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Authors: George Singleton

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BOOK: Calloustown
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“Lee Wayne's coming by to stay with us for a couple weeks, until he can straighten out his life,” Monica said to me one day, seven years into our marriage, nine months after the last time we'd heard from her brother. “I don't want to hear any crap from you about this.”

A minute earlier we had been getting along fine, talking about how it would never be socially acceptable for women to chew Red Man or Beechnut tobacco in public until they learned how to spit cleanly. We'd gotten on the subject because neither of us was doing very well when it came to nicotine gum, prescription Zyban, nicotine patches, prescription Chantix, hypnosis, and cold turkey. Monica and I stood out in the middle of our backyard smoking one-hundred-percent additive-free natural tobacco, because at least we'd gotten away from the more popular name brands. We had agreed that A) we should not smoke in the house because maybe the cleaner smell would make us eventually stop; and B) once we ran out of money from buying the one-hundred-percent additive-free natural tobacco cigarettes that cost twice as much as, say, Camels, Marlboros, and Winstons, we would have no other choice but to quit, or start robbing banks in a way more suited to her brother Lee Wayne. I'm not all that proud to admit that when I smoked cigarettes outside I found myself looking at the tomato/Brussels sprouts/habanero/broccoli/ rosemary/basil garden and wondered how difficult it might be to grow actual tobacco plants there, and learn how to roll handmade cigars.

The neighbors next door had a cookout. It was a little more than obvious that they pretended they didn't see us standing there, a half acre away, puffing like special lizards. These were new people who'd only moved in a couple months earlier. The old neighbors evidently didn't pay their mortgage. I think their last name began with either an L or a T, but I can't remember. I said to Monica, “Two weeks?” I said, “There's no way that he can straighten out his life in two weeks. Did you mean years? Did I mishear you? Did you say two decades?”

“Not funny, Clewis.”

It's my last name. People always call me by my last name, always—even when I was a child. Look at the other people in history known better only by their last name: Caesar, Einstein, Plato, Shakespeare. There are a lot of them. Maybe Geronimo and Crazy Horse. Hemingway and Faulkner. Castro. In the world of high finance: Rockefeller, Carnegie, Hearst, Astor, and Buffett. In regards to art: Picasso, Pollock, Dali, Renoir, Monet, Matisse, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Warhol. Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Nixon, and Reagan, when it comes to politics. Churchill. Gandhi.

I don't count Hitler.

I didn't know Lee Wayne would show up by the time Monica and I went inside, cooked supper, then came outside to smoke before going in to eat. I kind of wondered how come she made a big point out of fixing a special meal of fish tacos, asparagus, coleslaw, fresh-cut potatoes fried in olive oil, and a black bean soup concoction we'd never had in the past. She had already baked bread with forty-seven different grains and whipped up hummus from chickpeas. Monica made a regular tossed salad and cooked a pie made from canned peaches and pizza dough. I thought maybe I'd forgotten our anniversary, or my own birthday. I thought maybe it was Lee Wayne's birthday, or perhaps he was coming over to ask us to be in a wedding he had forthcoming.

“Are we cooking for the rest of the week or something?” I said. Most nights we didn't even eat together—I ate a bologna sandwich, and she ate unsalted, unbuttered popcorn with a side of eighteen-cheese quiche. I said, “When's your brother showing up?”

She looked at her watch. She said, “If possible, try not to mention the word ‘penny.' Don't mention currency, copper, recycling centers, or that thing up in Chicago that's not the stock exchange, really. I can't remember what it's called.”

I said, “Wrigley Field? Second City Comedy Troupe? The Sears Tower? Oprah? That German submarine inside the Museum of Science and Industry?”

“The Chicago Board of Trade. I think that's where it is. Anyway, don't mention pennies.”

I was about to ask why, there in the backyard, with the neighbors still grilling what smelled like nice rib eyes and our own tacos growing cold on the kitchen counter, when Lee Wayne drove up palming an oogah-oogah-oogah horn attached to the steering wheel of a late model Toyota hybrid.

“Pennies, or jail. Don't mention either one,” Monica said. “He just got out of prison.”

