
Ron is one of those good ranchers who has an affinity for
machinery. The new bulldozer was his proudest possession. The monsoon
rains had turned his northern Mexico ranch as green as Indiana. But
they had also washed out a few pasture roads.
He kissed his wife goodbye and headed out the door to spend the day
"dozing." She handed him his lunch sack and commented on the
new straw hat he was wearing. "All you need is a cape and mask
and you could be "Dozerman," she teased.
Well, Dozerman had a great day. He smoothed, graded and moved large
rocks in a single bound. At day's end he started home. Passing under a
dead oak tree he noted that, being more powerful than a locomotive, he
should push it over some day.
Little did he know that his super thoughts were being monitored by
residents of the oak tree. They mobilized and swarmed the open cab of
his bulldozer. Attack of the killer bees!
Dozerman was unprepared. The air around him was filled with angry
buzzing. Little squiggly feet, flapping wings and pointy stingers
tormenting his ears and arms and head and knees. With cartoon-like
martial arts flailing he managed to knock his new hat onto the dozer
track. He caught a glimpse of it riding forward and disappearing over
the front like a log going over a waterfall.
Seizing control of the situation, he leaped from the seat, arms
windmilling. He tugged his hat from beneath the track and, being
faster than a speeding bullet, he tried to outrun his attackers.
In his mind, he imagined diving in a lake to evade the swarm. Alas,
there was no lake. They continued to dive bomb his hair, neck and
torso, to crawl down his collar and into his gloves. He rolled,
whirled, pirouetted, stumbled, skipped and cartwheeled across the
pasture, slapping himself silly with his free hand and beating his hat
into the shape of a dish towel.
Finally he outran the horde and stopped, arms on his knees, chest
heaving. He looked back through his swollen vision to the bulldozer
still purring like a mountain lion under the oak tree. How had he run
the course of rocks and knee-high weeds without stepping on a
rattlesnake?
And, how does someone, even with X-ray vision, find his glasses
when he can’t see them? Undaunted, he waded back the way he had
come, swishing the deep grass with a big stick like some demented
beachcomber, and got lucky.
The bees had won the round. They let him sneak back on the
bulldozer and clank home in his flapping straw turban, crooked eyewear
and bumpy skin. He was a sight to see.
Look — up in the sky, it’s a bird, it’s a plane, no ... it
must be Dozerman’s hatband and right glove being carried off to
buzzard heaven.
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