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Village Squire, 1980-06, Page 17SIX ACHERS Yvonne Reynolds and her husband, a retired Canadian Armed Forces officer, settled in rural Huron County six years ago. The antics of one dog (daughter of an immoral Sheltie), one house cat (Himalay- an aristocat), one barn cat (don't ask) and a fluctuating number of chickens and goats keep her supplied with more than enough material for a regular monthly column. The play is not the only thing BY YVONNE REYNOLDS Nothing disturbs my friend Elva. If the world should come to an end, she would finish whatever task was at hand - vacuuming the upstairs, hulling strawber- ries, putting Drano in every drain -tie her apron more securely around her firm little waist, and begin looking around for ways to rectify matters. When she phoned one day to ask if I would like to g� with her to see a play in Stratford, I agreed at once. There would be Elva and myself, Elva's 19 - year -old daughter Laura and her friend Brenda. We would go Dutch. I anticipated an enjoyable, tranquil evening. The drive to Stratford was uneventful. Laura parked on a quiet, tree -lined street near the theatre, locked all doors, and we sauntered past flourishing flowerbeds and decorative shrubs to the city's most famous building. After Laura picked up the tickets, we stood in the foyer hoping to spot a celebrity, famous or otherwise. (The only one I recognized was Gordon Sinclair, and 1 would not dare to categorize him.) When the doors to the inner sanctum opened we located our seats, two rows from the back and two seats in from the wall. If the action did not take place on stage right, we did not see it. After the performance, we strolled back to the car. Laura casually inserted the key in the lock of the door on the driver's side while debating amicably with her friend the relative merits of this night's play as compared to the one she had attended the week before. She broke off her discourse in mid -sentence to give the door her undivided attention. It refused to open. She ceased her efforts on that side, came around to the other front door, and tried her key in that lock. No luck. "We've been having trouble with the locks" Elva explained in her calm, unruffled voice, "and the original set of keys works best." Turning to her daughter, she asked Laura which set she was using. "The duplicates" Laura answered in disgust. GAVE UP A man parked directly behind us in a pickup truck came over, immediately grasped the situation, and was handed the keys. He soon gave up, and suggested a dab of oil. Laura speculated that with a coat hanger she might be able to pry a window aside, snag one of the door locks, and open a door from the inside. The man shrugged and offered to go back to the theatre and see what he could find. He vanished into the darkness. As cars pulled out around us, the street became more and more deserted. A fine mist hung in the trees, and drops of moisture fell from wet leaves onto wet pavement. A man in evening clothes approached . asked what the trouble was, and suggested liquid graphite might help. He went to his car and came back with a small tube of lock de-icer, which he squirted into both locks. Laura tried the key. Our helper tried the key. The doors stayed firmly locked. Our erstwhile friend shook his head, pocketed his little tube, and walked back to his car, black patent shoes gliding over glistening black asphalt. His vehicle roared into life, curved around us, and vanished with a final wink of red tail lights. The four of us stood helplessly beside the car, hair uncurling into dank strands (except for Brenda's, which curled even more tightly in the damp night air.) Periodically Laura slapped her hand down on the car's hood, an obvious psychic substitute for the kick she wanted to give herself. OUR GOOD SAMARITAN All four heads lifted at once. Our Good Samaritan had returned. He handed Laura a coat hanger already bent into a hook at one end, took back the keys, and began applying oil. Laura started pulling at the passenger side window. No matter how hard she pushed, she could not get the metal between the glass and the rubber. She walked around to the driver's side and tried again. In a few minutes she gave an excited shout. She had hooked onto the door lock. She pulled and tugged, tugged and pulled, but the lock would not move. Finally Eva spoke in her calm, serene way. "Laura dear, don't you remember that the lock is broken on that side? Even if you were sitting behind the wheel with your hand right on the button, you wouldn't be able to open that door." The four of us sagged hopelessly against the front of the car. A triumphant male voice shattered the gloom. Our Sir Galahad had succeeded in opening the passenger -side door. While thanking him profusely, Elva and 1 climbed into the back seat. Laura crawled through to take her place behind the wheel, and Brenda closed the door. I leaned back and breathed a silent prayer of relief. We were on our way at last. Laura turned the much -abused key in the ignition. Nothing happened. "We are also having trouble with the ignition," Elva explained in her calm, quiet voice, "Laura dear, are those pliers still on the dash? Hand them to me please." With the pliers in her hand, Elva bent forward at a 90 -degree angle. "Hold the key in place, dear", and Elva grasped the whole ignition system with her pliers and turned. The motor coughed, caught and started running. I said another prayer of thanks- giving and again relaxed. As Laura guided the car onto the road, she said over her shoulder, "1 hope there's an all-night gas station open. The needle's on empty." 1 shall be eternally grateful for gas stations that provide 24-hour service. After going in the wrong direction for two miles, getting directions from a helpful jogger, and retracing our route, we tanked up and started home. We were soon enveloped in a fog as thick as soo peep. . .1 mean sea poop. . . or is it poo seep . . . it was like cream of wheat porridge.Three hours after my ETA (estimated time of arrival), 1 stepped gratefully into my kitchen. A concerned husband wanted to know why I was so late. "Believe me", I replied, "the drama that took place after the final curtain came down tonight was far more exciting than the one enacted on stage." VILLAGE SQUIRE/JUNE 1980 PG. 15