I have a story to tell you, and it must be prefaced by this one very important piece of information: My house is clean.
Wednesday night, I bid goodnight to my mother, who was staying in the guest room, and crawled into my comfy bed, outfitted with clean sheets. Safely ensconced, I fell asleep.
A few hours later, in the dead dark of the night, I woke up, not all the way, just enough. I felt a faint brushing on my cheek, and tiredly I swiped at my face. I pulled my blanket up and turned over. A tickle on my forehead and I thought there was a bug, but it moved in time to me rolling over, so maybe it was a hair. I am overly paranoid about bugs. I know this, so I have to actively talk myself out of my bug invasion horror fantasies. I slept.
The next morning I awoke bright and refreshed (or groggy and a little moist from my drool). I wandered out to do my morning activities and even managed to get a robe on, since my mom was in the house. Bladder emptied, email read, and fish fed, I wandered back to the bedroom to get dressed. I was about to pull off my robe when a giant 27-foot-long centipede with 8000 legs came skittering up over my pillow and onto my bed. I screamed and rousted Jen out of the bed with the well known, “CENTIPEDE CENTIPEDE CENTIPEDE!!” call.
It should be interjected here, again, that my house is clean. This time of year, all centipedes decide to give up their dirty hippie lifestyle and join the landed gentry. They like to come inside, where the weather is more agreeable and the predators fewer in number.
Jen flies out of bed, and I remain in panic mode (but still manage to get a robe on her in case my mom comes to investigate), yelling and jumping. My job in situations like this is to scream, shake my hands, and retrieve the vacuum. I accomplished my tasks admirably. Jen’s job is to remain calm, keep an eye on the bug so it doesn’t escape, and suck its sorry ass into the vacuum. While she assures me that the centipede was only 2 inches long, maybe less, I feel she is probably lying to make me feel better, for I know only an insect of monstrous proportions could have bested her and escaped in such a way.
He was gone, hiding in my room, waiting for night to fall again. I dress and leave for work, filled with dread. I remember the incident the night before and I am sure now that he was on my face, violating me as I slept. I picture him sitting in my room that day, vacation brochures spread out in front of him. On each glossy trifold is a picture of my face. My face is a vacation wonderland for the bug world. In my basement, there is a travel agency working non-stop to provide high-end vacation packages to the insect jet-set. I see the photo of my sleeping face, mouth agape, drool streaming endlessly across my pillow. The caption reads, “Charming natural springs provide a soothing place to take a dip, and scenic waterfalls add a once-in-a-lifetime feeling to your romantic getaways”. There are ads for my nose with copy written about spelunking, my ears are invigorating saunas, and I cannot even imagine what my pried-open eyes could provide for these trendy multi-legged hipsters. I am their spongy-fleshed Yellowstone!
The decision is made that when we return home, we will have a quick and light dinner and proceed to tear the entire room apart in search of this quatredecapedal Charles Kuralt. The room is emptied and vacuumed from top to bottom, but he is not found. Jen assures me that he is gone; pictures developed, he has headed home to share his adventures. I am not so sure. I put a bounty on his head: 2 giant cans of tuna fish for the cat that either kills him or traps him so I can kill him. No reward if he escapes. I want to give him a taste of his own medicine, I want to stand on his head and see how much he likes that. Shouldn’t be too hard for him since I only have 2 feet, he has 40.
I go to bed Thursday night, fully aware of how easy it is to be violated and none too happy that the perpetrator is still at large. We have Friday off and have planned a road trip. I concentrate on this. Friday morning, the alarm goes off and I slowly open my eyes to see my cat staring intently at the other side of my night table. Unable to process information, I doze off. She pounces and I am returned to fully functional mode. She’s found the bug, GOOD JOB. I rush off to get the vacuum, this time fully disrobed as my mother has returned home. Jen is moving things around, but cannot find the bug. A few half hearted swipes with the vacuum, and we know it is a lost cause. Suddenly, victory is heavy in the air: Jen spies the wily little fucker trapped in my trash can. The outside is textured, but the inside is smooth; the cat had been stalking him through the side and he had probably been in there the whole time we were cleaning. He was promptly dispatched to vacuum cleaner hell, and someday soon I will have the strength to develop the tiny roll of film I found.
