The Mexican restaurant was crowded. There were twinkly lights. Terracotta tiles everywhere. Trumpet music.
I was sitting next to Morgan Love, trying to make her laugh. Getting Morgan to laugh, as it turns out, is easy.
Morgan is a UAB student who has become a dear friend. I don’t know how my wife and I became friends with a college girl, but there you are.
Morgan is pretty quiet. But I have always liked quiet people. You never know if they’re floating in a daydream, or carrying the weight of the world upon their shoulders. In Morgan’s case, it’s both.
I first met Morgan a few years ago, when I wrote about her. Morgan is an exceptional kid. An A-student. On the president’s list. And she pulls it off while being low vision, paralyzed on her left side, prone to seizures, and a brittle diabetic.
Her digestive system is partially paralyzed, too. Thus, she is on a permanent feeding tube and cannot eat solid food. She hasn’t eaten
real food in months.
Tonight, this quiet young woman was my special guest at the theater where I performed my one-man spasm. After the show, I took her backstage. She stuck close to my side, shadow-like. I introduced her to the band, the sound guy, the theater manager. I let her play the piano some, and—God help her—even the accordion.
Then, several of us came to the restaurant for our traditional post-show supper. I had been in rehearsals all day, I hadn’t eaten since breakfast. But I still didn’t want to eat in front of her.
“It doesn’t seem fair,” I said, “eating in front of you.”
“Please,” she said. “I go to restaurants with my friends, I’m used to it.”
“Are you sure?” I said, gazing at my steaming burrito, feeling like a consummate fool.
“I’m sure.”
Morgan misses…