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Authors: Winston Groom

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‘You wanna go see her?’

‘Who?’

‘The Statue of Liberty.’

‘I guess,’ he says.

‘Well, good, cause I done arranged for us to take a tour of the town these next few days. We is gonna see all the sights.’

So that’s what we did. We gone down Fifth Avenue
to see the shops an out to the Statue of Liberty an the top of the Empire State Buildin, where little Forrest says he wants to thow somethin off to see how long it takes to land on the ground. I did not let him do that, though. We gone up to Grant’s Tomb an down to Broadway, where they was a man exposin himself, an in Central Park, but not for long, account of there was muggers present. We took the subway an come out near the Plaza Hotel, where we stopped in for a CokeCola. The bill come an it was twenty-five dollars.

‘That’s a bunch of shit,’ says little Forrest.

‘I reckon I can afford it,’ I says, but he just shook his head an walk on out to the car. I can see he ain’t havin such a good time, but what I’m gonna do about it? He don’t want to see no plays, and the FAO Schwarz store bores him. I took him to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, an for a while, he seems interested in somethin looks like King Tut’s tomb, but then he says it’s all just a bunch of ole stuff, an we are on the street again.

I let him off at the apartment an gone back to the office. When Miss Hudgins brought me in another batch of papers to sign, I ast her what I oughta do.

‘Well, maybe he’d like to see some famous people, you know?’

‘Where I’m gonna find em?’

‘Only place in town,’ she says, ‘Elaine’s restaurant.’

‘What is that?’ I ast.

‘You gotta see it to believe it’ was Miss Hudgins answer.

So we went to Elaine’s restaurant.

We go there at five o’clock sharp, account of that’s the time most people have they supper, but Elaine’s restaurant was deserted. It was not the sort of place I had expected; to say it is nothin fancy is a understatement. There was some waiters hangin around, an
at the end of the bar was this big ole jolly-lookin lady doin paperwork. I figger her to be Elaine.

While little Forrest waited by the door, I gone over an introduced mysef, an tole her why I was there.

‘Fine,’ Elaine says, ‘but you come a little early. Most folks don’t start showin up here for another four or five hours.’

‘What? They eat someplace else an come in here later?’ I ast.

‘No, you dummy. They are all at cocktail parties or plays or openings or somethin. This is a late-night place.’

‘Well, you mind if we set down an have our food?’

‘Go right ahead.’

‘Any idea which famous people will be showin up later?’ I ast.

‘It’ll be the usual suspects, I guess. Barbra Streisand, Woody Allen, Kurt Vonnegut, George Plimpton, Lauren Bacall – who knows, maybe Paul Newman or Jack Nicholson’s in town.’

‘They all come here?’

‘Sometimes – but listen, there is one rule, and you can’t violate it. There will be no goin over to these famous people’s tables and disturbin them. No picture taking, no tape recording, no nothin. Now, you just sit right at that big round table. That’s the “family table,” an if any famous people come in that don’t have other arrangements, I will put them there, an you can talk to them.’

So that’s what we did, little Forrest an me. We ate our supper an dessert an then a second dessert, but ain’t but a handful of people have arrived at Elaine’s. I could tell little Forrest was bored, but I figger this is my last chance to impress him with New York, an just about the time I see him squirmin to leave, the door opens an who should be comin in but Elizabeth Taylor.

After that, the place begun to fill up very fast. Bruce
Willis an Donald Trump an Cher, the movie star. Sure enough, in comes George Plimpton with his friend, a Mister Spinelli, an the writer William Styron. Woody Allen arrives with a whole entourage, as does the writers Kurt Vonnegut an Norman Mailer an Robert Ludlum. They was all sorts of beautiful people, wearin expensive clothes an furs. I had read about some of them in the papers, an was tryin to explain who they was to little Forrest.

Unfortunately, all of them seem to have other plans, an are sittin with each other, an not with us. After a while, Elaine comes over an sets down, I guess so we do not feel too lonely.

‘I guess it’s a light night for bachelors,’ she says.

‘Yup,’ I says. ‘But even if we can’t talk to them, maybe you could tell us what they is talkin about with each other – just to give little Forrest an idea of what famous people talk about.’

‘Talk about?’ says Elaine. ‘Well, the movie stars, they are talkin about themselves, I imagine.’

‘What about the writers?’ I ast.

‘Writers?’ she says. ‘Huh. They are talkin about what they always talk about – baseball, money, and pieces of ass.’

About this time the door open an a feller come in, an Elaine motions him over to the table to sit down.