Success
I finished the travelogue. I win and when I win you win and then all 19 of us win. Now I can get back to the business of typing about stupid crap and observing things that were really best left unseen.
It really feels good to be back with you guys. All 18 of you.
Huzzah
7/13 Chicago, IL 4382 Miles
The ride from Cleveland to Chicago was relatively uneventful. Some tollways, some roadsides, we got gas somewhere. Hell, even our time spent in Chicago wasn’t eventful. Normally when in Chicago, we tool around downtown, take in some shopping, check things out, fun stuff like that.
Not this time.
We got into town and stopped at Portillo’s for lunch. If you don’t know Portillo’s, you should. Portillo’s is a staple for us when we visit Chicago, it’s all meat and meat and more meat. Vegetarians have limited options, and vegans really need to just not go inside.
After a lunch that shortened my life by a few days, we headed off to IKEA to kill whatever life might have been remaining in our checking account. I got a new set of pans to replace the ones I got for Christmas 10 years ago, and Jen got herself an umbrella that is the physical manifestation of swank.
Back to Portillo’s for dinner. Being that the past two weeks were about tasting the adventure and doing new things, I figured I would try something new. Usually I get something with their tasty Italian beef, but I was craving ribs so I ordered up a half slab of ribs for carry out. Big fat ugly mistake. My last meal of my trip was a flat grey slab of meat that tasted the way a dog smells. Terrible. Shit.
I rounded out my evening by watching Men in Black and discovering that none of the RoadRunner-provided dialup numbers in the Chicago area worked. No email for me.
The next day I drove quickly and safely home, a route I have taken a million times before. My sister and my in-laws were waiting for us and while I was sad to have such a great vacation end, I was relieved to be back in the familiar comfort of my own home.
7/12 Cleveland, OH 3996 Miles
Up early, very early. Packed and ready to leave, we’re gonna go home. It is with a touch of melancholy that I bid adieu to this great nation’s capitol, but it must be done. I have a house and cats and a job waiting for me, so I must begin my trek back to the Midwest. We checked out and kindly Mohammed lifted the suitcase that I would bet was larger and heavier than himself into the car. Parcels rearranged, we set out to find gas, coffee, and the freeway out of town. Gas and coffee were relatively easy, but the freeway was not. As I said before, the city is easy to drive in as long as you ignore all the angled streets and all of the circles. At first it seems that the angled streets are a good idea, a quick way to cut across town when your destination is at an angle from your current location. These angled streets are deceptive. Sure, on the map they look fat and quick, but every few blocks you have a circle with a damned statue in the middle and things get all mucked up and you have to drive slowly and read each street sign so you find the right turn out of the circle, plus you have cars roaming in and out of the circles and their goal is not to get somewhere, but to kill you. But my point is not circles or angled streets or the city planning commission, I am trying to tell you about the freeways. I-95, 295, 395, and 495 all run in and around the city. You can see them clearly marked on the map. What you do not see is any agreeable way to enter these freeways. Street signs led me on a crazy chase all over town, and 18 years later I finally ended up on 495 in the middle of morning traffic.
Meeting up with I-95 was easier, and we headed on our way to Cleveland. The trip was uneventful, really. I had one of those perfect music moments as I was listening to Prodigy while whipping through the Allegheny Mountains at 90 mph. Nothing quite like “Smack My Bitch Up” blaring while you watch the scenery whiz by. We made a quick reroute so we could drive into and out of West Virginia, just to say we had been there.
The Pennsylvania Turnpike was almost completely construction free and reasonably priced. Peace, Love, and the Pennsylvania Turnpike indeed.
