When I’m 64

The monthly meeting of the Jonny Pals came to order the way all bad ideas do—too late and with a hangover. Smoke hung in the room like a guilty conscience while Bro Joe banged a chipped coffee mug against the folding table and cleared his throat like he was calling witnesses to the stand. “It’s December,” he said, squinting under the flickering light, “and that means Jonny’s birthday is coming up.” The legendary Junior Ranger leaned back in his chair and sneered. “How old’s the moron gonna be this year? 35? 36?” Rosie De Candia, the recording secretary, thumbed through her almanac like it was a police blotter and froze. Her eyes went wide. “64,” she said. The room went quiet. “That can’t be right. Have you seen the way that guy eats? I had 28 in the Death Pool and nearly choked when he blew past that. Anybody got him older than 64?”

They took a poll, the kind that ends friendships, and the verdict was unanimous: Jonny had outlived every reasonable expectation. “Well, shit,” Bro Joe muttered, letting his eyes drift where they weren’t welcome, toward the gorgeous Davida Bourland, who stared straight through him like he was already dead—something that had become fashionable after the Washington Post ran that unforgettable list of his accumulated STDs five years back. “This changes things,” he said. “I was banking on Jonny checking out so I could inherit his fortune and square up with the mob.” He spat on the floor and shrugged. “Turns out Boris has the money, and he hates my guts. So instead of cursing Jonny’s longevity like a bad rash, we’re gonna celebrate it.” He cracked a crooked grin. “This year, we throw a party to end all parties. If he won’t die, we might as well drink to it.”

The Protectors

Jonny was just cracking open the morning paper when Boris staggered out of the crime lab like a sailor off a week-long bender. The pug’s eyes were bloodshot from pulling an all-nighter with nothing but fluorescent lights and government-issue coffee to keep him company. The Feds had dumped a stack of anonymous death-threat letters on him—nasty business aimed at the newly announced Nobel Prize winners. Boris had worked the envelopes like a maestro, but the only thing he could pull from the saliva was the ghost of fast food: Big Macs and Filet-O-Fish fingerprints in biochemical form. He muttered something about cholesterol profiles and brand loyalty before face-planting onto the nearest chair.

Meanwhile, Jonny scanned the front page, brow furrowing at names he didn’t recognize—Barack Obama, Robert Fauci, and one Albert Einstine… Einsteen… some German egghead whose name looked like a winning Scrabble hand. But then his eyes snagged on a name he DID know, one that hit him like a thrown blackjack: Bro Joe, fresh winner of the Literature Prize for that book he’d written about the crackpots haunting the local Starbucks. Jonny shut the paper with a snap, marched to the old rolltop desk, and fished out a pair of dusty passports. He tossed one to Boris, who caught it like a man grabbing the last donut at a stakeout. “Pack your trench coat,” Jonny said. “We’re flying to Sweden. Those Nobel nerds don’t know it yet, but along with a certificate and a novelty-sized penny, they just won the two best bodyguards in the business.”

The Hair of My Chinny-Chin-Chin

Happy Decembeard! It’s an annual campaign where people grow beards (or fake beards) during December to raise money and awareness for bowel cancer, a serious but treatable disease, especially when caught early. Participants start clean-shaven on November 30th, grow their facial hair all December, and use it as a conversation starter to educate others about symptoms like changes in bowel habits and blood in stool.
Since those are Hack’s favorite topics of conversation throughout the year, it’s not a big deal to him, but we thought you’d like to know.

Murder in the Doritory

Before Boris could answer, there was a sharp rap on the dorm room door. He and Jonny quickly threw on their wigs and long nightgowns and gave each other the thumbs up that they could safely pass for their female alter egos “Jonna” and “Boreen’” The pug opened the door to find Chloé, the bespectacled brunette who had bonded with Jonna, shivering at the door wrapped in only a small bath towel.

“With all the murders going on in the dormitory,” she said to Boris, “I didn’t want to sleep alone tonight. Is it alright if I sleep with Jonna?” Then she turned to Jonny. “But I forgot to bring my nightie from the murder room, so I’ll have to cuddle up to you in the nude. Is that okay?”

Boris shot Jonny a concerned look. This would be crossing a serious ethical line, but by refusing her they might lose her hard-earned trust. But before the pug could say anything, his partner was already in bed, raising a corner of the blanket that beckoned the scantily clad beauty to join her confidante.

“Hop in,” said Jonna with a puzzling wolf-like grin.