Time to Go Shopping
Part 1
[Author's Note: Since you can't tell from this story's title, I should tell you that it is a continuation of My Baseball Scorecard.]
I always hate to go shopping, but sometimes I just have to face facts and bite the bullet. It’s easiest to face these facts when it comes to food. When I go to the cupboard to get a snack and Eleanor’s Original Hairball Remedy by Iams is all I can come up with, it’s clear that I have to get to the grocery store pretty soon.
But I resist even more vigorously the kind of shopping where I have to go to the mall for OTHER kinds of stores, so I’ve established some rigid guidelines for determining when such a venture is absolutely necessary. There must be at least TWO indicators that a trip to non-food stores is required. For example, I encountered such a situation just the other day.
For the first indicator, I was completely out of red ink. [Remember that I collect and use fountain pens - both modern and vintage.] Now I don’t use red ink straight - I mix it with brown, and the brown is by far the more predominant color in that particular mix. While I like brown a lot since it can look pretty classy, especially on ivory or cream colored paper, I prefer it with an added touch of red to make it not quite so chocolate looking. Now I could probably live without my brown/red mix for a few weeks, but then my coworkers at the office could only ask me “Why do you have so many pens?” instead of their usual “Why do you have so many pens and colors of ink?”
The second indicator that forced me to go shopping was the fact that every one of my socks was worn out just above the heel - where the top of the shoe back hits the sock. And I don’t mean just a little bit worn - there were large holes right through every sock I owned. In the old days, I used to darn my socks, but now that all four of my kids are grown and on their own and I don’t have to spend anything on them anymore, I have this big surplus of money. So now I don’t have to scrimp like I used to, and darning socks is no longer in my routine.
There’s a mall about three minutes from my apartment that has a Paradise Pen Store and a Macy’s Department Store, which means I could get both ink and socks in one shot, and do it in just a few minutes. But I still prefer to do all my pen-related shopping at Fahrney’s, a beautiful store in downtown Washington, DC, which celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary in 2004. Fahrney’s is located just a block from Hecht’s, a local department store on a par with Macy’s. [In fact, long after I had already written this story, Macy’s took over Hecht’s so now Hecht’s is Macy’s rather than Hecht’s. But since it was still Hecht’s when I wrote the story before it became Macy’s, I’m going to keep calling it Hecht’s despite the fact that it’s now officially Macy’s. I hope I didn’t confuse you with all those store names, but I just wanted to make sure you understood that Macy’s bought Hecht’s, even if you really don’t care that much.] Hecht’s carries lots of socks in their inventory, even more than I could possibly need for the rest of my lifetime. And oh yes, Irving’s Sporting Goods is located right between Fahrney’s and Hecht’s.
Now I don’t like driving in Washington because the traffic is really bad all day long - it’s like a never-ending rush hour. I guess it’s a combination of all the politicians driving around and all the reporters following them, but I don’t know for sure. All I know is that it’s always wall-to-wall cars. And besides, when you park downtown, you usually have to let some guy who looks like he just stepped out of a horror movie park your car and you don’t even get to watch him do it. Or maybe it’s better that you don’t get to watch.
So I take the Metro when I go downtown. It avoids all the hassles associated with driving and parking. And besides, you get the added bonus of being able to meet all the nice people who ride the Metro. If you don’t live in the Washington, DC area, I should tell you that the Metro is our subway system.
So after all that buildup to explain how I came to be on the Metro, there I was, sitting in my seat on the subway minding my own business and figuring out just how many socks I was going to buy in the various colors, and what colors of ink besides red I was going to get as long as I was at Fahrney’s, when a young girl sat down next to me. At one time, I would guess she had been a very attractive young lady. But apparently being a very attractive young lady wasn’t good enough for her.
She had her hair done up in some unbelievable arrangement to look like ears of corn protruding from her head. And the color of those ears of corn - it’s hard to even explain what the color was because it isn’t on any color chart I’ve ever seen, and Crayola never made a crayon that looked like that - not even in the big box that comes with the built-in sharpener.
Probably the best way to describe it very briefly without showing you the actual color because I wouldn’t even know where to get something like that to show you, is that it was kind of like lime green, but with some aluminum mixed in to make it almost metallic shiny.
She also had seven earrings running around the entire periphery of each ear, she had a couple of rings that actually penetrated her nose (doesn’t that hurt?), three in each of her cheeks, and an indeterminate number (to me at least) in her tongue. Despite all those things in her tongue, she was chewing gum and doing it with her mouth open, which always makes the picture of a gum-chewer that much more appealing. In the language of a coxswain in an eight-woman rowing shell, she was chewing at eighty strokes per minute.
I won’t even begin to try to describe to you the clothes or tattoos she had because it would be too difficult and wordy, and I don’t want to keep you from your work, which is piling up while you’re sluffing off at the moment just to read this ridiculous nonsense. Or is it sloughing off? I can never remember.
And then out of the clear blue she asks me “Hey, old timer, do you wanna - like - you know - get lucky?”


Reply With Quote