THE
BICYCLE
Dear Santa,
I’m
too old to be writin’ you these letters. Truth is, I’ll be 9 in a few months and
I been thinkin’ for awhile that you ain’t real. But just in case you are there’s
this cool chopper bike at Wal~Mart I’d like to have. My l’il sister Lily wants a
Cabbage Patch doll (she likes cat things too and race cars). She’s 7. My brother
Louie is 6. Louie’s just about crazy for fire trucks. The smallest of the Lanes
is baby Lisa. She’s 1 and a half. She likes those ol’ dolls with the blinky eyes
(sometimes she pokes ‘em out).
Like I said before, if
you’re too busy or you ain’t real just forget about this letter. I’m gettin’ so
old it’s probly the last one you’ll get from me. Seems to me like good ‘n bad
don’t have as much to do with presents as Daddy’s job. When he has work you
always bring lots o’ stuff. When he don’t you don’t.
Santa he ain’t been workin’
much at all this year. His foot got hurt and he started takin’ pills then the
doctor wouldn’t give him no more but it still hurt a lot. Well he started
drinkin’ whiskey and beer and him and Mommy took to fightin’ all the time. She
cries a lot and that makes my l’il brother and sisters cry. I try to wait and do
it by myself when nobody can see me. If you pray Santa could you say one for
Larry and Laurie and Lonnie (that’s me) and Lily and Louie and baby Lisa? Yeah
that’s us the L Family. Kids in school use to tease me ‘bout the L’s and I’d get
mad at Mommy and Daddy for namin’ the whole Family like that. Lately I been
writin’ our names down in a row over ‘n over and now I think maybe it’s kinda
neat that they got together and decided to have all us l’il L’s.
And that’s my real wish
Santa. That Mommy ‘n Daddy’ll be like they use to. Never mind the bike and toys.
Maybe if you’re real you could get together with God or somethin’ and sort o’
teach ‘em to smile again like they use to at each other and us kids. I know it
sounds sappy and I use to hide my eyes when I was a kid so I didn’t have to
watch ‘em makin’ eyes at each other and kissin’ ‘n stuff.
Well, I’ll let you go for
now. You probly won’t hear from me no more since I’m gettin’ so old now.
....
Your
Friend, (if you’re real or not) |
Lonnie
Lane
Laurie waited until after
ten o’clock just like she had each Christmas for the past eight years. She went
to the Children’s rooms, nibbled at the snacks and sipped the juice they left
out for Santa. Her hand trembled a bit as she wrote, “Ho! Ho! Ho! See you next
year! Be good boys and girls!” on the backside of some leftover Christmas wrap.
She wiped a tear from her cheek as she picked up Lonnie’s letter to Santa and
replaced it with her Santa reply. This was the thinnest Christmas ever,
barebones and nothing left over. She’d managed to scrimp and save to buy gifts
for each of the younger Children but the bicycle Lonnie longed for, any bike for
that matter, just plain cost too much… if only Larry could find work.
Larry had a warm fire going
in the fireplace and was getting ice cubes from the fridge when she returned
from visiting the Children. “Want a nightcap, Honey?”
Laurie bit her lip. “Just
one and make it light. Come on in the living room and read Lonnie’s letter to
Santa with me.”
Larry laughed derisively.
“Isn’t he getting a little old to be writing letters to Santa? If he hopes to
realize his dream to be a writer someday, just like Jack London, he’d
better start writin’ somethin’ stronger ‘n letters to Santa. Not much power in
Santa notes.” He finished preparing the drinks and went to sit with Laurie
on the sofa. She sobbed into her drink and handed him the letter.
He put an arm around her
shoulders. “Don’t cry, Sweetheart. Next year’ll be better for us. I’ll
straighten up and fly right, I promise. I don’t know what’s gotten into me.” He
paused and sipped his drink. “If I could just find work.”
Laurie turned toward him,
teary eyed. “Just read Lonnie’s letter, Larry.”
Larry bent forward, using
the glow from the fireplace to light up his oldest Child’s words. “Ah damn,” he
said and kissed the top of Laurie’s head, “I’ll be back.”
