Last night when I noticed the guage hovering slightly above 'E', I went out of my way a few blocks, knowing there was a Sinclair in the neighborhood. "Praise to Allah," I joked to myself as I pulled in and saw the sign advertising Regular Unleaded for $.08 cheaper than any of the other stations I'd passed. "It pays to stick it to OPEC."
I hopped out of my car and into the frigid night just in time to see a small truck run into a sedan at the traffic light adjacent to the pump. The little Toyota pickup looked like the kind you might see on the evening news. The kind that prowls the unpaved roads of a North African or Middle Eastern country, and totes around machine gun wielding militants with their heads covered, and bands of ammunition draped across their chests. I laughed out loud at the mental image I'd painted in my head and the ironic nature of my thoughts.
Moving quick to pump the gas I swiped my card and started to fill the tank. It was then I noticed a sign next to the card reader declaring Credit and Debit card transactions would be charged an additional $.10 per gallon, and that the advertised price on the glowing Sinclair board was for cash paying customers only. Feeling deceived, I stopped the pump at $10 instead of filling the tank. I hadn't stuck it to anyone; instead, someone had stuck it to me.
I took my slightly bruised ego and wandered inside the store to grab a six-pack for the football game I was headed to watch. As I swung the door open I was hit by a harsh odor that I can only describe as old incense and toxic cleaner, and a stocky man with thinning hair and a wily comb-over greeted me from behind the counter. By the accent of his voice and his brown skin I knew right away he was from the Middle-East. I gave a wave with my right hand as I made my way towards the cold drinks, again thinking about the rationale that brought me here and the subsequent events that had followed.
'No Beer or Tobacco Sales,' the hand written sign proclaimed. A single sheet of lined paper hung in the window of every case in the store. Even the one that contained energy drinks, Snapple and old gallons of 2% milk. It was as though they thought one unmarked door might lead someone to believe that you could, in fact, buy beer. If only I could reach beyond the stocked inventory and into the cold storage where cases of beer were neatly stacked. Then it might be allowed, I thought. I decided it wasn't worth a try.
"So what's the deal," I asked the clerk, who had intently watched my every move.
"We're not selling beer or tobacco," he said flatly, as if I hadn't seen or understood his posted announcements.
"Yes, I see that. Is there a holiday I don't know about?" I was ready to do something dramatic, something you might see in a movie, like knock over a display stand or smash a bag of chips with my shoe. Of course I knew I would never do it.
"Changing ownership," he replied, finally shedding light on the mystery and sparing me the task of wondering any longer. "We're not licensed to sell those things yet."
"Too bad. I was about to buy out your entire supply of Pabst," I mocked. "Are you licensed for false advertising your gas prices?"
His face twisted slightly in confusion and his comb-over shifted back on his scalp. I knew he didn't understand the nature of my comment, but it didn't matter. I felt better after I said it. With the wave my hand, the left one this time, I walked out.
Contemplating the chain of events that had just taken place I wondered if it was really worth my effort to try and make small differences--like being selective where I buy gas. Is it worth it to drive out of my way, wasting time and more fuel to get there. Yes, I concluded, it is. It's worth it to me.
With my position firmly established I drove down the street to a Tesoro, finished filling the tank with OPEC fuel, and bought a six-pack of Mexican beer.