She was a pretty girl. A teenager. Dark skin. Black hair. And alone. She was standing in the canned soup aisle of the supermarket. Scared.
Miss Wilma—which isn’t her real name—was an elderly woman, reaching for a can of chicken broth from the top shelf.
She was going to make chicken and dumplings. It was a recipe that had been passed down from her great grandmother. It was a recipe which, women in her family claimed, could cure yellow fever, and croup. And on one occasion in Mount Dora, Florida, 1969, it prevented divorce.
The girl reached the top shelf for the old woman. She was a tall girl. Seventeen, almost eighteen.
A pang in Wilma’s gut told her something was wrong. There was something in the girl’s face. The girl looked terrified.
She started talking to the girl. Their conversation led Wilma to ask where the girl’s mother was.
“I don’t know,” the girl admitted. “I think I lost her.”
But the girl hadn’t lost her. The mother
had left.
The girl’s mother had disappeared from the state, and left her daughter in the supermarket. The girl had been looking for her mother for hours.
“Why haven’t you asked for help?” asked Wilma.
“Because I don’t wanna get my mom in trouble,” the girl said.
Wilma was going page the woman over the supermarket intercom, but the teenager begged her not to.
“But,” said Wilma. “What’ll you do? How will you get home?”
The girl shrugged. “Ain’t got no home.”
The girl was from Jacksonville. But truthfully, she was from everywhere. She’d been living in a car with her mother, roaming highways since her early days. Her mother had a talent for falling in with the wrong people—which is how the woman had kept a drug habit going. Motels, RV parks, public shelters, those were her homes.…