Stephen King – Night Shift – The Man Who Loved Flowers

in the spring – young and so much in love that you practically zoomed everywhere. The vend6r’s face

was normally sour, but now he smiled a little, just as the old woman pushing the groceries had, because

this guy was such an obvious case. He brushed pretzel crumbs from the front of his baggy sweater and

thought: If this kid were sick, they’d have him in intensive care right now.

‘How much are your flowers?’ the young man asked.

‘I’ll make you up a nice bouquet for a dollar. Those tea roses, they’re hothouse. Cost a little more,

seventy cents apiece. I sell you half a dozen for three dollars and fifty cents.’

‘Expensive,’ the young man said.

‘Nothing good comes cheap, my young friend. Didn’t your mother ever teach you that?’

The young man grinned. ‘she might have mentioned it at that.’

‘Sure. Sure she did. I give you half a dozen, two red, two yellow, two white. Can’t do no better than that,

can I? Put in some baby’s breath – they love that – and fill it out with some fern. Nice. Or you can have

the bouquet for a dollar.

‘They?’ the young man asked, still smiling.

‘My young friend,’ the flower vendor said, flicking his cigarette butt into the gutter and returning the

smile, ‘no one buys flowers for themselves in May. It’s like a national law, you understand what I

mean?’

The young man thought of Norma, her happy, surprised eyes and her gentle smile, and he ducked his

head a little. ‘I guess I do at that,’ he said.

‘Sure you do. What do you say?’

‘Well, what do you think?’

‘I’m gonna tell you what I think. Hey! Advice is still free, isn’t it?’

The young man smiled and said, ‘I guess it’s the only thing left that is.’

‘You’re damn tooting it is,’ the flower vendor said. ‘Okay, my young friend. If the flowers are for your

mother, you get her the bouquet. A few jonquils, a few crocuses, some lily of the valley. She don’t spoil

it by saying, “Oh Junior I love them how much did they cost oh that’s too much don’t you know enough

not to throw your money around?”‘

The young man threw his head back and laughed.

The Vendor said, ‘But if it’s your girl, that’s a different thing, my son, and you know it. You bring her

the tea roses and she don’t turn into an accountant, you take my meaning? Hey! she’s gonna throw her

arms around your neck -‘

‘I’ll take the tea roses,’ the young man said, and this time it was the flower vendor’s turn to laugh. The

two men pitching nickels glanced over, smiling.

‘Hey, kid!’ one of them called. ‘You wanna buy a weddin’ ring cheap? I’ll sell you mine . . . I don’t want

it no more.’

The young man grinned and blushed to the roots of his dark hair.

The flower vendor picked out six tea roses, snipped the stems a little, spritzed them with water, and

wrapped them in a large conical spill.

‘Tonight’s weather looks just the way you’d want it,’ the radio said. ‘Fair and mild, temps in the mid to

upper sixties, perfect for a little rooftop stargazing, if you’re the romantic type. Enjoy, Greater New

York, enjoy!’

The flower vendor Scotch-taped the seam of the paper spill and advised the young man to tell his lady

that a little sugar added to the water she put them in would preserve them longer.

‘I’ll tell her,’ the young man said. He held out a five dollar bill. ‘Thank you.’

‘Just doing the job, my young friend,’ the vendor said, giving him a dollar and two quarters. His smile

grew a bit S- ‘Give her a kiss for me.’

On the radio, the Four Seasons began singing ‘Sherry’. The young man pocketed his change and went

on up the street, eyes wide and alert and eager, looking not so much around him at the life ebbing and

flowing up and down Third Avenue as inward and ahead, anticipating. But certain things did impinge:

a mother pulling a baby in a wagon, the baby’s face comically smeared with ice cream; a little girl

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