He sat alone in a breakfast joint. He was old, wearing wrinkled clothes, with white stubble on his chin, like he forgot to shave. He was doing a crossword puzzle.
When I am old, I will forget to shave and do crosswords.
He wore a Navy ball cap with scrambled-egg embellishments on the bill, his reading glasses on his nose.
Buck Owens was overhead singing “Together Again.”
I pulled up a stool beside him. Socially distanced, of course. We micro-smiled at each other. The waitress handed me a menu, I gave it back and replied, “Three eggs, sunny, and bacon, please.”
The old guy and I exchanged another formal grin. Minutes went by. He broke the ice first. “Where’s home, fella?”
When I am old, I will call strangers fella.
I jerked a thumb behind me. “About three hours that way. You?”
He laughed. “Nineteen hours in the other direction. On vacation with my kids in Crawfordville this week.” He looked at me over his readers. “Had to get outta the condo, my granddaughters were driving me insane.”
The waitress refilled his mug. The man
used six packets of sugar in his coffee.
I will someday use six packets of sugar.
The inscription on his ballcap caught my eyes, it read: “Navy Chaplain Corps.”
I pointed to his hat. “Bet I can guess what you did for a living.”
The man smiled. “Yep. I’m an inactive chaplain—there’s no such thing as a retired chaplain.”
“So, how’d you get into the business of saving Navy souls?”
He laughed again. “Well, I didn’t save’em. I just listened to a lot of’em talk.”
Silence.
He added, “My daddy was a preacher. But that ain’t what made me wanna be a Holy Joe.”
“What did?”
“Oh, lotta things.” He looked at me with eyes of slate blue, the color of dungarees. “You ever hear of the SS Dorchester?”
I shook my head. “Was that…