enough alone.
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With about a dozen time contracts to fill outâeach one a little bit differentâI tried to hurry home from school that day, hoping to avoid anyone else who wanted to shave some time off their miserable existence. Thatâs when I ran into Skaterdud. At first he rolled past me on his board like it was just coincidence, but a second later he looped back around. He flustered me with his eight-part handshake before he started talking.
âCultural Geography, man,â he said, shaking his headâit was a class we were both in together. âI just donât get it. I meanâis it culture? Is it geography? You know where Iâm going, right?â
âThe skate park?â I answered. Sure, it was closed for the winter, but that never stopped Skaterdud before.
âIâm talking conceptually,â he said. âGotta follow close or youâre not never gettinâ nowhere.â
Iâve learned that silence is the best response when you have no idea what someone is talking about. Silence, and a knowing nod.
âIâm thinking maybe one favor begets another, comprende ?â
I nodded again, hoping he hadnât suddenly become bilingual. It was hard enough to understand him in one language.
âSo youâll do it?â he asked.
âDo what?â I had to finally ask.
He looked at me like I was an imbecile. âWrite my Cultural Geography paper for me.â
âWhy would I do that?â
âBecause,â he said, âIâm gonna give up six whole months of my life to your boy Gunnar.â
That got my interest. No one had offered that much. The Master of Time was intrigued.
Skaterdud laughed at the expression on my face. âAinât no biggie,â he said. âItâs not like itâs never gonna matterââcause donât I already know when Iâm gonna be pushinâ up posies? Or seaweed, in my case? That date with destiny ainât never gonna change, because the fortune-tellerâs prediction would have already taken into account whatever life Iâd give away to Gunnar. Smart, right? Yeah, I got this wired!â
I was actually following his logic, and it scared me. âSo . . . why just six months?â I said, playing along. âIf your futureâs all set in stone no matter what you do, why not give a year?â
âDone,â said Skaterdud, slapping me on the back. âDonât forgetâthat Cultural Geography paperâs due Friday.â
âWhoa! Wait a second! I didnât say it was a deal.â I was getting all mad now, because I felt like I was a sucker at a carnival, and had gotten tricked into thisâso I said the first thing that came to mind, which, sadly, was: âWhatâs in it for me?â
Skaterdud shrugged. âWhat do you want?â
I thought about how stockbrokers get commissions when they make a deal, so I thought, Why not me? âOne extra month commission for me. Yeah, thatâs it. An extra month to do with as I please.â
âDone,â he said again. âLet me read the paper before you turn it in so I know what I wrote.â
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I, Reginald Michaelangelo Smoot, aka Skaterdud, in addition to the twelve months donated to Gunnar Ãmlaut in the attached contract, do hereby bequeath one month to Anthony Paul Bonano for his own personal use in any way he sees fit, including, but not limited to:
a. ) Extending his own natural life.
b. ) Extending the life of a family member or beloved pet.
c. ) Anything else, really.
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R.M. Smoot
Signature
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Ralphy Sherman
Signature of Witness
8 Who Needs Cash When Youâve Got Time Coming Out of Your Ears?
I have never been in the habit of cheating at school. I mean, sure, the occasional glance at my neighborâs paper on a multiple-choice test or a list of dates written on my forearm, but nothing like what Skaterdud wanted me to do. Now not only did
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