Janet didn’t have a problem. She’d been collecting things her entire life—books, stamps,
porcelain dolls, rocks, empty bottles, slightly broken chairs. She didn’t even hesitate anymore when
people stared at her with gaping mouths as she dug through the bins of garbage
outside the Hillridge Apartment Complex two and a half miles from her
house. So what if they watched her
with disgust? That was their
problem, not hers.
It all started when she was about twelve, a few months after
her family moved to New York. Her
father was an avid drinker, and he was known back home for being a bit loose
with his wallet when he’d had a few too many drinks. That wasn’t his biggest problem, though. His biggest problem was his pride. Afraid to admit just how much of a screw
up he really was, Janet’s father would often bet what little money his wife had
earned doing laundry that week—the money that was meant to buy their family
bread, milk, and butter.
But he didn’t care, as long as he didn’t have to admit his
own failure, as long as he could blame luck. So what if it meant they would go to bed hungry? It wasn’t the first time, and it
certainly wouldn’t be the last.
One day Janet walked in to find her father passed out on the
couch in just his underwear, her mother crouching on the floor over his
pants. In about three seconds her
mother had successfully taken the few coins remaining in his pockets, put two
down the front of her dress and slipped the third back in his pants to avoid
suspicion. When she saw Janet
watching her, she simply whispered, “A penny saved is a penny earned” and
walked away.
Janet started collecting, too. If a penny saved is a
penny earned, think of what I can earn by saving stuff worth more than a stupid penny, she thought. And
so it began.
She might have come from humble beginnings, but look at her
now! Janet had an entire house all
to herself. And the things—God,
she had so many possessions! Her
house was crammed to the top with them, every free space housing a stack of
newspapers or a bag of old cans she was planning on exchanging for cash. Under the piles of partner-less shoes
she had chairs and tables that were only missing one leg, which she knew could
be easily fixed and then resold to make a quick buck. She just hadn’t had the chance to sit down and physically fix the legs—not yet. But she would. Just you wait and see, she thought to herself whenever someone brought this fact to
her attention.
The smell didn’t bother her too much either—it was just
something that came with the glory of owning things she supposed. Other people might complain, but screw
them. They could make their houses
smell like whatever they wanted, but this was her house and she happened to like the smell of success… Well, it
was closer to the smell of a corpse rotting in a garbage dump on a hot August
day, but who cares?
She didn’t have friends, but it was better that way. Less
people askin' me for money, she told herself whenever she noticed how quiet
a house without people could get.
But none of that mattered because Janet was going to be
filthy rich one of these days—as soon as she had a chance to fix the broken
chairs and repaint the faded dolls’ cheeks. All she had to do, for now, was keep collecting and saving
things. Whenever she started to doubt
her approach to life, she just thought of what her mother said all those years
ago and she’d feel better. A penny saved is a penny earned, and just
look at all the stuff I’ve saved!
I’m gonna be richer than a king someday, Janet would think to herself
time and again.
If she thought it enough, repeated it over and over, one of
these days she might just believe it.
One of these days it might become true.
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