

It further embellishes man's frustration with life's absurdity, and drives us to somehow feel for Llewelyn. In a cruel twist of fate, though, it immediately throws a haymaker of a reminder to the audience: even luck has a price. Perhaps as a way of responding to his lucky day and as what any person experiencing a good day would do, Llewelyn wants to give back to the person responsible for his new fortune. Not only that, the suitcase's transponder alerts Chigurh like a dog hearing a ringing bell. Consequently, Llewelyn encounters a group of men finding the lost suitcase, and he gets injured while trying to escape. In a disastrous move, he decides to go back to the bloody crime scene to give the last surviving man a drink of water. However, Llewelyn soon understands that this lucky occurrence is one that carries a lot of baggage. Llewelyn is given a great blessing through pure luck, one that seems to bring a swift resolution to what is understandably everyone's problem: finding a way to feed his family.
