This is the quintessential beer joint. There are pool tables, chain-smokers, dartboards, a jukebox, and a plywood stage. There’s a young guitarist. He knows three songs. He repeats them.
I think he's overdue for a break.
My friend tells a waitress that I am a writer—if that's what you call it. My pal is only teasing me. The waitress says she has a good story.
And without awaiting my response, she's already telling it.
She is the quintessential barmaid—a no-nonsense woman, mid-fifties, a few tattoos on her forearm. Tough.
“Okay,” she begins, like she’s rehearsed. “So there was this homeless guy..."
I like the story already.
She tells me the man rode his bike all over town. She often saw him on her way to work and wondered where he was going.
So one day, she followed him. He lived behind a strip mall, in the woods. She discovered he had a son.
“It was enough to break your heart,” she adds. “They were living underneath a tarp.”
The next day, she and a friend delivered gift bags. A prepaid cellphone, snacks,
clothes, toys, food. As many items as they could fit into a few gym bags.
“He was skittish,” she said. “Very protective of his son, didn’t want us getting close.”
She couldn’t get him off her mind. She contacted her brother-in-law—a church deacon. She convinced his church to offer the man a room and meals.
One night, she approached the homeless man with the offer. She walked right into his camp. This woman is fearless.
He refused. He told her he didn’t want her charity.
"So I got in his face," she says. "Told him if he didn’t take my handout, I was gon' call the law and have his kid removed."
Magic.
He moved into a small Sunday-school room which she and her friends had outfitted with beds and a mini-fridge. The church agreed to hire him…