Nothing to report about Cleveland, as we didn’t care to actually go exploring. If my experience in Cleveland were the basis for reality, I would have to say that Cleveland is populated entirely by drunken New Yorkers waiting to go to a Yankees game, as well as woefully uninformed desk clerks. I am certain this is not the case, as it probably has its share of shady lawyers and snotty baristas, but I can only work with what I know.
I was in the mood for sushi, but I figured Cleveland sushi would be suspect, so we ordered some room service, watched some TV, and fell asleep.
7/12 Washington, DC 3656 Miles
Our last day in our Great Nation’s Capitol.
Sigh.
We wanted our last day to be leisurely, with only a few more things on the list to see, and this is really the wrapping of our vacation so we figured we should take it easy and relax. We slept in a bit, got ready and headed out around lunchtime. We meandered towards tourism central, hoping to find something to eat. A stop at a place called Harry’s was just what we needed. It was hard to tell if it was really a throwback kind of charming diner with brusque waitresses, simple food, and pleasant atmosphere, or if it was a calculated marketing ploy that worked beautifully. Hard to say, and frankly I didn’t care after my food was delivered and I found 2 Oreo cookies nestled in the chips. I ate one right away and saved the other for dessert. Oreo cookies, hooray.
After lunch we realized we had gotten pretty close to the White House and there was no need to find a Metro station. Someday I will develop a special skill where I will be able to easily maneuver from one map to another and not be messed up by the change in scale. Until then, I will always be surprised to find that the distance from the capitol to the Lincoln Memorial is not equal to the distance between Cleveland and Pittsburgh.
Inside the White House visitors’ center, there was a man dressed as Thomas Jefferson rambling on about important things. I wonder if they specifically started hiring Thomas Jefferson docents that looked like Nick Nolte once the movie came out? I won’t ponder hard on this one, as I have more important things on my mind, like whether or not butter goes bad even if kept cold.
Near the White House is the Department of Commerce Building, and in a city-planning coup, the National Aquarium is located in the basement. I am trying to imagine the meeting in which they are deciding where to put all the tourist attractions on the Mall, and the powerful Department of Commerce lobby managed to get the aquarium in their basement. Probably very much like the meeting where they decide to put a monorail in Springfield, but with less singing and more oral sex.
The aquarium itself is a modest attraction (it’s in the basement of a building that houses a department not in any way related to icthyology). The whole place is reminiscent of a fish store, but the information at each display is thorough and there are many species here that you don’t see regularly at other aquariums. The highlight of my visit was the little boy with his mother, one display behind me. He paused at the tank with the gigantic lobster. “Look, mom, it’s Larry Lobster.” I didn’t catch the reference immediately, then all was clarified: “Mom, where’s SpongeBob?” I wanted to die right there. The kid wanted to see SpongeBob! This was quite possible the most perfect child on the planet.
There was a tank with a nurse shark with a remora stuck on his head, which was good for a few laughs. The touch pool was loaded with horseshoe crabs, hermit crabs, starfish and snails. I felt bad for these animals just trying to hang out, maybe put the moves on that chick with the fancy shell, then suddenly they are torn from their world and smacked around. Sure, this new life keeps you safe from predators that want to eat you, but the average 5 year old is a different beast altogether.
After this, we meandered slowly down the mall, communed with the geese and dragonflies, and headed towards the Vietnam Vets and Lincoln Memorials. There at the end of the mall we sat quietly and had one of the most vicious games of ‘What’s Their Story’ of the whole trip. Nothing was spared and no sympathy was allowed. This whole day was about war memorials, and after flirting with some park rangers, we happened by the Korean Memorial, the DC War Memorial and the future site of the WWII Memorial. We walked a lot this day.
We found our way to the Metro, headed back to the hotel, and collapsed. Not having enough energy to call up for the car and then try to actually pick a place that we would both want to eat at, we decided to order in. A mess of Indian food was delivered and we watched a Star Trek movie until bedtime. We had worn ourselves out and decided that it was, in fact, time to go home.