It's late. She’s standing on a curb at the gas station, waiting. She’s wiry. Her neck is gaunt. She’s having a smoke.
When she finishes her cigarette, she touches the ember to a fresh one.
I’m filling my truck. It’s cold outside. She’s bundled. Whenever a gust blows, she pulls her jacket tight.
The weatherman is calling for snow.
I break the ice. “Cold, isn’t it?” I say.
She makes a familiar remark about a witch wearing a brass bra, and I love her.
She looks old, but is younger than she looks. She clocked off work an hour ago. Her daughter was supposed pick her up, but there’s a problem.
“Our car don’t work so good,” she says. “My girl’s gotta call her boyfriend and borrow his car.”
So she waits.
I wait with her for a few minutes. She’s cold and alone; I need something to write about.
So meet Karen. She raised her daughter on her own. It’s always been just the two of them. They’re best friends.
Her daughter is an honor student. A senior. The girl has been looking for colleges all over the U.S. She has scholarship opportunities.
There is sadness in Karen's voice.
“All them colleges she’s looking at,” she goes on, “they're outta state. That kid’s been my whole life for eighteen years. I can’t bear the thought.”
I offer her a ride. She refuses. I insist. She only laughs. Laughing leads to coughing. Coughing leads to hacking. Smoking hasn’t been kind.
Her daughter has taken a few road trips with her boyfriend to visit universities. One trip took them to Philadelphia.
“Fifteen hours away,” she says. “Might as well be Mars. Every time she leaves to visit a college, I see what it’s like without her. God, it's so quiet. Don’t know if I’m strong enough.”
…