I woke early. My back is stiff. I should be sleeping right now, but I’m not.
My mother always said this would happen. “One day,” she said. “You won’t sleep as long or hard as you used to.”
She was right. She was always right.
It is dark outside. So, I drive to the gas station. I buy coffee and a bag of sodium-free pork rinds for my dog. The coffee isn’t ready yet.
The man behind the counter is nice. He puts the coffee on and tells me it’ll be a few minutes. So I wait out front, looking at the night sky.
A man pulls up in a ratty vehicle. He jumps out and starts loading the newspaper machine with today’s edition.
“Good morning,” I say.
He smiles. His eyes are baggy. His face is tired. I recognize that face.
“Morning,” he says.
“Can I have one of those?” I ask, handing him a five-dollar bill. “They’re better when they’re fresh.”
He forces a courtesy laugh. “Just pay
the machine, dude, besides I can’t make change.”
“I don’t want change.”
He stares at me. He takes the money. He tips his hat. I get my paper.
One hundred years ago, my mother and I threw the Northwest Florida Daily News. We would wake up at two in the morning. She would drink god-awful gas station coffee every blessed day.
And each morning, she’d take one sip and say, “This coffee tastes like bathwater.”
We were service people.
In daily life, you had your regular Joes—guys who had nice cars, a single-story-three-bedroom, and two-point-five kids. And you had service people. Us.
Service people are the sort who drink bathwater coffee.
One morning, my mother and I were delivering papers to apartments on the beach. We carried large canvas bags, slung over our shoulders. My…
