The hotel lobby is about the size of an aircraft hangar. It’s like a city unto itself. They do things big in Atlanta.
There are restaurants, cafes, gift shops, arcades, boutiques, and a glass elevator that brings to mind “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.”
I am sitting at the bar. Watching people wander through the lobby in clots.
My bartender is a youngish woman with a pronounced drawl. She pronounces “dance” as “daintz.” She brings me a beer and asks how I’m doing, but my attention focuses on the throngs in the lobby.
“Are you a people-watcher?” she asks.
As it happens, I am a longtime people-watcher. You can put me in an airport, beer joint, train station, school, or Holiday Inn Express, and I’m at a matinee.
“I like watching people,” I tell the bartender.
She nods. “Me, too.”
So here we are. Both of us. The bartender and yours truly, People-watching.
“I like to look for old couples,” she says. “I like to see old people who are still in love. They remind me of my parents.”
“Where do your parents live?”
“North Georgia. They’ve been married 52 years. Good people.”
A group of young dark-skinned men walk by. They are wearing traditional African garb, rolling suitcases. Long tunics. Wild colors. I can hear them talking. Their accents sound melodic.
“Those guys are from Kenya,” says the bartender. “I waited on them yesterday. Happy guys. They’re here for a wedding. They’ve got more money than Jesus.”
More hordes walk by. A girls soccer team. Midwesterners with shopping bags. Young men in sports coats and Guccis. A mass of older women, all wearing matching T-shirts that say, “Happy birthday, Caroline! You turned 35 twice!”
“How did you end up in Atlanta?” I ask.
“Came to Atlanta with my husband, who is now my ex-husband. He had a job here. He left me the day after my fortieth birthday. He…