Did you get the half-birthday card I sent you? You
should have, I sent it a week ago. No matter how old I am, I never forget
September 20th is my half-birthday. Reason is Uncle Norman, read below.
Mom had this thing with shoe stores. She always
complained her feet hurt. We’d go in and out of Yorkville’s many shoe stores
looking for the perfect comfortable shoe that she never found. Rory and I
played on the store’s big ladder on wheels flying it back and forth across the
floor with one of us hanging off with one arm free in front of the customers.
This usually stopped when the clerk or Mom threw something at us. Then we’d
pick up the foot-measuring device. It was all metal and looked like it held
some secret code with its side measuring knobs. It must have been expensive
because the clerk went bananas when we threw it. Rory tried on spiked heels he
grabbed from the store’s front window display. He’d wobble up and down the
carpet smiling from side to side. I studied him with one hand to my chin and my
elbow to my leg. Involuntarily, my head swayed with him as he traveled back and
forth, back and forth.
Rory and I liked two shoe stores best. One was
“Salamander Shoes” on 86thStreet. The other was “Yorkville Shoes” on 83rd
Street. Each store had a kid gimmick. Uncle Norman in “Yorkville Shoes” always
made sure he knew your birthday. Then he’d send you a birthday card. Six months
later, he’d send you another card wishing you a happy half-birthday. I’d get my
half-birthday card and say out loud, “Boy that Uncle Norman is one swell guy.
Hey Mom, I need a new pair of shoes. What do you think?”
Mom delivered her look. First of all, I never cared
whether I had any shoes much less new ones. I only cared about new sneakers.
The only thing that triggered me getting a new pair of shoes was a good
rainstorm after a hole in my shoe’s sole developed. Either, I’d get home from
school and Mom would notice my socks were wet, or I’d take off my blue socks
and Mom would notice my feet were blue from the sock’s dye. Only then, Mom
said, “Tomorrow we go for new shoes.”
The other store’s gimmick was a beauty. Salamander
was the high-end shoe store in the neighborhood. If you had orthopedic needs,
this was the place. I tested the laws of gravity by dropping my body from
rarefied heights. My feet took most of the damage and had orthopedic needs.
Here’s the gimmick. Salamander gave you a balloon with every pair of new shoes.
What the cheapskates failed to give you was helium. The balloon was nice but
filled with mere air; to hold it aloft Salamander’s management decided to put
it on a straightened out metal shirt hanger. You left the store flying your
balloon majestically above the stick of metal. Most kids never made it a full
block before the metal punctured the balloon. This left an extremely
disappointed kid carrying a straightened out hanger with a shred of rubber
dangling from its tip. Most times, the kid took his frustration out on another
kid.
If you were lucky, you might witness two kids
leaving the store with their balloons at the same time. Walking in the same
direction, smiles on their faces, arms outstretched, hoisting their balloons
toward the clouds, screaming without sound, “Hey look at me!” “No, look at me!”
Suddenly one of the balloons burst. With no pause,
the victim turned toward the still breathing balloon delivering a deathblow.
The two aggrieved parties ~ a midget reenactment of the Hamilton-Burr incident,
with hangers replacing traditional pistols, dueling to the death or stopping
when a parent carefully intervened.
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