, but it seemed
like the right thing to do, so we did it.
We took off as planned on what would
become our last road trip.
Daniel always liked road trips.
In 2006 we talked about going on vacation, anywhere,
here or abroad.
I mentioned Washington, DC, Germany, England.
Daniel wanted to go on a road trip in California, so
we did.
We
headed northeast towards Las Vegas and onto Utah.
We stopped in Utah and took some photos.
Daniel took off and did some moderate rock climbing
as I took photographs, photos that are now priceless.
I didn’t notice it at the time, but after I lost
Daniel and examined other photos I saw a different Daniel.
I saw the same thing repeated in other photos, a
peace and thoughtful moments where it seemed he was
contemplating life.
They seemed to be serine moments.
I wonder what he was thinking, what he was thinking
in the other similar photos.
I’ll never know.
I wish I had been more observant and had asked him
when I had the chance.
We miss so much in our lives while caught up in our
own world. He
probably won’t have answered me anyway.
Most of us would just say, “I’m not thinking about
anything.”
We spent the first night in Colorado,
got up, had breakfast and continued driving east.
While driving through Vail, Colorado we talked about
Daniel snowboarding there one day.
There was still snow on the mountains, it was
beautiful.
By that evening we were through the
Rocky Mountains and in Nebraska, following a major
thunderstorm.
It looked dark and ominous ahead.
We didn’t hit much rain, but could see that the rain
had preceded us.
As we approached the Omaha area we could see cars
and trucks off the road, or stuck in the center median of
the highway.
We were listening to my iPod through the car radio that
Daniel had hooked up….for some odd reason, we never put on
the news. We
stopped for the night at around 7 p.m. about 50 miles from
Omaha. While
checking into the motel we were told that several tornados
had just past, killing several boy scouts about 35 miles
east of us. We
found out that we were following in the direct path of the
tornado.
We ate at a local coffee shop.
I remember Daniel wasn’t that hungry and didn’t eat
much. We
talked about the tornado, the local area and other things.
I remember that we were people watching and Daniel
commented that he’d never want to live in that area.
The people seemed very friendly, but just too
different from what we were use to.
We went to the hotel and got some
sleep.
In the morning, we got breakfast and
headed to the home of Charlie Myers, arriving mid morning.
We met the caretaker who told us that Charlie was
out of state and wouldn’t be meeting us.
Charlie’s property was a large lot with a ranch
style home, surrounded by numerous nice track homes.
The sub division was named after Charlie Myers,
since he originally owned all of the land.
We also found out that Mr. Myers had a wing of a
hospital named after him, owned a grain company and was
extremely well off.
The caretaker told us that Charlie had wanted her to
show us his collection of cars.
Packard’s, an original Cobra, a Studebaker and
several race cars, all beautifully restored or in the
process of restoration.
They were all stored in two large garages.
We also found out that Charlie was travelling in his
personal Lear jet.
The woman said that Charlie was thrilled to see the
midget was finally returned to the Scott family.
It then became clear why he sold us the car for half
of what he had invested in it and half of what it was
worth.
We took a few photos, loaded up the
car onto the trailer, took some more photos and headed
home. We
stopped at a Menard’s to pick up a lock for
the trailer. I
recall how Daniel was so helpful.
Running out to the car to check the size of the
hitch, coming back, never an unwillingness to help, just a
calm peace.
This part of Omaha was much nicer than where we spent the
night, much more urban, more modern.
Daniel commented that he could live in a place like
this.
We decided to go a different way home,
the southern route, just to change the scenery.
It would add about 500 miles to our trip, but Daniel
wanted to see a different part of the country.
We checked out a couple of Bass Pro
Shops and Cabala’s, looking at guns, on the way to
Oklahoma.
During one stop at a Bass Pro Shop they had a large outdoor
boat show. We
climbed aboard several and Daniel talked about getting a
boat for wake boarding, which he loved.
I told him I’d buy the boat when he bought a truck
to tow it. I
meant it, I figured I didn’t have anything else to spend my
money on, so why not.
It would give us something to do together and I
thought Michelle and Maya would love the boat too.
We spent at least an hour checking out different
things, from guns to the live fish tanks to hunting gear.
As earlier, it was peaceful, calm, we weren’t in a
rush and it showed.
This trip was another example of how our
relationship had evolved.
I don’t know when it started, but there was a mutual
respect now, two men talking man to man, not father to son
or visa versa. There
was always that father – son bond, but now we were friends,
best friends.
I developed that with my dad when we worked together at
Northridge Hospital and I’m developing that with Michelle
now. Michelle
and I never had the opportunity to develop it with the
divorce and her moving away after high school.
I believe it’s rare between parents and their
children and I’ve been blessed to have had it with my
father and both of my children.
I told Daniel I’d buy him the gun of
his choice for his birthday which was the following week,
he was happy, but reserved on the outside.
I could tell that he was thrilled on the inside.
