While waiting for people to disperse from the Nokia Care counter so that I could have my phone serviced, P and I wandered into Tower Records/PowerBooks. I was magnetized to the books section; P twirled his way to the records section (thank God the Ramoses thought of combining both businesses in just one store. They should be credited for keeping couples happy with each other. When before I used to frown into a unibrow or expel long, tortured sighs whenever P whined about wanting to buy music, when really all I wanted to do was fall into a coma everytime I had to wait for him to painstakingly choose between two albums by the same artist/group whose name I had never heard of or didn’t really care about. P would vacillate between CD A and CD B [Which should I get? This or This? I’d roll my eyes and say, For God’s sake buy them both!]. This would prompt him to run around the store some more, almost feverish, eyes glazed like a heroin addict, and end up buying five albums [which explains why we are still poor]. Now, with the advent of the bookslashmusic store, we can leave each other in peace).
I remember the time we were in
Going back to our day at Tower Records/PowerBooks, P made several purchases: a couple of local, award-winning digital films and a compilation of classic tunes which he claimed were all for me (his way of saying that he’s still entitled to purchases that are just for him next time). I bought a book which contains a lovely quote that says, “The books we choose, choose us too.” I made a mental nod to myself, while my brain whispered, “How true . . . how true.” I recalled the many times I bought a book only because it seemed to jump at me. While at the cash register, my eyes drifted on the book the cashier was reading. The cover screamed 101 Ways to Spoil Your Husband in bold letters. I looked at the young woman’s face and, though it was very pretty, I could tell that she was very tired. Well, I thought, of course! Who wouldn’t be tired being a cashier by day and going home at night to perform 101 favors for a husband? The lucky bastard . . .