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> Excerpt from Walpuski's Typewriter
by Frank Darabont
“Yes?
May I help you?”
Howard froze in the open doorway, letting the wind howl through the long,
narrow shop like a wounded beast. The scabrous old man behind the counter was
grinning — not smiling, but grinning and rubbing his hands together with
a predacious glee like John Carradine in a bad movie. He was positively ancient,
a bald fossil in green tweed, sporting a pink roadmap of eczema on his scalp.
He reminded Howard of a praying mantis.
A rumble of thunder rolled down Hollywood Boulevard and rattled the windows
in their frames. Howard stepped inside and closed the door, shutting out the
gale. It wasn’t a dark and stormy night, not yet, but it was getting there
in a big, ugly way.
“May I help you?” the proprietor persisted.
“Uh, yes, I hope so.” Howard hefted the battered black typewriter
case onto the counter and opened it to reveal the equally battered and black
IBM Selectric II within. “I’m afraid my typewriter broke down this
morning.”
Broke down, hell. It had self-destructed with an oily belch of smoke and a
prolonged, wheezing death-rattle. The sound it made as it expired was that of
an old dog farting.
Howard saw no point in relating all the sorry details. “I’m not
really sure what the trouble is.”
“How tragic,” murmured the old man, and leaned over the carcass
of the machine with a look of overwhelming sadness. Then his grin returned,
so sudden and unexpected that Howard took a nervous step back. “You’re
a writer,” he croaked. It wasn’t a question so much as the accusation
of a hooded Inquisitor.
“Well, yes,” Howard admitted.
“I spotted it right off, didn’t I? I am Cyril Pratt. And you are…?”
“Howard. Howard Walpuski.”
“Feel free to browse around, Mr. Walpuski. See what strikes your fancy.
Will you be using the dearly departed,” he nodded at Howard’s IBM
with the solicitous air of an undertaker, “as a trade-in?”
Howard shrugged, non-committal. The truth of the matter was he had the sum
of his wordly wealth riding around in his wallet in the form of five wrinkled
dollar bills and an RTD bus pass. He noticed the faded REPAIRS MADE ON CREDIT
sign mounted on the wall and gestured vaguely in its direction. “Actually,
I wondered if you might be able to—”
“Affect repairs?” spat the old man. Again, it sounded like an
accusation: Zoo, you vant your typewriter repaired, schweinhunt? Und on credit,
no doubt! Hmmm…you haff relatives in Argentina, perhaps? Howard felt his
face redden, suddenly sure that Pratt knew he had only five bucks to his name,
knew about the phone company threatening to disconnect him for non-payment,
knew about the nasty letters his bank was sending him with the words INSUFFICIENT
FUNDS and OVERDRAWN screaming at him from every paragraph, knew…well,
everything.
“Yes,” Howard stammered. “Affect repairs.”
“Well, we’ll just have to see about that, won’t we? We’ll
just have to see if repairs are in order.”
Pratt removed the carriage housing cover and poked his nose into the IBM,
prodding around with his index finger, whistling and grunting softly under his
breath.
Howard turned away and pretended to browse the typewriters that lurked in
the shadows on musty shelves and pedestal displays, hating himself for letting
the old man make him feel ashamed and small, praying that the Selectric could
be mickey-moused into functioning again. He had a deadline to meet, rent to
pay.
He’d been to damn near every typewriter shop in the city, lugging the
beastly black IBM till the muscles in his neck and shoulders sang arias about
muscular aches and pains. Most of the repairmen had simply smiled as politely
as possible, shaken their heads, and shown him the door. One guy had actually
laughed in his face and said, what’d you do, buddy, use this sucker to
barbecue? Howard had resisted a blinding urge to remove all the man’s
teeth with one mighty swing of the typewriter; he’d simply thanked him
and left, the back of his neck flushed and hot.
There was no reason to hope that Pratt would be any different, none at all.
Howard glanced at the counter and was shocked to find the old man staring
at him. He was suddenly sure Pratt had been watching him all along, studying
him instead of the typewriter. He pictured himself lying on the counter in the
IBM’s place, the top of his head removed like a carriage housing cover,
Pratt peering inside his skull and poking his finger around, making those soft
sounds under his breath.
“Well?”
“Yes,” said Pratt, “I think repairs are called for. Much
needed repairs.”
Howard’s face lit up. For a brief moment he even found himself liking
the old guy. “Great! How long do you think it’ll take?”
“Major repairs,” continued Pratt, ignoring the question. “Beyond
just the obvious. The typewriter is the least of it.”
Howard blinked. “I’m not sure I follow.”
“Answer me this. If you had an infinite number of monkeys randomly hitting
the keys of an infinite number of typewriters for an infinite amount of time,
do you know what you’d get?”
Of course Howard knew; this had been standard in every philosophy course he’d
ever taken in college. “You would eventually get all the great works of
literature?”
“YOU’D GET BULLSHIT, THAT’S WHAT YOU’D GET!”
screamed Pratt, causing Howard to jump several feet in the air. “And do
you know why you’d get bullshit?”
“Why?” blurted Howard.
“Because monkeys can’t write!” Pratt unfurled a long, gnarled
finger and jabbed it in Howard’s direction. “You, Mr. Walpuski,
are like one of those monkeys. You just keep hitting the keys, and all you keep
producing is bullshit.”
Howard’s mouth dropped open like a trapdoor. “Now wait just a
damn minute…”
“Yes, I will affect repairs. On credit, of course. You need pay only
a small deposit now, say perhaps . . . five wrinkled dollar bills?”
This stopped Howard cold. He had just been working himself into a good rage,
too — had, in fact, promised himself to grab the nasty old codger by the
frayed lapels and shake him till his head fell off — but this brought
him up short like a bucket of water between the eyes.
“Fuh-fuh-fuh-five . . . ?”
“Wrinkled dollar bills, yes. The remainder of my fee will be 10% of
all your earnings from the three novels.”
“Three novels?”
“Yes, of course,” said Pratt, waggling three fingers impatiently
in front of Howard’s nose. “My work is guaranteed, you know. For
three novels.”
Before Howard could respond, Cyril Pratt tucked the big IBM effortlessly under
his arm, case and all. He strode to a door near the back of the shop and threw
it open, revealing rickety wooden steps leading down into darkness. He spared
a glance over his shoulder. “Well? Come, come! I haven’t got all
night, you know!”
The old man plunged into darkness.
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(from Walpulski's Typewriter copyright © 2005 by Frank Darabont)