four-and-a-half years before she talked to Johnny Smith again.
⦠2 â¦
âDo you mind if I sit up front?â Johnny asked the cab driver.
âNope. Just donât bump your knee on the meter. Itâs delicate.â
Johnny slid his long legs under the meter with some effort and slammed the door. The cabbie, a middle-aged man with a bald head and a paunch, dropped his flag and the cab cruised up Flagg Street.
âWhere to?â
âCleaves Mills,â Johnny said. âMain Street. Iâll show you where.â
âI got to ask you for fare-and-a-half,â the cabbie said. âI donât like to, but I got to come back empty from there.â
Johnnyâs hand closed absently over the lump of bills in his pants pocket. He tried to remember if he had ever had so much money on him at one time before. Once. He had bought a two-year-old Chevy for twelve hundred dollars. On a whim, he had asked for cash at the savings bank, just to see what all that cash looked like. It hadnât been all that wonderful, but the surprise on the car dealerâs face when Johnny pumped twelve one-hundred-dollar bills into his hand had been wonderful to behold. But this lump of money didnât make him feel good at all, just vaguely uncomfortable, and his motherâs axiom recurred to him: Found money brings bad luck.
âFare-and-a-halfâs okay,â he told the cabbie.
âJust as longâs we understand each other,â the cabbie said more expansively. âI got over so quick on account of I had a call at the Riverside and nobody there would own up when I got over there.â
âThat so?â Johnny asked without much interest. Darkhouses flashed by outside. He had won five hundred dollars, and nothing remotely like it had ever happened to him before. That phantom smell of rubber burning . . . the sense of partially reliving something that had happened to him when he was very small . . . and that feeling of bad luck coming to balance off the good was still with him.
âYeah, these drunks call and then they change their minds,â the cabbie said. âDamn drunks, I hate em. They call and decide what the hell, theyâll have a few more beers. Or they drink up the fare while theyâre waitin and when I come in and yell âWho wants the cab?â they donât want to own up.â
âYeah,â Johnny said. On their left the Penobscot River flowed by, dark and oily. Then Sarah getting sick and saying she loved him on top of everything else. Probably just caught her in a weak moment, but God! if she had meant it! He had been gone on her almost since the first date. That was the luck of the evening, not beating that Wheel. But it was the Wheel his mind kept coming back to, worrying at it. In the dark he could still see it revolving, and in his ears he could hear the slowing ticka-ticka-ticka of the marker bumping over the pins like something heard in an uneasy dream. Found money brings bad luck.
The cabbie turned off onto Route 6, now well-launched into his own monologue.
âSo I says, âBlow it outcha you-know-where.â I mean, the kid is a smart-aleck, right? I donât have to take a load of horseshit like that from anyone, including my own boy. I been drivin this cab twenty-six years. I been held up six times. I been in fender-benders without number, although I never had a major crash, for which I thank Mary Mother of Jesus and Saint Christopher and God the Father Almighty, know what I mean? And every week, no matter how thin that week was, I put five bucks away for his college. Ever since he was nothin but a pipsqueak suckin a bottle. And what for? So he can come home one fine day and tell me the president of the United States is a pig. Hot damn! The kid probably thinks Iâm a pig, although he knows if he ever said it Iâd rearrange his teeth for him. So thatâs todayâs young generation for you. So I
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