He got up from the sofa,
grabbed his coat, and headed for the door. “Please don’t go to the bar tonight,”
Laurie said as the front door closed behind him. She heard his truck start, held
her face in her hands and wept.
Larry drove directly to the
nearest Super Wal~Mart, thankful they stayed open late. The bike rack was near
the front of the store and he marched straight to it. “May I help you?” asked a
blue-vested clerk.
“I hope so,” Larry replied
in earnest. “My son wants one of those chopper bikes for Christmas. I probably
don’t have enough money to buy it but maybe I can work out somethin’ with the
manager of the store to make up the difference. I’ll shovel snow, sweep the
floor, unload trucks… anything. I gotta have that bike for my boy.”
“I’m sorry, Sir,” the lady
said. “Those bikes were a big hit this season. All our stores have been sold out
for over two weeks.”
Larry stared at her in
disbelief. Tears filled his eyes. “I told you I’d work. I’ll do anything; if you
could just..”
His desperation startled the
clerk. She edged away, offered him a nervous smile. “I’ll get the manager,” she
said consolingly, “Maybe there’s something he can do to help you.”
Larry paced back and forth
but felt relieved when the store manager appeared a few moments later. He shook
Larry’s hand and gave him an appraising look. “Good evening, Sir. Liesel told me
about your problem and asked me to have a word with you.”
“Liesel?” Larry mumbled, “L…
L. Liesel, L’s on both ends?”
The manager laughed heartily
and Larry was taken aback at the portly man’s gaiety. He was middle-aged or
older, had a full white beard and twinkling eyes and for a moment Larry thought…
but no… Stop it! Larry chastised himself, this is the real world, not
some eight-year-old’s fairy tale fantasy. “Sorry for my outburst,” the jolly
man said, “But your response struck me as funny. Of course Liesel has L’s on
each end of her name.”
Larry offered him a sad
smile, the best he could muster under the circumstances. “Guess I got a thing
for L’s.” His smile went a bit deeper, became more genuine. “Life and love, my
whole Family; L’s have been kind to me.”
“My name’s Nick,” the
manager said, not sure what to make of Larry’s statement. He scrutinized Larry
for a short moment. “And hey, about the bicycle; I have one in back that was
damaged in shipment or something. I don’t remember precisely what happened to
it. There was something wrong with it that was fixable but we don’t have the
resources here, time, machinery, a welder… something like that. We planned to
claims it out after the holiday and take it to a recycling facility with other
damaged merchandise. Mind you, if it appears beyond repair, I won’t be able to
sell it to you.” Having said that, he turned on his heel and headed for the back
of the store. “Come along; let’s see what we can do for you.”
Larry followed close behind,
hands in the pockets of his jeans. He worried the fifty dollar bill there,
his stash, with his fingers and in his mind. What if it wasn’t enough like
countless other things this past year that hadn’t been enough; like Larry
himself wasn’t enough anymore, his self-esteem at an all time low.
‘Here we go!” Nick announced
while jingling through a ring of keys. He tried a couple and finally found one
which unlocked a large metal door that led to a chain-link cage outside the rear
of the store.
“Lot o’ stuff,” Larry
commented as Nick flipped on a light. “Everything out here damaged?”
“Pretty much,” Nick replied,
“Oh, there it is, over in the corner.” He started down an aisle littered with
the miscellaneous debris of broken and damaged merchandise. “Wait by the door;
I’ll pull ‘er out and we’ll have us a look-see.”
Nick moved some boxes, then
returned up the aisle, pushing a bicycle with a fat back tire, long front end
with a thin, chromed spool wheel. Just as he reached Larry the front wheel fell
off. Nick shook his head. “I remember now. The front tire was flat and when Jim,
our bicycle assembler, repaired it, the front axle threads were stripped.” He
looked down at the bicycle, disappointment evident on his kind face. “I don’t
know, Sir. It’s been sitting out here in the weather for a couple of months.
Look at all that rust on the chrome.”
