“Do you know where I am?”
“It’s three in the morning,” croaks Son, his voice raspy from sleep.
“I make it … twenty-two minutes after three … London time.” Dad is calm, his voice commanding. His accent hints of a childhood down south. He is standing outside on the street corner, cell phone in one ear, finger in the other as cabbies scrape and squeal for post-Broadway fares.
“Can’t this wait? I have a test tomorrow morning.”
“At that fine center for higher learning where I’m paying your tuition, right?”
Son thinks, Uh-oh. Stretching, rubbing his eyes, he is awake now. He says nothing, bracing himself for the downward spiral about to begin.
Dad says nothing either. They are two men separated by 3,000 miles of Atlantic Ocean, five hours of time zone, and thirty-two years in age. But the silence between them cannot be quantified. It is a vast, infinite gulf of dead air time.
Finally, Son returns to the beginning, to Dad’s opening salvo. “I take it you’re in New York?”
“Hosting a dinner for my biggest client. Which begs the question: why am I calling while your mother and two other people, who indirectly underwrite your tuition at the London School of Economics, are patiently waiting for me to return?”
Son returns Dad’s sarcasm in kind. “The thought had crossed my mind.”
“Let me ask you something. Did you have a good time in Germany?”
INTERMISSION
Last year when the New York Times reviewed The Trust, Janet Maslin described my novel as “beach-reading money porn.”
I liked that. So much so that I googled “money porn” which, much to my dismay, generated a list of websites likely to leave your computer with gifts that keep giving. Know what I mean?
But I digress.
This story is pure money porn. I have taken some liberties with the dialogue and locations in order to protect the identities of Son and Dad. But the events are completely true, and I have written them as best as I remember what my friend said.
END OF INTERMISSION
“Err … Germany was okay.” No more retaliatory sarcasm from Son. He knows this conversation will not end well. Not sure why.
“I take it you enjoyed Oktoberfest?”
“If you like that sort of thing,” replies Son, attempting to sound contrite. Months ago he had reported to a friend, “Dude, it was the bomb.”
“Your flight was okay?”
“Uneventful.”
“So let me ask you something. Did you go with anyone?”
“Couple of the guys.”
“Good,” says Dad. “That’s helpful. Now, while you and the guys were bouncing around the beer halls, is there any chance you had a few too many?”
“Not on purpose. It just kind of happens that way at Oktoberfest.”
“Right. And when you returned to London, did you ever develop a strange feeling in the pit of your stomach that you had left something behind? Anything?”
Son replies, “No.” But realizing he has spoken too quickly, he stretches the word into two syllables. “No” sounds somewhat southern, like his father’s pronunciation. “No-oh?”
“Let’s go back to the flight. ‘Uneventful’ if I recall correctly.”
“Can you please tell me what’s wrong?” Son glances at the woman in his bed. She is starting to stir. He hopes she does not wake and say something. No doubt Dad will hear.
“Can you remember how you and the guys got from the terminal to those beer halls?”
Son thinks. He really thinks.
Dad waits.
Suddenly, a vague recollection morphs into an uncomfortable, horrifying moment of eureka recollection. Son says, “Oh sh**.”
“Right. Oh, sh**. I’m sitting here with your mother, my clients, and a restaurant bill I can’t pay. And you know why? I’m maxed out on my credit card all because the rental company charged me for the BMW you never returned.”
This is money porn gone bad.
omg, wish you’d posted this before my daughter went overseas, however, I was proactive and called the CC bank and told them where she would be, and I also checked my cc account online online daily. Did this seriously happen to you? Yikes! I love your stories! I even started checking my IRA statements for the first time in years. Thank God!
True story … and, fortunately, it is NOT a thinly disguised tale of fiscal malfeasance inside my family. This bones of this story came from a friend.
Ouch, but still a nice heads up story! Mine are all within “traveling age” with MY CC, however I recently procured two for the two oldest in their own names ! By the way, when you fly back, bring some warm weather with you please! It’s stinkin’ freezin’ here in South County!
Norb – was the CC defrauded? I thought the son failed to return the rental vehicle…
Not fraud. And sorry for the confusion. Son got drunk and forgot about the BMW. No CC calls to Dad. He discovered the charge at the restaurant.
Ah, so the CC company should have made a phone call about that rather large billing. And the son, of course, should have returned the vehicle after he sobered up! What a shock for the father.
Great story, Norb. I hope this encouraged your friend to put his son on a much tighter leash for the rest of his college years.
Tremendous fallout. I think they invented the term “nuclear family.”
LOL!