The Silicon Underground
  Welcome to Dave Farquhar's Silicon Underground Tuesday, October 07 2008 @ 12:52 AM CDT  
Theme Changer
Change the look of the site by selecting a theme below:

What's New
STORIES
1 story in last 24 hours

COMMENTS last 48 hrs
  • I got a Pentax K1...

  • LINKS last 2 wks
    No recent new links

    Google Ads

    User Functions
    Username:

    Password:

    Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User

    Firefox


    Meet Melvin.   
    Thursday, April 26 2007 @ 06:24 PM CDT
    By David L. Farquhar

    I have a new un-friend now. His name is Melvin.

    Thanks to Melvin, I can almost add library sales to places I've been kicked out of. It's a short list, but it includes the library, church, Best Buy, and substitute teacher Rick Hannebutt's seventh grade theology class.

    It began innocently enough. My wife and I arrived early. We were 10th in line. The problem was that within about half an hour, we were 15th in line. For example, one guy came in, asked where the end of the line was, and then walked up and took a spot two or three places in line ahead of us. He wasn't the only one who did it, but he was the closest one.

    The guy behind me said something to him. They had a brief exchange, then the guy who cut in line apologized, got in his car, and left.

    It was stupid, because if he'd gone to his proper place in line, he would have only been five or six places back. There's not much difference between being the 10th person in and being the 15th.

    Then Melvin came staggering out of Applebee's. He walked over to his black Chevy Celebrity (very much like the one my driver's ed instructor drove, back in 1990), got out his bag, and then went to the front of the line and talked to the people standing up there. Nobody up there let him in, so he settled back, two places ahead of my wife and I.

    Melvin seems to go to all the places I go, and he's elbowed in front of me (or tried to) twice in the last two weeks. Furthermore, I saw him steal from an estate sale. It takes a special kind of scumbag to steal from an estate sale--the deceased's survivors could be relying on the proceeds from that sale to pay for the funeral, for all we know.

    Needless to say, I'm pretty tired of Melvin.

    "Sir, I think you got here after we did," I said.

    "You're wrong, Junior. I got here two and a half hours ago, then I walked over there to have a couple of drinks. You can ask anyone here. Now why don't we step over here into the parking lot and we'll settle this. You're messing with the wrong guy," Melvin said.

    "If you take a swing at me, I'll call the police. And keep in mind I do have your license plate number."

    "If you call the police, I'll call my lawyer and he'll be over here so fast, and I'll be sure to get your number too--"

    I wonder what it says about Melvin that he has his lawyer on speed dial?

    Just then, one of the people running the sale walked past.

    "Ma'am, this guy is threatening me."

    "Actually," I said, "He's trying to start a fistfight and I don't want a fistfight. I don't want any trouble here."

    She took my admission money and gave me the don't-give-us-any-trouble look. I nodded and thanked her. She told me she'd keep an eye on him.

    The guy standing behind me told me he'd heard people at a sale last week talking about Melvin too.

    Melvin went up to the front of the line and started ranting at the people up there about me. They kept looking back my direction with confused looks on their faces.

    None of the people up there are people I know well, but I see them often enough that I don't want trouble with them. Melvin came back, took his place in line, and tried to burn holes through my skull with the laser death rays in his eyes.

    For a few seconds I stared back, then I decided that was stupid. I tried to egg him on a bit. I looked back behind me, tried to look confused, looked back at him, and mouthed, "There's nothing back there."

    Well, the other people in line thought it was funny. That was probably too far over the top though.

    Once I was pretty certain Melvin was going to stay put, I walked up to the front of the line.

    "Hey, I don't know what he told you, but he tried to get me out in the parking lot and start a fistfight. I just want you to know I didn't threaten him. I'm not that way," I said.

    They nodded. "So we're cool?" I asked. They nodded again. I smiled, thanked them, and took my place in line.

    Melvin continued his gaze of death. I turned around and made smalltalk with the guy behind me. He cracked a few jokes about drunks.

    Finally we got to go inside. I watched my back pretty much the whole time. You can't trust a drunk guy with his lawyer on speed dial, after all. Wherever Melvin was, I stayed away.

    Finally, he walked up to the counter. I heard him say he had 10 record albums. I was standing a good 15 feet away with a big crowd in the room, so I guess a lot of people know he had 10 record albums. I breathed a sigh of relief when he left.

    My wife asked if I found something I wanted. I told her I got what I wanted the most.

    "What was that?" one of the people running the sale asked. "Anything good?"

    "My fistfight buddy left," I said.

    "Is that a CD or a book?" she asked. "I've never heard of that."

    "Oh, it's not a thing. The guy who tried to start a fistfight with me in the parking lot left."

    "That was YOU?" she asked.

    Yeah, I'm pretty harmless. I'm usually fairly polite too. But I guess the word was out about me now, even if the people who knew the story couldn't place my face with it.

    A few minutes later, I ran into one of my acquaintances from the front of the line. "You know Melvin's gone now," he whispered.

    I nodded.

    "What happened?"

    "He challenged me to a fight, and I said if he took a swing at me I'd call the police," I said.

