Sitting on my desk at about “Ten O’clock” as the military
assigns locations is a rapidly tarnishing, metal – brass, bronze, I don’t know,
do I look like a metallurgist to you? – desk lamp, that, you pull a chain and
the light goes on.
I no longer recall where I got it, but I have had the lamp
for at least twenty years, and beyond its illuminational properties, its
venerability has always been a substantial source of comfort to me, as in, “I am
older than I used to be. But I am not as old as that lamp.”
Moving closer to the point…
The lamp-in-toto
includes a metal base, from which rise two penholders, the pens, being long-stemmed
straight pens, coffee-brown, plastic cylinders – except they narrow at both
ends though more so at the top – decorated with fake gold trim.
I try not to use them too often, because, now that the stationary
stores have gone away, I cannot easily find refills for them, once the ink in
their long-narrow-tubes-attached-to-the-point runs out. For some time, till I found a place that carried those refills, I had the company
of two dead pens, standing impotently in their holders.
Now here’s the thing.
And trust me, you will shortly be scratching your heads in confusion,
amazement and disbelief, mostly the latter, but I promise you this is true.
For long stretches of time, the longest lasting more than
two years, one of the pens ensconced in one of the penholders on my desk lamp abruptly…
Disappears.
I do not know if it’s the same pen. These are twin pens; they look exactly the
same. It could, however, be the same pen, as I have moved them around so
much – placing the pen I am using in whichever holder happens to be empty at
the time – that I am unable to definitively say, “That is the left penholder pen, and that is the right.”
I just know that when I inadvertently glance in the “Ten
O’clock” direction as I am working away at my computer, I notice – and not for the first time – that one of
them is missing. Never two – just
because they’re identical twin pens does not mean they socialize – always just
one.
The remarkable thing is that, whichever pen is gone?
It inevitably – and I mean always –
Comes back.
My wife had a grandfather like that. A vagabond, who left hearth and home for long
stretches of time, but who, eventually, always came back. That’s what I have – a pen like my wife’s
grandfather.
Notice I said, “The pen comes back”, rather than, “I
eventually find it.” That is not how it works. I never
find it. Nowadays, I do not even bother
to look, as I have feverishly done in the past.
Right now, there in no pen in the right penholder and my search was at
best perfunctory, as I know that looking for it does no good whatsoever. It will come back on its own. Which explains why I am taking this in
stride. This is not like the single sock
that gets lost in the laundry. Those
things never come back. That’s just infuriating!
The renegade pen will return. In its own time. When it’s ready.
I have occasionally speculated on where the pen goes. I have read about (and have even conceived an
animated feature about) runaway parrots who instinctively find each other and
form communities in runaway-parrot-designated trees. There’s a famous documentary about this
phenomenon: The Parrots Of Telegraph Hill.
(I should show you my outline for the movie sometime. I wrote it as a poem. It’s pretty interesting. Lemme write myself a reminder about that… Okay,
I’m done.)
I have wondered if runaway pens do something similar. There’s this place in Manhattan called “Pen
Station.” Maybe they go there. No, wait.
That’s “Penn Station.” Never mind.
I must admit that the lamp does look a little “off” without two pens. It’s kinda lopsided, a gunfighter totin’ a
two-gun holster, but only one gun. This
off-kilter firearm arrangement attracts at least
attention, and at worst
derision.
“What do you put in the other one, a banana?”
My desk lamp is thankfully free of such abuse. And I have to say, as the years have passed,
I barely notice the pen’s absence. I
just shrug acceptingly, and file “‘the wandering pen’ situation” among the
“Unexplained Wonders of the World”, one of life‘s fascinating mysteries, which I
cannot explain and will never understand.
I am fine with that. It is simply
the way it is.
Okay, I’ve had enough of this. Fess up!
It’s killing you that there’s
only one pen. I’ve seen you frantically looking for the other one – not in the
past, this time – clearing off your
desk, crawling underneath it, among the nests of computer wires and boxes of stored
mailing envelopes. You are desperate to find
that pen! We know you. You’re a person of
obsessive orderliness. You cannot put
your wallet down on a table without compulsively “squaring it up!” And you’re trying to convince us that a desk
lamp with two penholders but only one pen is not driving you crazy? I mean, come on! You spent an entire post writing about it, are you kidding me? – "The Blue Truth" (that Earl
can’t see, so don’t expect him to react to it.)
Easy-peasy. The pen’s
gone – it’ll come back.
I’ll let you know when it does. And you let me know if you see it, okay? Tell it to come home. On second thought, don’t.
I am perfectly fine without it.
Teller took it.
ReplyDeleteYour pen sounds like a cat and you sound like a person in a house with a cat who pretends he doesn't like cats but really misses them when they are gone.
ReplyDeleteYou could always put up posters with a picture of the other (identical) pen and say something like, "Reward offered - I'll name a character after you if you return the pen." Oh wait, that hasn't worked for Dennis Lehane and his missing dog.
http://www.dogster.com/the-scoop/find-dennis-lehane-lost-dog-next-book
Saw this preview for The Lone Ranger, recently, starring Armie Hammer as the masked man and Capt Jack Sparrow as Tonto.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3L5pbgKyWs4