Somewhere in Alabama. It’s an old cafe. The coffee cups are bottomless. The waitress wears jeans. On the walls are mounted bass and a few buck heads.
There are old men in the corner, seated around a table with mugs. These are rural men with old-world accents like your granddaddy probably had.
They are discussing crucial topics like:
“Hey, Charlie! Got a question for you. What the heck was the guy’s name who used to date Sharon? You know, he had the big ears and always looked like he’d just sucked a lemon?”
They say things like:
“Did you hear Marilyn’s son built his house with the kitchen window facing his mama’s kitchen window so in the mornings they can wave to each other when they make coffee?”
They say:
“Looks like Mike is running for mayor again, can you believe it? That streaking thing is gonna come back to bite him, just watch.”
These are the conversations you hear from old men with rural sensibilities.
Their reparte doesn’t follow one line of thought. One man says something. A man across from
him says something unrelated. Everyone gets a turn.
Round and round it goes, until you realize they aren’t actually talking to each other. They are simply reporting their random neural firings.
A young couple walks into the restaurant. The young man wears a work jacket and boots. He has a baby-carrier by the handle. The young woman is holding his arm.
They are both so young they still squeak when they walk. They sit in the booth behind mine.
“What time do you have to go back to work?” the girl asks her young man.
“As soon as we’re done eating,” he says. “I’m sorry, I wish I had longer today.”
She seems disappointed. Nobody wants Daddy to work so much.
They order burgers and fries. The waitress doesn’t need a notepad to take their order. She says…