He sat in a construction office trailer. It was after hours. He was off the clock. He watched a black-and-white television after a long day of work.
He was an ordinary American foreman. He had things to do. He had a busy life. Normally, he would've been anywhere else besides the office trailer. But today was different.
A knock on the door.
An old man with an unshaven face and backpack. The man was lean. He asked if he could dig through the job-site dumpster.
“What for?” asked the foreman.
“Looking to make me a house out of a cardboard box. One that won’t get knocked down by the wind.”
So, the foreman showed him the biggest and best boxes. One was large enough to play basketball in.
They talked. They laughed. The foreman asked if the old man was hungry.
“I could eat,” was the man’s response.
The foreman fed him two bologna sandwiches with mustard.
The old man ate caterpillar-slow. He watched the television with big eyes while he chewed.
“Been awhile since I seen a TV,”
he said.
After the man finished his meal, the foreman gave him all the food in the break-room kitchen. Potato chips, Cokes, peanut butter, a loaf of Bunny Bread. He gave him the money in his wallet, too.
“Where’re you staying?” asked the foreman.
“Behind K-Mart.”
“That’s terrible.”
“Nah, it’s nice back there. Sometimes they even throw away old canned food.”
How about that.
The foreman brought the man home. He introduced him to his family. After a fifteen-minute shower, the fella was hardly recognizable. His skin looked three shades lighter. His hair was less yellow.
They ate. They talked about good…