I
had not been in a Chase bank for several years and was surprised to be
welcomed
by a young lady.
I
showed her
our latest mortgage bill.
She pointed to a teller. "Make
your monthly payment there, Jaron."
"Okay. I'm going to pay it all off."
The young lady gasped. "Really? All of it?"
"That way we don't have to pay 7 per cent on our balance any more."
"Clever man. I'll get a vice president, Mr. Summers." She scampered away.
Within seconds an eager fellow in a suit sprinted toward me, shook my hand
and introduced his associate who also vigorously pumped my hand and
told me what a pleasure my arrival gave him. Gave the
entire world.
He mentioned that for the last 16 years no one in Los Angeles had ever paid off a mortgage. I noticed his
knees were shaking.
The pair escorted me to a senior executive in a beautifully appointed booth
and she shook my hands. The two VPs left, again re-shaking my hand.
The senior executive said to call her Ann and I told her to call me Jaron
but she said she preferred Mr. Summers.
I said that sounded okay.
Ann, thrilled, called a special number and found out that Kate and I owed
exactly $15,400.15. She said that Chase required a certified check or
cash to close out our mortgage.
I handed her a certified check for that amount. (I had picked it up from
The Bank of America after calling Chase earlier in some cyber cloud
where they keep a tally
of what each customer owes by the hour. Possibly minute.)
Ann made several calls and while she waited for responses asked me how I liked
the B of A.
I confided that they were crooks and in the death game.
Just like Chase.
"The death game?" she asked.
"Mortgage comes from mort─like
in mortuary. Means death. Gage is a grip. Grip Until Death."
"I'll have to remember that," Ann said. "We'll set you up with some
excellent senior accounts. Check these out. I'd love to be your personal
banker." She gave me colored checks
showing pictures of old people holding gnarled fingers on park benches, then
she scurried off to complete our mortgage.
In a few minutes she returned and said that everything was settled and
reaffirmed that she was looking forward to being my personal banker.
I said that would be wonderful but I was certain she would soon be racing up
the corporate ladder and I would have to put up with her replacement─
"Trust me, everything will be fine, Mr. Summers."
"You people don't trust me."
"We trust you. Why, just look at your splendid record─you
have not been late with a payment in 28 years. We would be honored to have
you." She looked at me with longing in her pretty brown eyes.
"You don't trust me because you demanded I bring a cashier's check here to make my
final payment, Since you don't trust me; I can't trust you," I said.
"If you had a checking account here and a mortgage with the Bank of America,
then they would require that you gave them a certified check from us," she
said.
"So what's the difference between the two of you?"
"Free parking."
I thanked her and on the way out the gal at the desk stamped my parking
ticket.
Because I had been in the bank an
extra 15 minutes I had to pay the parking guy $1.50. That's six bucks an
hour.
That works out to $144 per day or $4,320 a month. You can lease a
Rolls-Royce for that and pay for the gas. (Not the one pictured,
that's a Phantom Drophead Coupe Convertible and leases for a tad over $6,000
a month.)
A parking lot is a great business.
Of course the banks hold the
mortgages on the parking lots.
Rather than beg one million people to donate a dollar each, I'd like one
billionaire (or two or even three) to simply give me a million buck$.
You know who you are.