“I can fix it,” Larry
assured him. “I could probably fix most of the things out here. I’ve worked with
tools and machinery all my life, construction, roofing and stuff, done some
garage door repair. Always fixed my own bikes when I was a kid.”
“Hmmm,” Nick mused, “Did
Liesel mention something about you being out of work?”
“I get a side job every once
in a while,” Larry replied honestly, wondering what it was about this man that
made him feel so comfortable, urging him to open up. “But nothin’ steady for the
past year or so.”
Nick picked up the front
wheel, lifted the front end of the bicycle, and rolled it past Larry. He leaned
it against the inside wall of the store, turned off the outside light, and
closed the metal door. “Well Sir, don’t know if you’d be interested but Jim’s
retiring at the end of the month, been with Wal~Mart for thirty-two years. You
come in after Christmas, fill out the paperwork, a proper job application; might
just be a job here for you. If you’re interested, I’ll leave the manager a note
saying you seem like an apt young man to me.”
“Uh…” Larry began, “I
thought you were the store manager.”
Nick chuckled. “Me? No, I’m
Home Office/Toy Distribution… whatever you want to call it. I’m here on a tour
of the stores in Colorado; just happened to answer the call when Liesel
requested a manager for assistance.
Larry screwed up his courage
and looked Nick straight in the eye. “I’d appreciate the recommendation. I’m
definitely interested in the job. I’d be in your debt.”
Nick fiddled with his beard,
obviously uncomfortable. “No one’s ever in my debt, young man.” Then the smile
returned to its home on his face. “Well then,” he said brusquely, “Let’s get you
back home to that boy of yours.” He appraised the bicycle doubtfully. “A lot of
work there; sure you can get ‘er up to snuff?”
“That bike’ll be better ‘n
new when I’m finished with it,” Larry assured him.
“I believe you and that’s
good enough for me,” Nick chuckled, “We usually don’t sell damaged merchandise,
liability and all that.” His eyes twinkled when he looked at Larry. “But it’s
Christmas eve, isn’t it? I got me a good feeling about this.”
“Thank-you,” Larry said with
relief. “Uh… how much do I owe you?”
“Let’s see here.” Nick bent
to look at a tag hanging from the gooseneck of the bicycle. “Well she has a
price tag for $177.00 new… hmmm..”
Larry felt a lump beginning
to form in his throat. Half off the selling price would be around $90.00, a
generous discount but $40.00 more than he had in his pocket, $40.00 more than he
had to his name. What was he going to do now? The question spun round and round
in his mind and his knees felt like jelly.
Nick squeezed his upper arm.
“How ‘bout forty dollars? Does that sound fair to you? Tax’ll bring ‘er up to
around $43.00. Can you swing it?” Larry was surprised at the strength of the
older man as his hand squeezed a bit harder. “Listen Son,” he said softly, “I’ve
been penniless and on the streets before in my life. I know how difficult life
can be at times, how hard we can be on ourselves. Your boy’s gonna have that
bike if I have to pay for it myself.”
Larry swallowed deep, then
answered enthusiastically, “No Sir, you’ve done more than enough. I’ve got cash
in my pocket. Let’s do it!”
“That’s the spirit!” Nick
released his grip on Larry’s shoulder and gave him a bear hug. Larry couldn’t
believe how good it felt and, though he’d never hugged another man, found
himself returning the embrace. Nick broke away and beamed at Larry, cheeks and
ears as red as beets. “I hate to rush off but I’ve a busy night ahead of me, if
you know what I mean.” He offered Larry an exaggerated wink. “I’ll tell the
cashier up front to price override the damaged bicycle to $40.00. You just take
it up there and hey, have a merry Christmas!”
Larry gathered up the
bicycle and turned to thank the man but Nick was gone. Lonnie’s note crinkled in
his pocket and Larry thought, Yeah, I’m pretty sure I
know what you mean.
Larry backed his truck up to
the garage and there she was, barefoot in the snow, his silly girl, his Laurie.
She was wringing her hands with worry. Larry got out of the truck, picked her up
and carried her into the house. She was crying and trying to speak but Larry
smothered her mouth with kisses and hugged her in a slow circle through the
room. He set her down on the sofa, then threw another log on the fire.
