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and I got a little angry. I took it back from her looking at the fish that’s evident.” She told me
and I flicked it back in her face, and yelled, “Why “his name is Bobby.” I asked, “The artist or the
you sellin’ it?” She shrugged and said “gimme fish?” She told me, “Oh, the artist of course, but
a quarter.” No need to haggle. Sold! I took it, that’s a good name for the fish too.” It was, but
framed it, and hung it on the wall in front of I told her I’d have to think about it. Ten bucks
my toilet. is a lot of money. As I turned to walk away she
Now, herein lies the problem. My husband says, “And I’m pretty sure those are real human
said that my bathroom was creepy and weird teeth.” I go, “Jeez Pat! Why didn’t you lead with
and that he didn’t feel comfortable in that? Of course I want it! Sold!” I wrapped
there. I said, “That’s my point! I don’t it up, brought it home, and put it
want you to be comfortable in there! on the mantle in the middle of my
Get in, get out! And besides living room.
I don’t want any guests to be So here we were at a standstill.
relaxed enough to rifle around My husband thought my
my medicine cabinet!” house was creepy and weird
Then I had to spend the and I clearly did not. So I
next hour trying to convince made one final ditch effort
him that NO, I was not to save my stuff and I recited
addicted to prescription pain a quote that’s been attributed
medication and YES, I probably to Dr. Seuss. (Because when
did need intense therapy. Which you’re me, you have to have
leads me to my final item, Bobby “His name is Bobby” random quotes handy to justify
the wonder fish. your behavior.) I said to him, “You
Bobby was an orange papier- know what? We’re all little weird, and
mâché fish with a full set of hillbilly teeth and life’s a little weird, and when you find someone
mismatched eyes. When I saw him on the shelf whose weirdness is compatible with your own,
at Pat’s thrift store, our eyes locked! At least the you join up with them in mutual weirdness, and
one that was facing me. I knew he had to be mine you call it love.”
and I asked Pat how much. She said, “Well, he And to my surprise. . .that didn’t work. I
was made by a genuine artist, I’m gonna need thought it was kind of charming but he wasn’t
10 bucks.” I said, “10 bucks for this thing, are having it. The stuff in the bathroom had to go.
you kidding me? Its eyes don’t match. They’re It got relegated to the basement, facing the wall
two different sizes and colors. They’re not even of course, because no one wanted to be caught
pointing in the same direction!” off guard. But Bobby, with his gap-tooth grin
And then I got the full story. The genuine and wall-eyed stare, still reigns supreme on my
artist is actually a homeless guy that lives in mantle in the center of the living room.
the alley behind her shop and when he’s low Heather shared that she went to work for Banfield
on cash he’ll make something to sell. She told Pet Hospitals so that she could join Banfield Barkers
me sometimes he likes to wear up to three Toastmasters. Which she did in 2013.
sets of contact lenses at the same time. “Yeah,
“The world is shaped by two things — stories
told and the memories they leave behind.”
Vera Nazarian, Dreams of the Compass Rose
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