MONTGOMERY—A barbecue joint. An old place with faded walls and perfect Boston butts. A TV above the counter shows footage of helicopter-crash wreckage. The headline reads “Kobe Bryant Dies in Helicopter Crash.”
The young woman behind the bar turns the volume up. It’s a sleepy Sunday afternoon, there are no customers in the restaurant but me and my wife.
The news reporter says, “...NBA legend was killed this morning in a helicopter crash that claimed the lives of the passengers aboard including Bryant’s thirteen-year-old daughter...”
“Oh no,” says the girl behind the counter, covering her mouth.
The cook and a dishwasher have come out of the kitchen to watch. Everyone is silent.
The TV reporter goes on, “Kobe Bryant was forty-one years old…”
When I pay my tab the cashier remarks, “He was so young.”
“Too young,” the cook says.
“Way too young,” adds the dishwasher.
This is what all people say when a young man dies. It’s a ritual of sorts. My father also passed away when he was forty-one. People said this millions of times. Always in this exact way.
Anyway, the
cashier hands me my change and I know it sounds silly, but the first thing I usually do is inspect the pennies in my pocket change.
“What’re you doin’?” she asks.
“Looking for pennies.”
“Why?”
“Old habit.”
She looks at me funny.
The penny thing is kind of a weird story. Maybe too weird for your taste. I wouldn’t hold it against you if you stopped reading right here.
But ever since boyhood I’ve had a knack for finding special pennies. Don’t misunderstand me, I never find any real money in the form of dollar bills, blank checks, or winning scratch-off tickets. Just pennies. And each time I find one, I always check the penny’s date.
I come from a long line of superstitious people who believe that a found-penny’s date means something. Namely, it means…