He Traded His House For Trash Tickets—Then The Serial Number Hit-tantan

By the time the morning trash trucks rolled behind the gas station, David was usually already there.

He moved slowly, but not aimlessly.

He wore the same faded hoodie, the same work pants with one patched knee, and the same brown shoes that had been polished so many times the leather looked tired.

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The alley smelled like spilled coffee, diesel, and wet cardboard, and David never seemed to notice.

He would lift the lid, lean in just enough to see, and pull out old lottery tickets one by one.

Scratch-offs.

Draw slips.

Receipts.

Anything with numbers.

Then he would flatten them on the hood of his old car and tuck them into a shoebox with the care of someone handling letters from a dead soldier.

People saw him.

Of course they did.

In a small American town, nobody can do anything strange for more than three days before it becomes breakfast talk.

At the diner, the retired men at the counter shook their heads when David walked past the window.

At the grocery store, shoppers whispered when he checked the bin beside the automatic doors.

At the gas station, the cashier stopped asking what he was looking for because David never gave a real answer.

He only said, “Something that belongs to me.”

That made it worse.

By seventy-four, David had become the kind of man people discussed in lowered voices while pretending they were being kind.

They said he was lonely.

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