My first thought, of course—maybe during my predictable and likely second bachelor party I would say to those gathered, “Prison?! When and why did Lee Wayne go to prison?!” but it would be an exaggeration—my first thought was, “Who leaves prison and shows up at a sister's house driving a late model Toyota hybrid?”

Then I thought that stuff about when and why did Lee Wayne get incarcerated, and then the third thing I thought was, “Why would anyone put an oogah-oogah-oogah horn on a nice car?” There might've been some other considerations in between. I'm that way. I've been coming up with other considerations ever since I decided that I wanted to make more of myself than being a plain guy with a horticulture degree in charge of making sure city workers pick up branches, weed beds, and cut the grass in public areas.

Not to get sidetracked, but one time I made a movie of a man who cut the grass at his house, took a shower, then went to bed with his wife. They had sex for about two minutes. All of this was done in silence—even when he was on the Troy-Bilt 17.4 horsepower manual 42” riding mower in the front yard—until he got into bed. Then he said, audibly, “I'll do the backyard tomorrow.” And she said, “You ain't done the front yard yet, son,” like that, all symbolic and ironic. Then the credits came up saying how my friend Fred Bingham played the part of the Grass Cutter, and his then-fiancée Kay Sue Platt played the part of Disgruntled and Unsatisfied Wife. I sent the film off to one of those movie contests but never heard anything. It might've been too short. It ran right at two hours, because I slo-moed the grass-cutting scene.

I slo-moed the mow, see.

The movie's called
Chores and Maintenance
, in case it ever comes out for real and people want to know.

Everyone called Kay Sue “Kazoo” behind her back until she took off from Fred. I'm hoping that
Chores and Maintenance
never gets picked up by a major distributor, just so she doesn't gain fame and royalties.

Lee Wayne got out of the car and skipped our way. He said, “All right! I smell something good!” When I say “skipped,” I mean that he actually skipped, like a schoolgirl. He still possessed long sinewy arms, the face of a hatchet, the legs of a man who'd never used a ladder. He looked like my beautiful wife, minus the boobs.

I dropped my cigarette butt and stomped on it twice, then reached down to pick it up. As I stood erect, Monica dropped hers so that I'd have to stomp on it, and bend back over. At least that's what I thought about a year later. I said, “Hey, Lee Wayne.”

He held his arms out wide and said, “Not bad, huh? That was certainly worth it.” He hugged his sister, then nodded up and down toward me. We didn't shake hands or anything. The last time we shook hands that I could remember was at the bachelor party when he returned from a place I never learned. He came back, and shook my hand, and said, “I got to thank you, my man.” My groomsmen had taken me out to one of those Hooters places. I think he might've hooked up with a barmaid out in the parking lot in the van he used to drive.

I said, “What've you been up to?” pretending I hadn't heard.

Monica said, “What you smell is those steaks over there,” and pointed toward our neighbors, who had evidently made a pact to keep their backs pointed our way, like synchronized swimmers. Kind of too loud she blurted out, “We're eating fish, asparagus, coleslaw, potatoes, peach pie, soup, and hummus, because it's more nutritional than red meat!”

They were either Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, or one of those other denominations whose members prided themselves on clean living and pure spleens. I didn't know for sure, because I hadn't found the right time to take them some flowers or brownies.

While I spent my day telling men named Fred and DaQuawn to spread pine nugget mulch around the pansies, Monica taught kindergarten and, I imagined, had to raise her voice often.

“I need a beer,” Lee Wayne said to me. “Let's go inside and get a beer. Y'all still smoking? I quit. They don't let anyone smoke inside prisons these days anymore, so I had to quit. What a good way to quit!” He put his arm around my shoulder as we walked inside and said, “Say, you got any pennies I could buy off you? I'm going straight back to my old ways, seeing it's worth it.”

Monica shot me a mean look. I wasn't supposed to say “penny” and those other things. I said, “I think we might have some one-cent currency units, Lee Wayne. Why do you ask?”

