I killed the engine next to a sky plastered to a lake.
With a thousand wilting banana trees in the back, and a needle jumping in the red, I came to a stop.
Planes scoured the sky with their screeching, soured the lake with their contrails, the geese watching from the middle of the lake in flotillas idling in the heat because it was too hot to move.
If I didn't get these bananas back to the nursery, they'd die.
Taking out a gallon jug, I walked to the shoreline and reached in between reeds, and cattails and contrails and cirrus in globs of clay to lift the water to the radiator.
As I poured the water into the radiator, I knew that humanity is neither the geese, the truck, or the airplane, humanity is the needle.