So today was the day that everything clicked. It flowed. It was perfect. I realized that a light misting of rain - not even rain, but the sort of mist you'd find refreshing on a hot day at a Disney park - will keep the Valencians warm and cozy inside so that you can walk into your bank and be the only customer in there and so that one hour photo becomes 5 minutes while you wait. It's a beautiful thing. And you can run to the school and drop off those photos and head to the bakery for a coffee because you're running ahead.... but wait. I never quite got there.
That's where my appreciation for German old people comes in. I met my second set of Spanish old people today that probably shouldn't be operating a lawn mower let alone a car. Nice people, but not fab drivers.
Today, I was driving at a safe speed down a main road heading into town. A intersection that I often take was coming up on my right. I saw the blue opel approach the stop sign where I have often stopped before making a left hand turn. I watched as they slowed briefly, then looked ahead confident that the slowing meant a stop. But the stop didn't come. She didn't see me. She wanted to make a left quickly to cross those lanes ahead of traffic. She gunned it fast and hard. And I felt it as she hit the back passenger's side tire with a force that caused my car to spin until it stopped at the little stripped median near her facing oncoming traffic. I got out, grabbed my iphone, and dialed 112.
Traffic flowed around me normally. No one stopped. No one asked if I was ok. No one even slowed down or yelled out their window. Francisca's husband wandered over to my car. I told him I'd called the police, so please wait. "Why!?," he asked, "There's no damage to your car?!?!" There were grey and blue bits of plastic and metal all over the street around our cars. I walked him to the back of my car and pointed to the smashed in place around my incredibly flat tire that I was seeing for the first time as well. He grunted and walked back to his car.
The lady at the other end of the emergency told me to move my car if I could if it was in a dangerous spot. Traffic cleared long enough for me to pull it over to the other side of the road in a wide spot. And I waited.
The old couple walked over. Francisca was the driver.
"No tengo seguros," she told me. No insurance. She said insurance is expensive and she doesn't have the money to pay for the damage.
"But you have to have insurance to drive," I told her in Spanish. It was calm, amiable. But "I'm sorry", I said. "The police are coming. I had to call them. Please wait."
"How long?", they asked.
"I don't know. May be 10-15 minutes."
The accident was at 1152. It was spitting rain and bitterly cold - more for them than me, but still. None of us wanted to stay outside. We sat in our own cars. Theirs was across the street. Every 5 minutes they'd walk over. I'd roll down my window. How much longer? Did you call the police? Are they coming? Why did you call? Let's just exchange contact information. We have to go to Valencia. We don't have time to wait. And the questions and complaints kept coming. Not in a mean way though Francisca's husband looked upset. They were just as cold and frustrated as I. She said she never saw me. At one point after talking to me, she leaned forward a little, reached out, and smoothed out my damp windblown hair before turning and walking away. That was nice.
A man driving a tow truck stopped by and talked to me. He lives in Sagunto just up the road. It looks like I'll need a tow truck. So he gave me his business card. That was nice too.
At 1225 the police weren't there yet. Francisca came over and told me that they were going into town to get insurance papers. They'd be back. They weren't "those kind" of people. Ok, I guess.
20 minutes later they did come back, park next to me, and ask again about the police. I'd called a friend while they were gone and he'd made some calls to get the police to come.
Little did I know we were across the street and a small green lot from a police station.
Just after 1 a policeman walked over and asked us to drive to the station since it was cold. Drive? He looked at my car and said he'd walk over with me. He was nice. No one spoke English, but that's ok I understood what was going on. I could tell them what happened and they understood me. I filled out the paperwork. I understood when the old man said that it was dark and I was driving fast and the policeman said that everyone drives fast there because it is a fast road and they ran a stop sign, so they carry all of the fault. It felt good to be defended.
Francisca was scared, but the policeman was kind and calming. Eventually, the reports were done, the papers signed. And the old couple drove away.
I asked to use the bathroom, then sat down on a chair in the station lobby to look through my paperwork and try to think of what to do next. The school had called during all this. Arianna was sick and needed to get picked up. I couldn't drive my car. I didn't know where to take it. I was shaky and just wanted to go home.
Three police officers there offered help and asked me what they could do. One led me to his office, pulled out a chair, and scooted his phone over to me. I started to cry. "Don't cry," he said. I cried some more. "Ok, just cry." He was nice.
Several different phone calls. He called the dealership for me to see if they were open. He called a tow truck for me to see how much it would cost. I called the tow guy who'd stopped by and decided to go with him. He knew my voice and was at my van within 5 minutes. That was nice too.
The school called again. "Um. Before we go to the car place, can we stop by and pick up my sick daughter?" I asked. And he did. So Joaquin Jimenez Falla drove me and my beat up van to Caxton College and waited while I went in to fetch a coughing Arianna. He drove me to the Toyota dealership in Paterna and waited with me for 40 minutes for them to open. He helped me load my things back into his tow truck and offered to drive us back home. And he laughed each time I looked back at the flat of tiny poinsettias that I'd bought earlier for a party - young plants that he'd put in the open on the back of his tow truck that I was convinced would blow away. When he stopped by my bank for me he asked, "and how are your flowers?" with a sly grin. "Perfecto," I said. I couldn't believe it.
And then I was home. 5 hours later after a crazy spin, a lot of kind people, and the opportunity to pick up a sick child in a tow truck from school, I was home.
Again. I love old people. But I do prefer them on buses. And bicycles.
