One More Thing: Stories and Other Stories

The woman sounded perplexed. “I’m sorry, could you explain more … what you mean, exactly?”

 

 

“You buy the twelve-million-dollar certified check made out to us, George and Cynthia Clark, from Hirst LLC. Okay? You give it to Damien Hirst. He writes VOID or CANCELED on it, or stamps or stencils it or however he wants to do it—he can decide that part.”

 

“Maybe he could paint it in red paint,” chimed in Cynthia.

 

“Shh,” said George. “Then you take that, you frame that—he frames that—whoever frames that—doesn’t matter—the voided check—that he voided, or an assistant voided, or however he does it—then one of you takes that to a gallery, and you sell it for sixty-five, seventy, a hundred million dollars!”

 

“I don’t think that would sell,” the woman finally said.

 

“Sure it would! It’s almost exactly like the first idea, but better!”

 

“What is?”

 

“The voided check to us! That we gave to him! And he voided! For the lottery ticket that we gave to him! That he voided!”

 

“I’m sorry,” said the woman. “I think I just don’t get it.”

 

“That’s okay,” said the husband.

 

Just an idea.

 

 

 

 

 

Heyyyyy, Rabbits

 

 

 

 

 

One morning I looked out my window, and I saw a rabbit hop across my back patio.

 

Just hopping through.

 

It entered from one side, then it hopped around a little, then it left out the other side.

 

That was it.

 

I loved it.

 

I wanted it to happen again and again and again.

 

I thought about buying a rabbit as a pet and putting it on the patio. But I didn’t want to have to lock it up in a cage. And I didn’t want to let it just roam free, knowing that at any time, anything could happen to it.

 

I would feel so terrible if something happened to it.

 

Or if it felt all caged up.

 

So I put a bowl of carrots out on my back patio.

 

Heyyyyy, rabbits.

 

 

 

 

 

The Best Thing in the World Awards

 

 

 

 

 

Many of the nominees were returning: love, Jesus Christ, Julia Louis-Dreyfus on Seinfeld, losing gracefully (which never won but was always nominated), sunrises, peace (which was often a finalist during times of war but was otherwise not nominated), summer evenings, the score to West Side Story, laughter, Christmas, and peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches.

 

Others were new: internet on planes, spicy tuna on crispy rice.

 

Beauty had never been nominated. People lived their lives as if it were the best thing in the world, but perhaps in their hearts they knew it wasn’t. The same was true for money. Same for honesty.

 

A lot of people said they thought that Jesus Christ was going to come close one of these days, but it was generally nonreligious people who said that. Believers tended to vote for love, and the more casual believers voted for Christmas, and that split the vote.

 

Love always won. Everyone knew that and watched anyway. Perhaps even more eagerly, the way that people are more willing to get caught up in a certain type of movie when they have a sense deep down that, of course, love is going to win in the end. The fun isn’t whether love is going to win; the fun is in seeing how.

 

“Welcome to the Best Thing in the World Awards!” announced the host, Neil Patrick Harris. He had been the host for the past four years and he was terrific at it. (“When are you going to be nominated?” he was asked each year as he walked the red carpet on the way in, and he’d laugh it off. And so would the viewers at home. “Let’s all calm down” was the general reaction whenever anyone would ask Neil Patrick Harris when he was going to be nominated. He was a fundamentally great host, there was no doubt about that; but it said a lot about how seriously people took the awards that he wouldn’t be nominated, at least not for a long, long time. An awards-show host? No, sorry. We love him, was the unspoken collective answer to this question, but we’re talking about the best thing in the world here.)

 

“Your votes—you, the viewers at home—are taken into account along with our confidential panel of experts and judges, all to determine the best of the best of the best …”

 

Most people skipped or only half watched the first ninety minutes of the show, which consisted of video segments and live performances celebrating the nominees, all of which had been previously announced. There were dance troupes, some subtitled singing. A man named Louie performed some standup comedy, but there wasn’t too much he could say on network television. Pixar debuted a ninety-second short film that was, everyone agreed, maybe just average for them but great for anyone else. Oprah Winfrey came out and explained in a smart and accessible way why some of the more-boring-seeming nominees—mostly those involving third world health—were actually really exciting to have on the list.