We went inside. We ate the hell out of some fish tacos. If it matters, Monica chose catfish. Tilapia would've been fine, but she chose farm-raised catfish from down in Mississippi. We had catfish juices dribbling down our faces, and we drank beer, and we turned up the stereo so we couldn't hear the neighbors sizzling next door. We listened to Johnny Cash, because Lee Wayne said they wouldn't ever let anyone listen to Johnny Cash for the month he spent in lockup. We listened to Merle Haggard, and Social Distortion, and about anyone else we figured had a lead singer who'd done time. Robert Johnson. Steve Earle. The Monkees. Monica and I didn't have the most complete CD collection, but we made do. I said some things. I said, “Here are some people who will be in jail,” and played one of those sad Italian operas.

We never even got to the peach pizza pie. We ate, and sang along, and then finally Monica said, “Tell me what happened exactly.”

Here's Lee Wayne's—and then my, eventually—story: a copper penny gets a person one cent's worth of merchandise. Let's say that there's an item out there that costs a penny these days, like maybe one-tenth of a gumball. But a full copper penny—it takes 146 pre-1983 pennies to make a pound—was worth about $3.40 a pound when Lee Wayne envisioned his brilliant, prison-worthy idea. I've never been good at explaining things mathematically, and I had to listen to Lee Wayne twice. One hundred forty-six pennies minted before 1983 equals $1.46. In weight, 146 pennies equaled $3.40, what with the price of copper.

Again, it's against the law to mutilate or diminute. I doubt that “diminute” is even a word, but before Lee Wayne I'd never heard of “diminution,” either. It's not a word used widely when telling employees to spread fertilizer or cull vines.

“What else did I have to do?” he said to us. “Y'all know how I was spinning my reel and not pulling anything in. Look, it only took time, and I had that going for me. I'd go to the bank, buy, say, a few hundred dollars in pennies, sort out the pre-1983 ones, put them aside, and rewrap the post-1982 pennies. Then I'd go down to the railroad track—you can't just take regular pennies to the recycling center and hand them in—and set the pennies down on the rail. Presto change-o! The pennies got flattened, I scooped them up and took them to a place where they knew, deep down, what I did but didn't care, and then I took that money—it would be quite a bit, and then I'd turn in the newer pennies for a penny apiece, you know—back to another bank and bought more. Over and over.”

I wasn't accustomed to drinking anymore. Monica said I could only drink on days when she came home from kindergarten happy. I said, “Let me get this straight. You had the pennies smashed by trains, and then you took those smashed pennies to the metal recycling center and turned them in. Like I might do with cans I pick up on the side of the road.”

“That's what I did,” Lee Wayne said. “I hung out in a hobo jungle-like setting, and I put pennies down on the rails. There's a place I know where freight trains come by on the hour. I set down all these pennies, and then I picked them off after they rattled off the rail all flattened and unrecognizable. Meanwhile, I set down more and waited for the next train to come by. Then I took bags of flattened pennies down to this iron and metal place. They knew what I did, but somehow they didn't get charged. Let me tell you, a guy named Mike Wayne something or another who worked down there should've spent time in jail too. But I ain't sad or blameful about it.”

I thought about a railroad track that ran straight through town, right in the middle of where I sent my workers to weed-eat cockleburs. I said, “How come not everyone's doing this?”

Lee Wayne craned his neck around and smiled. “The maximum fee is something like a hundred bucks and six months in prison. Or at least it used to be. I got charged a hundred bucks and thirty days in the county lockup. I wasn't really in a prison, technically. So what? You know how much I made, Cuz?”

Monica said, “Wait a minute. So you traded in dollars for rolls of pennies, and then went through the pennies and pulled out all the ones minted before 1983, when there was a bunch of zinc added or whatever. Am I getting this right? Is this what you did? And then you took the old pennies and laid them out on railroad tracks so they'd get smashed into unrecognizable, flat pieces of copper. Then you took the smashed pennies to some guy who paid you whatever copper costs by the pound, and walked out of there, and bought more. Is this right or is this wrong?”

I said, “You might be the smartest man I've ever met.” I said, “Hey, whatever happened to you at my bachelor party?”

Monica looked at me for about one second and picked up her fork as if she were going to scoop up some hummus. She said, “Why the hell can't you think up something like this so we can move into a nice subdivision and cook steaks out when we want? Goddamn. This isn't working. This here?” She waggled the fork between us, back and forth. She held her eyebrows high. “It isn't working, Clewis.”

BOOK: Calloustown
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