    "Ah, so that's why he brought up the police. Nothing wrong with that. You have to protect yourself."

    He told me a little more about Melvin, that he tends to be paranoid and he'd been drinking. When he's sober he's harmless, he said. He laughed when I told him Melvin told me he'd been drinking.

    "In the morning he probably won't remember any of it," he said. And he told me I'd handled the situation pretty well.

    We'll see how much Melvin remembers. I'll see him again, I know. But I'm pretty sure the people who run the sales we both end up frequenting like me better than him. I don't pick fights, and I buy a lot more stuff.

    And they know it.

    And now, since I know I'll get asked about it, here's the story behind the places I actually have managed to get kicked out of.

    The library: It was closing.

    Church: It was closing too. Yep, both of them sound a lot more interesting than reality.

    Best Buy: I uttered a couple of colorful words when they wouldn't honor the extended warranty I'd bought. The manager and customer abuse rep asked me to leave. I went to a different location and got my stereo exchanged under warranty there.

    Substitute teacher Rick Hannebutt's seventh grade theology class: He never liked me because I wasn't a Cardinals fan. I didn't like him much either. The kid sitting next to me hit me with a dusty mitten. I pushed his arm away and told him to quit.

    "Davit," Hannebutt bellowed, "You may leave now."

    I was really mad then. Twenty years later, I don't know why. I don't think anyone in that room wanted to be there, and I was the one who got to leave.

    I think Melvin makes for the better story.

    Incidentally, Melvin isn't his real name. I would never mention someone who has his lawyer on speed dial by his real name.

    It's pretty close though. His real name is the same as that little Martian from Looney Tunes.

      [ Views: 516 ]  


    Meet Melvin. | 0 comments | Create New Account
    The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
    No user comments.
    What's Related
  • More by DaveF
  • More from Personal

  • Story Options
  • Mail Story to a Friend
  • Printable Story Format


  • Calendar
    October 2008
    SuMoTuWeThFrSa
    28
    29
    30
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10
    11
    12
    13
    14
    15
    16
    17
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    25
    26
    27
    28
    29
    30
    31
    1
    Click on any day to see postings and events for that date.

    Referrals

    Top 10 by Comments
    Story TitleComments
    Cheap laptops from Sotec 253
    An untrustworthy vendor 164
    Upgrading an eMachine 125
    eMachine upgrade advice 99
    Why I dislike Microsoft 51
    Upgrade diary: Gateway G6-400 35
    And we're live 30
    The day after the Columbia 22
    How to pray 22
    CD-ROM troubleshooting under Windows 9x 20

    Top 10 Read
    Story TitleViews
    eMachine upgrade advice 67460
    Upgrading an eMachine 57773
    How to view a blg file in Windows 2000 38474
    Cheap laptops from Sotec 29897
    Upgrade diary: Compaq Presario 7360 18001
    Upgrade diary: Gateway G6-400 16942
    CD-ROM troubleshooting under Windows 9x 13830
    Finding an open-source alternative to Ghost 11874
    Big trouble 11188
    Salary cap? Baseball needs something 10467

    Topics
    Home
    Apache (2)
    Baseball (60)
    Book reviews (2)
    Business (1)
    Christianity (57)
    Cooking (1)
    Copyright (15)
    Curmudgeonry (1)
    Design (7)
    DOS (6)
    Games (4)
    Genealogy (10)
    General (498)
    Hardware (146)
    Health (13)
    Human Interest (9)
    Humor/Satire (19)
    Journalism (1)
    Linux (93)
    Macintosh (22)
    Model Building (2)
    Music (32)
    net.culture (40)
    Personal (80)
    Photography (6)
    Retro Computing (26)
    Saving money (58)
    Servers and Networking (17)
    Society (46)
    Software (49)
    Spam (13)
    St. Louis (23)
    This weblog (14)
    Toy trains (72)
    Troubleshooting (7)
    Vendors (6)
    Video (20)
    Viruses (12)
    Windows (116)
    Writing (16)

    Older Stories
    Tuesday 09-Sep
  • SSDs come of age? (0)

  • Sunday 07-Sep
  • My hot water heater: 1984-2008 (2)

  • Thursday 04-Sep
  • DOS nostalgia? (2)

  • Sunday 31-Aug
  • What does religion have to do with the United States falling behind in math and science? (3)

  • Thursday 28-Aug
  • Psst... Wanna compete with Best Buy? (4)

  • Friday 22-Aug
  • Why you should always stop at railroad crossings (0)

  • Wednesday 20-Aug
  • How to become a millionaire in 10 years (safely) (0)

  • Sunday 17-Aug
  • Why I still like Debian (2)

  • Thursday 14-Aug
  • Repainting rusty patio furniture (0)

  • Sunday 10-Aug
  • An old formula for making money (0)

  • Who's Online
    Guest Users: 5

    Syndicate!
    Get your RSS/RDF fix here.

    List of all stories
    Click here for a list of all the entries on this site


    Created this page in 1.43 seconds


     Copyright © 2008 Dave Farquhar's Silicon Underground
     All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.

    Powered by GL 1.3.x