Yet I digress. Nobody wants to read stories of people kvetching and bitching about their various aches and pains. We get enough of that in real life as it is, so I shall get on with the story of the trip.
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It was in such a temper that I awoke on Thursday morning. Jean and I stayed up relatively late on Wednesday night, packing equipment and celebrating our impending adventure. Eventually the celebrating outpaced the packing, and we left a number of items left undone. After we finished packing the car, we made a quick trip to the grocery, and then -- finally -- I pulled out of the parking lot at Publix, letting out a whoop as we got onto the interstate.
One of the things we didn't do before we left was to fill the Mazda with gas. There was about a quarter of a tank left as we got onto I-59, so we decided to see how far that would get us. As we neared Fort Payne, the gas light came on and we pulled off the highway for a quick break and a fill up. I manned the pump while Jean went inside to use the restroom; when she returned, I did the same. As I came out of the convenience store, Jean was talking to a short, heavy-set woman who was standing next to a Kia with its hood popped up.
"Do we have any cables?" Jean asked. We did. I opened the back of the station wagon (carefully, so as not to start an avalanche of luggage and camping supplies) and fished around until I pulled out a tangled pair of red and black jumper cables. I hopped back into the car, and after some fancy maneuvering in the parking lot (the car was so full I couldn't see out the rear window at all) I got to where I could reach the batteries of both cars with the cables.
Half a minute later, the cables were in place and the Kia started with -- well, not a roar, because Kias just can't do that -- but with a sound that a well-started Kia makes. It's more of a purr. Or a sustained hiccup. In any case, the little car cranked, greatly pleasing the owner. Many "thank-you's" and "you're-welcome-no-problems" later, Jean and I shut the doors and pulled back onto the road.
To be continued