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Old Veteran Was Counting Coins for Bread — He Didn’t Know Ozzy Osbourne Was Standing Behind Him

63 cents. That was all the money the old man had in his palm. At checkout number three, his wrinkled fingers trembled as he lined up the coins on the counter. On the counter sat just a loaf of bread, a can of baked beans, and a bottle of water. The screen on the register read $3.47. But at that moment, in this small supermarket on the west side of Los Angeles, it seemed like there wasn’t a single person who recognized or cared about him.

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The customers waiting in line behind him were growing impatient. The young cashier girl just stared at the screen, not knowing what to do. What nobody knew was this. At the very back of the line, a 68-year-old man trying to hide behind an old baseball cap and oversized sunglasses was watching every second of this scene. And the reason that man was in this supermarket had everything to do with something that had happened a few hours earlier.

That morning was a warm Thursday in October 2017. The sky over Los Angeles was as blue as ever, but for Ozzy Osbourne, everything was gray. 8 months ago, in February, he had played Black Sabbath’s final concert at the Genting Arena in Birmingham. 49 years. For 49 years, he had taken the stage with Tony, Geezer, and Bill, and now it was all over.

For the first time in his life, Ozzy Osbourne was waking up without a reason to get on stage. Sharon’s to-do list had new sponsorship deals and documentary offers lined up for Ozzy, but Ozzy wasn’t thinking about any of it. That morning, while he sat at the breakfast table, Sharon was getting ready for a meeting.

“Ozzy, what are you going to do today?” she asked, gathering her things. Ozzy shrugged. “I don’t know. Watch television, I suppose.” Sharon stopped and looked at her husband with a mix of worry, love, and a hint of irritation. “Go outside for a bit. The weather’s nice. Call Tony. Do something together.” Ozzy nodded, but he didn’t call Tony.

Instead, he sat in the living room for hours, turned on the television, but didn’t watch it. Something was playing on the screen, but Ozzy’s eyes were fixed on the world outside the window. Around 2:00 in the afternoon, he couldn’t take it anymore. He got up, threw on an old black T-shirt and faded jeans.

He slipped his wallet into his pocket, put on a Dodgers baseball cap a fan had given him years ago, and put on his oversized sunglasses. As he walked out the door, his driver, Miguel, spotted him and immediately opened the car door. Ozzy got into the back seat and turned to Miguel. “Miguel, today we’re not going anywhere. We’re just going to drive.

” Miguel looked at him through the mirror. “All right, Mr. Osbourne. Which direction?” Ozzy looked out the window. “Anywhere. Away from Beverly Hills. Somewhere normal people live.” Miguel nodded and started the car. The black Mercedes glided quietly through the narrow streets of Bel Air, hit the highway, and headed west.

Ozzy watched the world go by through the window. Small houses, dried-out lawns, old cars parked along the curb. There was something about these streets that reminded him of Birmingham. Their two-room house in Aston, his childhood on Lodge Road, his mother’s songs in the kitchen. They were poor back then, but at least everything was real.

20 minutes later, as the car passed a small shopping plaza, Ozzy suddenly sat up straight. “Miguel, stop. Pull over there.” Miguel hit the brakes and looked where he was pointing. It was an ordinary supermarket. Its bright yellow sign read Greenfield Market. “Here, Mr. Osbourne.” Ozzy peered at the store over the top of his sunglasses.

“Yes, here. I’m going inside.” Miguel hesitated. “Shouldn’t we let Mrs. Osbourne know? Security?” Ozzy waved him off. “Miguel, I’m a 68-year-old man. I want to walk into a supermarket and buy some things. Just once in my life, I want to shop like a normal person. Don’t say a word to Sharon, or she’ll send a helicopter.

” Miguel smiled, but the worry didn’t leave his face. Ozzy opened the door, stepped out, and walked toward the supermarket’s automatic doors. When he stepped inside, he stopped and looked around. White fluorescent lights, shiny floors, colorful shelves lined with products. He tried to remember the last time he had set foot in a supermarket, but couldn’t. Years, maybe decades.

Sharon organized everything. Meals arrived at the house. The fridge filled itself as if by magic. Ozzy grabbed a shopping cart and wandered into the aisles. The first aisle had fruits and vegetables. He picked up an apple, turned it over in his hand, smelled it. He felt a strange kind of happiness. Simple, small, but real.

As he was putting apples into a bag, a woman walked past him and glanced his way, but didn’t recognize him. Ozzy smiled to himself. This was exactly what he wanted. A moment when nobody knew who he was, nobody expected anything from him. In the second aisle, there were breakfast cereals, and Ozzy stared at the colorful boxes, unsure which one to pick.

“If Sharon were here, she’d say, ‘Ozzy, don’t get the sugary one. Your teeth will fall out.'” he thought. And with a grin, tossed the sweetest-looking box into his cart. In the third aisle, he reached the bread and dairy section. It was more crowded here. People rushed through their shopping, passing each other without a glance. Ozzy discovered a kind of peace in disappearing into this crowd.

There was no Ozzy Osbourne here, just an old man in a worn-out T-shirt and a baseball cap. When he finished shopping, his cart held some apples, a box of cereal, a bottle of water, and a packet of biscuits. As he walked toward the checkouts, he spotted a short line at register number three and headed over.

When he joined the queue, there were two people ahead of him. A woman with a large shopping cart, and in front of her, an old man. The man had his back to Ozzy. He wore a worn military green jacket. His back was slightly hunched, and the boots on his feet were old, but clean. The cap on his head read Vietnam Veteran. The woman paid for her shopping and left. Now it was the old man’s turn.

He placed three items on the counter, a loaf of bread, a can of baked beans, and a bottle of water. The cashier scanned the items. “$3.47.” she said in a flat voice. The old man pulled a small cloth pouch from his pocket and emptied the contents into his palm. Coins. A handful of coins. He began counting them with his fingers.

A quarter, two dimes, a nickel, three pennies. 63 cents. He counted again. Still 63 cents. Beads of sweat began to trickle down his face. When he lifted his eyes from the coins and looked at the cashier, Ozzy saw the heaviest emotion he had ever witnessed in his life. Shame. Pure, raw, crushing shame. The cashier girl didn’t know what to do and turned her head away.

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