‘Mr Gump, I want you to meet Tom Hanks,’ she says.

‘Pleased to meet you,’ I say, an introduce him to little Forrest.

‘I’ve seen you,’ little Forrest says, ‘on television.’

‘You an actor?’ I ast.

‘Sure am,’ Tom Hanks says. ‘What about you?’

So I tole him a little bit about my checkered career, an after he listened for a while, Tom Hanks says, ‘Well, Mr Gump, you are sure a curious feller. Sounds like somebody ought to make a movie of your life’s story.’

‘Nah,’ I says, ‘ain’t nobody be interested in somethin stupid like that.’

‘You never know,’ says Tom Hanks. ‘“Life is like a box of chocolates.” By the way, I just happen to have a box of chocolates right here – You wanna buy some?’

‘Nah, I don’t think so, I ain’t big on chocolates – but thanks, anyhow.’

Tom Hanks looks at me kinda funny. ‘Well, “stupid is as stupid looks,” I always say.’ An at that, he gets up an goes to another table.

Next mornin, there is a serious disturbance at Ivan Bozosky’s offices.

‘Oh, my God! Oh, my God!’ shouts Miss Hudgins. ‘They have arrested Mr Bozosky!’

‘Who have?’ I ast.

‘The police,’ she hollered. ‘Who else arrests people! They have taken him to jail!’

‘What’d he do?’

‘Insider trading!’ she yelled. ‘They have accused him of insider trading!’

‘But I am the president of the insider trading division,’ I says. ‘How come they didn’t arrest me?’

‘It ain’t too late for that, bigshot.’ The voice belonged to a big ole ugly-lookin detective who was standin in the doorway. Behind him was two cops in uniforms.

‘You just come along peaceful, now, an there won’t be any trouble.’

I done what he tole me, but his last line was pure bullshit.

So I am thowed in jail again, I might of known all this couldn’t last forever, but I didn’t expect there would be such a big deal about it all. Not only have they arrested Ivan Bozosky, but they have thowed Mike Mulligan in jail, too, an various other folks in the bidness. Miss Hudgins is also locked up as a ‘material witness.’
They give me one phone call to make, so I phoned little Forrest at the Helmsley an tole him I would not be home for supper. I just could not bring mysef to say his daddy was in the jug again.

Anyhow, Ivan, he is in the ajoining cell to mine, an to my surprise, he is lookin rather chipper.

‘Well, Gump, I believe the time has come for you to do your trained bear act,’ he says.

‘Yeah, what is that?’

‘Just what you did for Colonel North – lie, cover up, take the blame.’

‘For who?’

‘For me, you stupo! Why in hell do you think I made you president of my insider trading division? Because of your brains and good looks? To take the heat, in case of something like this, is why I hired you.’

‘Oh,’ I says. I might of knowed there was a catch.

Over the next few days, I am interrogated by about a hundrit cops an lawyers an investigators for all sorts of financial agencies. But I don’t tell em nothin. I just kep my big mouth shut, which pissed em off royally, but ain’t nothin they can do. They is so many of them, I can’t tell which is representin me an Mr Bozosky an Mike Mulligan, an who is against us. Don’t matter. I am quiet as a clam.

One day the jail guard come by, say I got a visitor. When I gone into the visitors’ room, sure enough, it was little Forrest.

‘How’d you find out?’ I ast.

‘How could I not find out. It’s been all over the papers and television. Folks are sayin it’s the biggest scandal since Teapot Dome.’

‘Since who?’

‘Never mind,’ he says. ‘Anyway, I finally got to meet Mrs Helmsley, who you said was sposed to be so nice.’

‘Oh, yeah? She takin good care of you?’

‘Sure – she thowed me out.’

‘Did what?’

‘Thowed us out, bag and baggage, on the street. Said she don’t feature no crook livin in her hotel.’

‘So how you gettin by?’

‘I got a job washin dishes.’

‘Well, I got some money in the bank. There’s a checkbook someplace in my stuff. You can use it to get a place to stay till you gotta go home. Might even be enough to make my bail outta here.’

‘Yeah, all right,’ he says. ‘Looks like you really done it this time, though.’

In this, little Forrest seems correct.

After the bail was paid, I was free to go for the time bein. But not far. Me an little Forrest rented a walk-up flat in a neighborhood filled with criminals an beggars an ladies of the night.

Little Forrest was interested to know what I’m gonna do when the trial is helt an, to tell the truth, I dunno mysef. I mean, I was hired to take the fall, an there is a certain amount of honor in doin what you is sposed to do. On the other hand, it kinda don’t seem fair for me to spend the rest of my life in the slammer just so’s Ivan Bozosky an Mike Mulligan can go on livin the high life. One day, little Forrest pipes up with a request.

