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Jules Carry (talk | contribs) (Removed citations (this short story has no citations); added cat and second ¶.) |
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{{dc|dc=O|n the Evening of September 10th 2001,}} having finished writing the first draft of a new article, I decided to take a walk to celebrate at some time around eight o' clock. I've always enjoyed taking walks, like the protagonist of Ray Bradbury's short story "The Pedestrian." And just the protagonist of "The Pedestrian" I discovered taking a walk in a suburb of Los Angles isn't always as easy as it should be. | |||
Before I left the apartment, in a weird moment of psychic prescience, I said to myself, ''Maybe I shouldn’t take any money with me in case I get mugged''. I was half-joking, as I’d never been mugged in my entire life and had no reason to think I would be tonight. Nonetheless, I found myself removing all the cash from my pocket and tossing it onto my bed. I remember thinking to myself, ''Oh, well . . . if I do get mugged all they’ll get is sixty-two cents in pennies''. Why I had sixty-two pennies on me, I can’t quite remember. | |||
{{Review}} | {{Review}} | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cents}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Cents}} | ||
[[Category:Short Stories (MR)]] | |||