The Lighthouse Card

A found receipt: Walgreens, 4812 Oak Park Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois. Saturday, March 7th, 11:47 PM — Birthday Card, one, $4.99. Visa ending 8804. No envelope selected. He stood in that aisle for seven minutes. She doesn't even like lighthouses.

The Lighthouse Card
0:003:13
He drove to Walgreens at 11:47 PM in his work clothes. The kids were already in bed. She'd gone into the bedroom with the lights off at nine, same as she always does when he forgets. He stood in the card aisle for seven minutes under those long fluorescent lights, ran his thumb across one with a sailboat, put it back. He picked the one with the lighthouse. She doesn't like lighthouses. He's known that for eleven years.
This is episode 15 in a series built around found receipts — pieces of paper that don't explain anything but somehow contain everything. Here, the receipt reads like a verdict: four dollars and ninety-nine cents, tax, Visa ending 8804, no envelope selected. The detail about the envelope is the one that gets you. He didn't buy the envelope because some part of him knows she won't be surprised — she'll find the card on the kitchen counter in the morning, and she'll put it in the drawer with the others. The wrong flowers, the wrong words, bought at closing time in a fluorescent store. He's not doing it badly. He's doing it with the particular competence of a man who has learned how to almost get it right.
The song doesn't ask for sympathy for him. It just follows him from the driveway to the card aisle and back — upright bass underneath, piano picking slowly in the dark, a voice that sounds like it's been saying the wrong thing for a long time and knows it. The last section drops back to spoken word, back to the receipt. No envelope selected. That's the whole story.

Full lyrics
[Spoken Intro] Walgreens. 4812 Oak Park Avenue. Oak Park, Illinois. Saturday, March 7th. 11:47 PM. Birthday Card — one. Four ninety-nine. Tax: thirty-seven cents. Total: five thirty-six. Visa ending eight-eight-oh-four. Note: No envelope selected.
[Verse 1] The kids were in bed by eight o'clock She turned the lights off at nine I sat in the driveway for twenty minutes Staring at the yellow line I drove down Oak Park Avenue Past the bars already closed Walked into Walgreens under the fluorescent lights In my work clothes
[Chorus] There's a lighthouse on the card I bought her She doesn't even like the sea There's eleven years of buying wrong Written all over me I'll leave it on the kitchen counter She'll find it in the morning there With a lighthouse on the card I bought her Because I didn't care to know — I didn't care to know
[Verse 2] I stood in that aisle for seven minutes Under those long humming lights Ran my thumb across the one with a sailboat And put it back twice A man like me learns the wrong things well How to be almost right How to get to Walgreens at eleven forty-seven On a Saturday night
[Chorus] There's a lighthouse on the card I bought her She doesn't even like the sea There's eleven years of buying wrong Written all over me I'll leave it on the kitchen counter She'll find it in the morning there With a lighthouse on the card I bought her Because I didn't care to know — I didn't care to know
[Bridge] She won't say a thing — she never does She'll put it with the others in that drawer The ones with the wrong flowers, the wrong words The ones I bought at closing time at some fluorescent store And maybe that's the cruelest thing — Not that she'll cry, but that she knows She's made her peace with me And that's not peace — that's just How the dark goes
[Outro] Visa ending eight-eight-oh-four Eleven forty-seven No envelope selected No — no envelope selected

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