“You’d think they would have slapped something more than a small fine on you,” shorter man says.
“You’re right. But after all my lies to the trooper and judge, I certainly wasn’t going to ask for it. Besides, I couldn’t afford to go to jail or pay a big fine. Look, I was lucky.”
“Did you watch a lot of TV in those days?” ponytailed man says.
“No, why?”
“When you were young then. Were you affixiated, I like to call it, to the TV screen?”
“No more than most kids my age. Howdy Doody at five every afternoon. There weren’t as many stations and programs then. Mostly test patterns and Gorgeous George and Ralph Bellamy as a private eye I think and maybe not even Uncle Miltie yet. But you think there’s some connection with my lying and conniving to TV?”
“I’ve theories, but nothing proven in the lab. But the art of getting away with things or thinking you can — that can be too much TV. That jail isn’t real, for instance, but that wouldn’t apply to you, since you wanted to avoid a sentence. You said you were lucky. Well, then Mr. Lucky perhaps — a character in the early days of TV.”
“I don’t remember him.”
“Flipping a coin? Dressed sharply? Always led off with ‘Hello, suckers — life still thrilling?’ No? If you do go back to Howdy Doody days, tell me — the early Howdy or the late?”
“You mean the one before he had plastic surgery on his face?”
“So, if you go back that far—”
“Hey, you too — his operation right on TV — right? right?” and I slap his palm though he didn’t offer it and say “And the doctors in masks working over him and his convalescence for weeks after with bandages covering his face. And he was so ugly before, but interesting, remember? — but much worse after because they made his face so cute and telegenic with too many freckles. And the Peanut Gallery and Bob Smith too?”
“I sat in it on TV one day.”
“So did I. Sent away for the seat. I wonder if we were in it the same day.”
“I’m sure not. And I only went as a chaperon for my younger sister, so I have to be a lot older than you.”
“I don’t know — I was a late bloomer. My family was afraid I’d never come around.”
“That’s surprising to hear. Still, getting back — but I’ve lost track of what I was going to say, and I have to apologize about Mr. Lucky. He was in the movies, even if somehow,” tapping his head, “it still registers TV. But I’m also starting to freeze out here, so no further questions.”
“I’ve only one,” shorter man says. “Maybe you won’t like it, but we’ve proven we’re civilized here without the other person immediately thinking we’re full of disapproval, yes?”
“Fine by me,” I say.
“Good. Then what made you change? Conniving to the army, lying to the judge, that injured man, because you say you’re much different today.”
“Life — the maturing process — the over and over again — ideas. Gradually realizing what I was doing and did. You know — the repercussions — on me and others. I mean, I still lie — little ones to get by, to others and myself. But the big ones — well you know, they’re more obvious and harmful, to me and to others, so if you continue to do them — if I do — cheat, bullshit — well you know, it’s increasingly obvious you can’t. But if you do after you know how obvious it is and that you shouldn’t, then it’s also increasingly obvious to others or should be — yourself included — that they get bigger and bigger these lies and just acting like a prick, and some more obvious and harmful than others — no, that’s not it. I know what I want to say but can’t articulate it, though it should be obvious what I mean by now, or fairly.”
“I think I see. Okay, I can figure out the rest myself, so my case is closed too.”
“You’ll clue me in later if we’re still here together?” ponytailed man says and shorter man says “If you don’t freeze as you said, yes.”
We’ve inched up — at least I didn’t know we had — to the car and I’m about to say goodnight to them when the ponytailed man says “Look — on the floor by the soda can — a quarter.”
“You saw it first, you take it,” I say.
“If you believe in good luck finding coins, that one’s bad.”
“Oh, I’m not superstitious and you never know when you might need some extra change. You guys first? Sure? Sir?” to the shorter man.
“Not me. This time I agree with my new friend completely.”
“Besides, talking about being unsuperstitious, I’ve a lucky coin jar at home — even have a five-dollar bill in it — but I didn’t tell you this?”
“Not tonight.”
“It’s a stupid reference — really, unrelated. Not unrelated, just stupid. Anyway, money I’ve found over the past ten years, not that it’s brought me good luck, but who knows? According to you two I could be dead right now without it, and for ten or fewer years. And then — well I wonder what you two would be doing now if I were. Everything else would be the same, though of course my shadow wouldn’t be here and footprints if there are any, and other small to smaller things: cigarette butts I might’ve squashed with my shoes and so on — carbon dioxide in the air or a little less oxygen because of me, but I know next to nothing about those. But the car would be here, bus, weather, etcetera — that policeman, with maybe just the slightest of faintest chances my absence of from an hour to ten years would’ve changed any of that. Probably, even without me, you’d be looking at this car and possibly from this or a nearby spot. Or more probably, since you’d”—to the ponytailed man—“have ended up just as cold and I wouldn’t be keeping you here with my yakking, you’d both be inside somewhere talking about the car, or on your respective ways home, if they’re not in the same direction. Or maybe they’re even in the same building or on the same floor for all you know, though that’s much less likely, unless it’s one of those twenty to thirty apartments to a floor buildings, if they run that large. No? All wrong?”
“I’ll go along about the shadow and dioxide,” ponytailed man says. “As for this guy living in my building, except if he moved in today or had been hiding all this time—”
“Okay. But after living so long with this jar, I don’t have the heart to stop putting found money in it or empty it out to use the money or even just to use the jar.” They stare at me. “I mean, it’s an old pickle jar with a wide neck — quart-size, so really good for storing things — so the money I’d store somewhere else, if I didn’t use both at the same time: money and jar. I knew I shouldn’t have brought up the subject of good luck.” Policeman has his back to us, talking on the phone. “But I can be compulsive about not passing up found money, though not to the point where I think it’ll bring bad luck if I don’t. That someone first had to point the coin out to me — well, that variation of finding lucky money hasn’t come up till now, so I’ll deal with it when I get home or along the way, but how can I deal with it realistically if I don’t have the coin? Anyway, coast seems clear enough,” and I reach in to get the quarter, blow off the glass bits. Try to put it into my change pocket, but this pair of pants doesn’t have one, so I feel for an empty pocket, back right one first, is none, take the comb and keys out of that pocket, which is where if I have no change pocket I put found coins, stick the keys into the less crowded left back pocket, comb into the left side pocket, quarter into the right back pocket where I’ll know where it came from if I want to drop it into the jar. My notebook and Hasenai’s book of poems in Japanese — and I tap the two side pockets to make sure they’re there. Wallet’s in the right side pocket of the pants, pen in the other. Smaller notebook — which I’m not afraid to lose since there’s nothing much in it, and its metal tip has ripped, even when I’ve wedged it under the spirals or taped it, a couple of my pants pockets or other parts of the backs of my pants — in the left back pocket, handkerchief also in the side coat pocket, so everything’s there. Subway tokens? Have none. Other coins — can’t feel or find any, unless they’re at the bottom of one of these pants or coat pockets. Nail clipper, I find, when I thought I lost it weeks ago, also in the right side pocket of the pants. “So, that was my Colorado car crash yawn and selected confessions. Call it a night, gentlemen?”