One More Thing (23 page)

Read One More Thing Online

Authors: B. J. Novak

BOOK: One More Thing
4.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I walked to the minibar and opened a beer. Josh stared while I downed the whole thing and threw the empty bottle on the floor.

Then he shrugged.

We got wasted in the room. Then we went to XS at the Wynn, Ghostbar at the Palms, and waited in line at Hakkasan at the MGM until we gave up. Willie won $800 at roulette. Josh hooked up. We got back to the rooms at five a.m., slept till ten, pulled the curtain open, turned up some music, smoked a bowl, and went to the Paris buffet for what we all agreed was the best breakfast, lunch, and dinner of our lives in a single sitting.

“We have to do this more often,” said Willie, in a crisp and brilliant benediction over a bottomless bottle of anonymous champagne.

“To health, wealth, and the beauty of our children.”

“To health, wealth, and the beauty of our children.”

“To health, wealth, and the beauty of our children.”

“To health, wealth, and the beauty of our children.”

The four of us shared a taxi to the airport together, still drunk from the breakfast. My plane was the last to take off. I played slots until my plane was ready to board. I won, then I lost, then I won, then I lost, all at random. I didn’t understand anything, but at least now it was a relief that I wasn’t supposed to. Then the plane boarded, and I went back home.

It was the happiest weekend the four of us spent together since college, as well as the last. A few weeks afterward, Willie changed his profile photo to a picture of him surrounded by smiling kids at an inner-city after-school program in a T-shirt with the unexplained acronym
H.E.L.P
. across it in cursive, and things seemed to get a lot better for him after that. Dave committed suicide six months later.

Wikipedia Brown and the Case of the Missing Bicycle

It was a quiet Sunday. Wikipedia Brown was sipping lemonade with his friend Sally, when all of a sudden their classmate Joey ran in, out of breath.

“Help!” said Joey. “Someone stole my bike! I left it outside the library this morning. Who stole it?”

“The modern-day chain bicycle was patented in Germany in 1817,” said Wikipedia Brown. “Ten-speed bikes became popular in the United States in the 1970s. Carrot Top uses a bicycle as a prop in his popular mainstream comedy act.”

“Oooh, Carrot Top,” said Joey. “Whatever happened to him?”

“Carrot Top was born Scott Thompson in Big Bear City, California, in 1965,” said Wikipedia Brown.

“Big Bear City? What an odd name. Is that a real place?” asked Joey.

“Big Bear City is an unincorporated census-designated location in San Bernardino County, California, with a population of—”

“Wait! Let’s not get distracted,” said Sally. “Every time we talk to Wikipedia Brown, we get distracted. We spend hours
and hours with him, and always forget what we were supposed to investigate in the first place.”

“Yes, good point,” said Joey. “We have to find my bike. Sally, do you have any ideas?”

“Sally is a bad detective and a well-known slut,” said Wikipedia Brown. “Citation needed.”

“Is that true?” asked Joey—his intentions unclear.

“No,” said Sally, fuming with anger. “I don’t know who told him that. It could have been anyone. Literally,
anyone
.”

“The government caused 9/11!” Wikipedia Brown shouted suddenly, for no reason.

Sally pulled Wikipedia Brown aside. “Are you sure you’re okay, Wikipedia?”

“I’m not perfect,” said Wikipedia Brown. “I never said I was. But I work fast, and I work for free, and I’m everyone’s best friend. Plus, I’m getting better by the second—and it’s all thanks to people like you.”

Sally smiled. She liked being part of Wikipedia’s process. “Okay, Wikipedia,” said Sally. “But I have a question for you, Joey. You say you left your bike outside the library this morning? It’s Sunday morning. The library is closed.”

Wikipedia Brown stood up with a start.

“George W. Bush is the father of Miley Cyrus’s baby!” announced Wikipedia Brown.

This story is under review
.

Regret Is Just Perfectionism Plus Time

They all gathered around his hospital bed to cry and watch him die.

“Do you have any regrets, Grandpa?” asked the ten-year-old, solemnly, as if he imagined himself wearing a tie.

“Yes, I do,” said the man. “I bought a lottery ticket in 1974. Once. One ticket. Ten million dollar jackpot.”

“Did you win?”

“No.”

“Were you close?” asked the boy.

“No,” moaned the grandfather. “I got all six numbers wrong. All six! I said 12-5-28-4-17-31—that’s what I put on the form. If I had put 3-16-18-19-34-1, then everything would have been different.”

