The assistant bank manager was dressed in camouflage; it’s
no surprise, they all are nowadays. He was, he said, sorry to inform me that my
loan application had been denied. He didn’t look sorry, though. He looked like
my father looked when he told me I was dead to him.
Luckily, I had learned to equip myself for precisely these
kinds of devastating moments. I go deep inside myself, into the desert, and
like in any desert, it’s not long before there’s a man on horseback, who
gallops up to save the day.
“It’s a magic coin,” he explains, reaching down from the
saddle to hand me what looks like a burnt potato chip. “Take it to any casino
in the land. You can’t lose. You’re sure to make your fortune.”
I take the chip, thank the crusader, and watch him gallop
away in search of the Holy Grail. This being the desert, there’s always a
casino close by. Fountains, palm trees, gold-plated lions—it's everything
you'd expect.
I step inside like I own the place, the only way to step
inside anyplace. The air is Arctic—so bracing! I walk right up to the roulette
table and put my coin down on lucky 14. The ball falls into the slot marked 25.
I lose everything.
Now with no loan and no lucky coin there is no way I could
ever be—well, what was it I wanted to be, anyway? Rich and famous? That’s a
laugh.
The assistant bank manager and my father were right to turn
away from me like I was dead to them. I turn away like I’m dead to me, too. I
feel like Lazarus stepping from the tomb, no longer Lazarus anymore.
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