‘You know, I wouldn’t mind goin out to the Statue of Liberty again,’ he says. ‘I sort of enjoyed that trip.’

So that’s what we did.

We took the excursion boat out to the statue, an it was all pretty an gleamin in the afternoon sunshine. We stopped an read the inscription about the ‘huddled masses yearning to breathe free,’ an then we gone on up to the top of the torch, an looked out across the harbor at New York, with all the tall buildins that seemed like they go right on up into the clouds.

‘You gonna rat them out, or what?’ little Forrest ast.

‘Rat who out?’

‘Ivan Bozosky an Mike Mulligan.’

‘I dunno – why?’

‘Cause you better be thinkin about it an make a decision,’ he says.

‘I been thinkin about it – I just don’t know what to do.’

‘Rattin’s not very nice,’ he says. ‘You didn’t rat out Colonel North . . .’

‘Yeah, an look where it got me – thowed in the can.’

‘Well, I took a lot of guff about that at school, but I’d of probably taken more if you’d finked on him.’

In this, little Forrest is probly correct. I just stood there on top of the Statue of Liberty, wonderin an thinkin – which is not my specialty – an worryin, which is – an finally I shook my head.

‘Sometimes,’ I says, ‘a man’s got to do the right thing.’

Anyways, the time for our trial has finally arrived. We is herded into a big federal courtroom where the prosecutor is a Mr Guguglianti, who looks like he oughta be mayor or somethin. He is all surly an unpleasant an address us like we is axe murders, or worse.

‘Your honor, ladies and gentleman of the jury,’ Mr Guguglianti says, ‘these three men is the worst kinds of criminals there is! They are guilty of stealing your money –
your
money – personally . . .!’

An it goes on downhill from there.

He proceeds to call us crooks, thieves, liars, frauds, an I expect he would of called us assholes, too, if we had not been in a courtroom.

Finally, when Mr Guguglianti gets finished tar-an-featherin us, it becomes our turn to defend oursefs.
First witness to take the stand is Ivan Bozosky.

‘Mr Bozosky,’ our lawyer asts, ‘are you guilty of insider trading?’

We are bein represented, incidentally, by the big ole New York law firm of Dewey, Screwum & Howe.

‘I am absolutely, positively, one-hundrit-percent
innocent,’
Mr Bozosky says.

‘Then if you did not do it, who did?’ the lawyer asts.

‘Mr Gump over there,’ Ivan says. ‘I hired him on as chief of the insider trading division with instructions to put an end to any insider trading, so as to improve my company’s reputation, an what does he do? He immediately proceeds to be a crook . . .’

Ivan Bozosky goes on like this for a while, an paints a pitcher of me, black as a beaver’s butt. I am ‘totally responsible’ for all the deals, he says, an in fact, I have totally kept them secret from him, so as to enrich mysef. His line is that he knows nothin about anythin illegal.

‘May God have mercy on his guilty soul’ is the way Ivan Bozosky puts it.

Next, Mike Mulligan gets his turn. He testifies I phoned him up with stock tips, but he has no idea that I am in the know about insider tradin an so forth. By the time they are finished, I figger my goose is cooked, an Mr Guguglianti be scowlin at me from his table.

At last it is my time to take the stand.

‘Mr Gump,’ says Mr Guguglianti, ‘just what was your line of work before you became president of the insider trading division of Mr Bozosky’s company?’

‘I was Goliath,’ I answers.

‘You was what?’

‘Goliath – you know, the giant man from the Bible.’

‘You stand reminded, Mr Gump, that this is a court of law. Do not fool with the law, Mr Gump, or the law will fool with you back – and that is a promise.’

‘I ain’t kiddin,’ I says. ‘It was at Holy Land.’

‘Mr Gump, are you some kind of a nut?’

At this, our lawyer jumps up. ‘Objection, your honor, counsel is badgering the witness!’

‘Well,’ says the judge, ‘he does sound sort of nutty – claimin to be Goliath an all. I think I am gonna order a psychiatric examination of Mr Gump, here.’

So that’s what they did.

They took me away to a insane asylum or someplace, where the doctors come in an begun bongin me on the knees with little rubber hammers, which, of course, is an experience I have had before. Next they give me some puzzles to work an ast me a lot of questions an give me a test an, to end it off, they bonged me on the knees some more with their hammers. After that, I am taken back to the witness stand.

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