WHAT GOES UP MUST COME DOWN

Being reasonably intelligent, I figured out that after four months of driving my faithful old Saturn, as little as possible, it was time to feed it some gasoline. So, I drove to the station closest to my apartment.
I parked in front of the pump, took out my credit card, and followed the pump instructions. All went well. Then came additional instructions:
Pick the Gas you want. I picked the cheapest.
Insert the nozzle. I inserted. THEN—-
Squeeze the handle.
I squeezed but nothing came out.
Suddenly, I felt a shower on my pumping arm. I was so happy! It was finally raining. I looked up and sure enough it was raining! It was raining gasoline! The hose was not connected to the pump, and I was getting a gasoline shampoo.
As I waved the unattached hose at other customers, , I shouted, “No one light a cigarette. This sucker isn’t connected.” “Please get some help.” A few drivers looked at the insane lady, and just did not understand my predicament, but finally a smart fellow said, “I’ll get someone for you.”
An attendant ran out of the building, and as she attempted to connect the hose, I ran into the station to wash off my arm. When I returned, She said, “Try it now.” Since, I had little confidence in her attachment skills, I moved my car to another pump, as she said, “Someone obviously drove off with the hose connected.”
Well, that reasoning process didn’t call for a nuclear physicist. I didn’t think that a customer had climbed up the post and screwed off the hose connection at the top. However, the person who did it was really a jerk—in more ways than one!
Esther Blumenfeld