My Precious
It was early November of 2000. The weather was turning colder, and I had accompanied my grandmother to Wal-Mart in search of mittens. Michelle was there, too, and we fell into our standard Wal-Mart protocol as we saved the lives of several children too small for our grandmother to see as she steered her shopping cart with purpose. Did I ever tell you about the time she blindsided a dump truck? My four-foot-something, stooped-over grandmother doesn't realize her own strength.
Michelle took the front-left on the cart, sacrificing the skin on her heels to the wild wheels of the cart. I guarded from the side-right and coaxed Grandma gently around the curves of the aisles, staving off my own charge of disaster.
My eye began to twitch sporadically, and as I turned my head to the right, there was a twinkling from a watch display. Forgetting my role in the excursion, I followed the effervescent light. I was hypnotized by the sparkle, and a small pool of drool collected on my shirtfront as my hand reached out to touch the radiant timepiece of my fascination. So taken was I, that I missed the wails as a young boy's toy car met with the speeding wheels of Grandma's unchecked cart, and as a teenager grabbed her recently run-over foot and hopped around one-legged, sputtering. I missed the 3 racks of autumn-weight coats that cascaded to the floor, and I missed Michelle screaming for Grandma to stop as she tried to pry that frightened, and now disfigured, kindergartner from the grill of the shopping cart.
It was two-toned, poorly made, and the most exquisite bracelet watch that I had ever seen. The band was braided herringbone and the face had a fake diamond at the twelve-spot...it was the only one of its kind. I searched the entire mountain of two-toned, poorly made bracelet watches, and no other boasted a braided herringbone band. I do so dearly love braided herringbone.
Meanwhile, five red-smocked, frantic Wal-Mart employees squeezed between shoppers, searching for the cause of the store's domino-effect collapse of order. Grandmother, hidden within tall heaps of yarn and unaware of causing a stir, meandered in the aisle as Michelle wiped the sweat from her brow, dabbed at the blood from her heels, and cursed the day I was born.
Holding my treasure two-handed above my head, I let its divine glitter paint the fluorescent-lit flooring as I passed, unmindful of the torn clothing or the clumps of pulled hair littering the walkway. It, quite simply, sang to me. Alarms were sounding, crowds were shrieking, and police with heavy artillery were entering. My grandmother made her yarn selection and marched to the cash register across from mine. That's right, I bought the watch. I know you didn't see that coming, but I live for spontaneity.
Michelle limped into line behind me, pulling a brace from her swollen knee, a headache pad from her temple, and a gruesome looking mouthguard from her teeth. She piled them upon the counter and looked at me as if waiting for an explanation. I noted that she looked frazzled. Her eyes always exude a brighter blue when she's frazzled...that's the sure way to tell every time, mark my word. The clerk hesitated with procedure. She picked up the phone and began to order a price check before changing her mind and giving Michelle the lot for free as long as she bagged it herself.
Nearly five years later, it is still the watch against which I judge all other watches. I keep searching for a replacement. Better craftsmanship, precious metals, real diamonds...but it seems not to exist. I have tried nearly all 60,043 search combinations of "braided herringbone" and "watch" only to discover that the internet has not heard of such terms joined together! The gall!
Perhaps I am not meant to find it's alter-ultra-valuable-ego. Perhaps I am meant to remember the Wal-Mart bloodbath, the destruction unto my cousin, and know I would gladly replay the events to taste the sweet nectar of its discovery once more...