Chris Hansen at the Justin Bieber Concert

His daughter was dying, literally dying, to go to the Justin Bieber concert, and it was only going to be one night, and her mother was going to be out of town, and it was practically impossible to get tickets anyway except, except! He could always get tickets to anything thanks to his connections as the longtime host of the NBC series
To Catch a Predator
.

But Chris Hansen did not want to go to the Justin Bieber concert.

“I just think,” he said, choosing his words to his twelve-year-old daughter carefully, “I just think that my presence there … might make some people … uncomfortable.”

“Who? Pedophiles?” snapped his daughter. “You’re afraid of making pedophiles uncomfortable?”

“Yes—no!—I mean …” stammered Chris Hansen. “
Look
. Anyone who has followed my career knows I am
not
afraid of making pedophiles uncomfortable. Okay? That’s just Chris Hansen 101. Let’s get that straight right off the bat.”

“Then what
is
it?” she challenged.

Tough girl. His daughter all right.

“What is it, Dad?”

“You want to know what it is?” said Chris Hansen. “You really want to know? I go to the Justin Bieber concert, and everybody’s looking at me. You know why? They’re looking at me trying to figure out who
I’m
looking at. So everybody’s staring at me. And I have to do them the courtesy of not looking back at them, because what they don’t realize is that if I look at them back for as much as a split second, then everybody’s gonna stare at
them
for the next two hours. You understand why, don’t you? And by the way, do you know who’s
not
looking at me? There are only a few people at this point who are not looking at me, who are trying to
avoid
eye contact. Do you know who those people are? That’s right,” said Chris Hansen. “Pedophiles. Those are the pedophiles. So, great, now I know who all the pedophiles are. That’s a fun thing to know, isn’t it? And now, I am morally obligated to do something—but what do I do? How am I supposed to alert someone in a position of authority that these people are definitely pedophiles who are destroying lives, but that the only evidence I can offer to support this charge is that these alleged pedophiles are suspiciously
not
staring at me? Huh? I’d look like something of an egomaniac, don’t you think? So you know what I have to do, to make it tolerable for myself? There’s only one thing I can do, Kaitlin. I have to stare straight ahead,
right
at Justin Bieber, never taking my eyes off him, not even for a second. And when people see me at a Justin Bieber concert, staring holes into Justin Bieber, you know what they think? They think,
Ahhh, I see. It all makes sense now
. And I don’t even care—I don’t have an ego about stuff like that,” he lied, “but besides all that, besides
all
that, what about the fact that I bust pedophiles eight hours a day, five days a week, and maybe for once in my life I just want to relax on a Saturday night spending time with my daughter without any of this on my mind?”

She started to cry.

Dammit, thought Chris Hansen. I shouldn’t have used that tone. She’s just a kid who wanted to go to a concert. I didn’t have to make it all about me. Also, I didn’t need to exaggerate my hours. It’s more like four hours a day, four days a week.

“You know what,” he said, “I’ll wear a hat or something. It’ll be fine.”

“You look stupid in hats,” she said.

“Hey. That hurt my feelings,” he said.

In the end, he took her to the Justin Bieber concert. It wasn’t as much fun as she thought it was going to be, and it wasn’t as bad as he said it was going to be. The concert was okay, and so were they.

Great Writers Steal

“What if they have an alarm?”

“I told you. We’re going to get out too fast for that to matter.”

“I don’t know. Something feels off.”

“Hey! Nothing’s off, okay? It’s what we’re doing. Remember what the book said?”

“ ‘Good writers borrow, great writers steal.’ ”

“You want to be a great writer?”

“Yeah.”

“Are you sure? Because you don’t sound sure.”

“I want to be a great writer!”

“You want to be a great writer?”

“Yes! I want to be a great writer! I want to be a legend!”

“Damn right. We’re both going to be legends. Kerouac, Burroughs, Bukowski—they probably stole all kinds of stuff.”

“Bret Easton Ellis probably still robs places.”

“Liquor stores, probably.”

“Who knows! Probably. I pictured maybe banks. The point is, we never hear about any of it.”

“Right. Right.”

“Right?!”

“Right!”

“Ready?!”

“Let’s do it!!!”

Neither of them ever got anything published. In fact, those who read their writing went so far as to say that they misunderstood literature on an unusually fundamental level.

But after a few years, they got to be pretty good thieves.

Confucius at Home

Other books

Desired By The Alien by Rosette Lex
The Darkest Secret by Gena Showalter
A Fair to Remember by Barbara Ankrum
The Hum and the Shiver by Alex Bledsoe
The Murmurings by West, Carly Anne
Wonderful You by Mariah Stewart
On Guard by Kynan Waterford
Treading Air by Ariella Van Luyn