“Larry, what?” Laurie’s face
was flushed, deep with concern but ready to be happy. She was as beautiful as
Larry had ever seen her, more so in fact. He wanted nothing more than to hold
her through and until the night went away.
“What, what?” he said
playfully. “I love you, that’s what! I got our Lonnie a bike, that’s what what
but it needs some work, what? I’ll be busy out in the garage for a couple, three
hours gettin’ it ready.” He made that face, the sexy face he knew she loved to
see. “Why don’t you just snuggle up warm and wait for me?”
Laurie leapt from the couch
and hugged him ‘til it hurt. She wet the front of his shirt with her tears.
Larry stroked her hair. Leonard Cohen’s Take this Waltz came unbidden to
his mind and he danced her slowly around the room. How could he have ever
abandoned their romance? “Don’t cry, Baby,” he whispered into her ear. “I got
the bike and well, maybe a steady job. Don’t cry, Honey. Whatcha wanna go ‘n cry
for?”
“I’m scared,” Laurie’s
muffled voice spoke against his chest where he held her head and refused to let
go.
“Don’t be,” Larry consoled,
“Everything’s gonna be alright, it really is.” Take this waltz, take this waltz,
take this waltz,” he crooned as round and round the room they danced.
“I’m happy,” Laurie sobbed,
“It feels like you’re back from that awful place and I don’t ever want to lose
you again. I’m happy and I’m scared; that’s why I’m crying.”
Larry led her to the couch
and told her about his incredible visit to Wal~Mart, his meeting the man, Nick,
and finding the damaged bicycle, how he knew he could fix it up better than new.
He had some tricks up his sleeve alright, ol’ Larry, some parts from his Harley
including an ooga-ooga horn he knew Lonnie loved. Laurie stopped crying and
breathed a silent thank-you to her God for answering her prayers, prayers gone
empty in their year of darkness. Larry pressed Lonnie’s letter into her hands.
“What did I say just before I left… that Lonnie was gettin’ a little old to be
writin’ letters to Santa Claus..” He choked up and had his turn at a jag of
crying. He stood up from the couch, arms akimbo. “Enough o’ that! No more happy
tears; it’s time to go to work. I won’t be long, believe me. You just wait and
save me some hugs.”
“We always did it together,”
Laurie said softly.
“What, Sweetheart?” Larry
asked, nonplussed at Laurie’s statement.
“The toys,” Laurie replied,
“Wrapping presents for everyone and putting things together.”
Larry clapped his hands, a
true and genuine smile softening his young man’s tough leather face. “That’s
right, girl! You’d better get some jeans and shoes on… and don’t forget
your coat!”
Laurie ran to the bedroom
and put on her jeans and warm felt boots. She looked every bit the excited Child
to Larry when she bustled back into the room. “I’ll get the fire truck,” she
chirped happily. “We have to put it together. And I found a few things to go
with the girls’ dolls at the secondhand store, even a race car for Lily. We’ll
have to clean them up a bit. Larry, I’ll make some coffee and bring everything
out to the garage. We’ll do it like before.”
Larry kissed her on the
mouth, long and hard, took her breath away. “We’ll do it like forever, my Sweet
Lady.”
Laurie went to the closet,
began unearthing hidden treasures. Larry got the bicycle from the truck, took it
into the garage, and stoked a fire in the steel drum stove he had built a few
years before. He got his tap and die set, cut new threads into the axle, and had
the front wheel on in a jiffy. He reached absently into his left-hand jeans’
pocket and felt something crinkly there. When he pulled his hand out, it was
holding a hundred dollar bill. Now how did that get there? He stopped for a
moment, amazed at how wonderful he felt. Hope, he thought, don’t
know how or when I lost it, what with all I got to be thankful for, but I got it
back. And with hope, I have faith. One more tear on the seat of Lonnie’s
bicycle. He was polishing the chrome on the wheels, chasing the rust away, when
Laurie came into the garage with two steaming mugs full of coffee.
“Oh Darlin’” she exclaimed,
“You didn’t just get a bicycle, you got the bicycle.