Daniel found the gun that he wanted, but we couldn’t
buy it since we were from out of state, even though I was a
cop. We tried
in every state that we found a sporting goods store from
Nebraska to Nevada but no luck.
Back on the road, heading south to
Oklahoma City the weather was getting bad again.
We only drove through a couple of heavy rain bursts,
but we were surrounded on three sides by very dark, tornado
like, clouds.
The radio was reporting tornado sighting all around us.
I remember passing through one small town and
wondering out loud where we would go if we saw the tornado
headed our way.
Towing a trailer would make it difficult to out run
the tornado, so we’d have to find an over pass and pray for
the best.
We arrived in Oklahoma City and
stopped to get gas and something to eat.
There was a McDonald’s attached.
Inside while ordering food I heard the buzz about
the tornado that had touched down about 10 minutes earlier
in the same small town we drove through 15 minutes earlier.
Another near miss.
During one stop for gas and food I
returned to the car and watched with pride as Daniel sat on
the trailer fender and carefully removed some gunk off
of
a part of the race car.
As I walked towards him I remember thinking how
grown up and capable he now was.
A few years earlier and I would have been concerned
about the quality of his work.
He finally had me convinced that he had arrived,
that he had his act together.
I recall now how he’d get upset if I questioned him
or didn’t trust that he could do something.
He always helped me do handyman work around the
house while he was growing up.
He’d sneak away to play, but he helped when I needed
him. He picked
up things just like I did from my dad.
We drove through Oklahoma and into
Texas. We
noticed a leak in one of the trailer tires, but it wasn’t
bad and since the trailer has tandem wheels (two on each
side) we knew we were safe.
We decided to sleep in the car, not knowing if the
trailer and race car would be safe parked out in the middle
of nowhere.
The locking device wasn’t the best and we knew if someone
wanted to steal the race car, it wouldn’t be that
difficult.
Daniel arranged the luggage and made a bed in the back of
the SUV. We
had taken turns resting back there when tired.
I wasn’t able to sleep, too hard of a surface, but
Daniel could fall asleep without any trouble.
We parked behind a hotel.
I slept in the front passenger seat that night, with
Daniel in the back.
We slept somewhere in Texas.
When we woke we continued west.
Around Albuquerque, New Mexico we noticed the
trailer tire getting much worse and starting to shred.
Daniel had slept in while I drove.
We stopped and had the tire replaced, then headed
west again. We
stopped in Flagstaff, again looking for a gun, but couldn’t
buy one there either.
Once we got to Highway 93, about 100 miles west of
Flagstaff, we headed north towards Las Vegas.
We had probably travelled 20 miles when we saw signs
that the Hoover Dam was closed to trailers, the only
crossing point.
We didn’t see any southbound vehicles with trailers
and couldn’t find out any information from the public
service radio station that was advertised on the road.
There were only two options, keep going and hope
they didn’t mean cars towing trailers or go back to
Interstate 40 and around the other side of the Colorado
River adding hundreds of miles to our trip and costing us
several hours, or another day.
We were already tired and wanted to get out of the
car for awhile.
We decided to take our chances and headed to the
Hoover Dam. We
found out that the trailer rule was for commercial vehicles
only and it was due to 9-11 and terrorist threats.
There was a check point, but we passed without any
trouble. It
was slow moving over the dam, but Daniel hadn’t remembered
ever seeing it, so it was cool.
We were down to the last 25 miles
before getting to dad’s house.
The trip was pretty smooth considering the tornado
and flat tire.
Daniel and I talked, listened to music, I read, and we just
hung out.
Nothing notable just enjoyed each other’s company.
The best was yet to come.
When
we arrived at my dad’s house, we quickly unloaded the race
car and pushed it into the driveway.
I then called my dad with a cell phone and told him
that I was at home watching the news and a high rise
building on the strip was burning out of control.
I told him to hurry outside and see if he could see
it from his house, I’d call him right back.
Sure enough, within a couple of minutes the garage
door rolled up and dad was “face to grill” with his midget
race car. The
look on his face was worth every penny spent and every hour
of driving time.
Daniel seemed to enjoy it as much or more than I
did. Looking
back at the photos I took, you can see how proud Daniel was
of his grandfather and how much he enjoyed being there.
The photos of Daniel and his grandfather are now and
forever, priceless.
We spent the night, eating pizza over
a couple of beers.
Daniel and I listened to my dad’s stories.
Dad’s not much of a listener.
In the morning, more
stories and some coffee and toast, then we headed home to
end our last adventure.
We travelled over 3500 miles in five days, made my
dad’s Father’s Day one that he’ll never forget, and got to
spend time with my son, not knowing that in less than 2 ½
months he’d be gone.
In a few days it’ll be one year since
Daniel and I departed on our final road trip.
I’m thankful for the memories and the photographs,
but so sorry that my boy isn’t here with me anymore.
I miss him so much.
I love you son.
Dad
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