Photo by Bob Benedetti |
Grace and I fell in love with
this dream home in a wonderful location.
As it must be with any
home, there was much to discover after we took possession. Our dreams of ease and relaxation were
soon replaced by frustration when we encountered the New Mexican way of doing
business and dealing with customers.
Basically, almost all local repair personnel took pride in never showing
up for appointments (but more about that later) while interpreting all
agreements exactly the opposite of what I intended them to do.
In February, we
rented a 14-foot truck and hauled a load of our furniture from Palm Desert, CA,
to Santa Fe. We had been
forced to rent some furniture so the home in Santa Fe would look as if people
were living there. Our homeowners’
insurance agent insisted that be done because the price of having insurance for
a home that was unoccupied was “exorbitant.” That was why the home currently displayed a sad, sagging
couch and a love seat that took the phrase “moth eaten” to new heights, and
some chairs and a table that were survivors of many failed dinners.
Our instructions to the rental
company that delivered the furniture in our absence: put everything near a
window so that if anyone looked in the place, it would seem occupied. Actually, because of the rather low
quality of the tacky furniture, our home looked like crack dealers were in
residence, which might not have exactly satisfied our home insurance occupancy
requirements.
With help, we loaded the truck
nearly to the ceiling and set off for Santa Fe. We stopped just beyond Phoenix, made sure everything was
locked and snuck Beowulf, our aging Shih Tzu, inside a black bag into the
motel. Beowulf enjoyed being
temporarily in a black bag, which I leave to a doggie therapist to learn
why. His sometime nickname was Stealth
Dog.
Just as we were going to sleep,
the sounds of railroad cars slamming into each other and of trains stopping,
starting and clanging alerted us to the fact that the motel was less than 100
yards from an energetic switching facility, which played host to trains
throughout the night. This
was not mentioned on the motel’s Internet page.
Only Beowulf slept well that
night. We got up early and
continued the trip. Because
the fully loaded truck was less than the speediest vehicle on the road and
because I was afraid of going too fast and tipping the thing over. So we plodded along, arriving in Santa
Fe around 9 pm at night.
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