Sometimes, nothing happens. And sometimes, it seems that
everything happens at once. For the next several Fridays, I’m going to be
posting on my recent time at a bus stop in Minneapolis. Having missed one
bus by mere minutes – there it goes! – I stood and waited for almost 30 minutes
for the next one.
Come stand next to me, won’t you, and we’ll wait together.
I’d gone to George’s directly after work, part of one of those “I
need to see you” aspects of a true friendship; and now, the light about 30
minutes from failing, I am standing on the corner, ready to go home.
I take a good look around.
This is certainly a savory little area,I think.
A blend of small, home-y restaurants, bars with four-hour Happy
Hours, people shouting into cell phones, there are taxis and buses and dog
walkers and children.
It is not until around 6:00 that the demographics begin to change.
Dressed in an olive-colored pencil skirt, an amethyst shirt, cream
fitted jacket and black heels, I do not stand out downtown, but with the
traffic beginning to thin on this Tuesday afternoon, I am beginning to stand
out at the bus stop in front of the McDonald’s.
A man in a Scarface jacket, pants belted around his knees waddles
past me. He is slender, young, his hair plaited into exuberant braids, a
Medusa in the Hood look that not everyone can carry off. He pulls fries
out of what seems to be an endless bag of fries.
I lick my lips.
My visit to George’s had not included dinner.
I watch his hand dip into the McDonald’s bag. I watch
enviously.
I consider asking for a fry.
I remember that I have a bit of string cheese in my lunch bag.
It’s amazing how often I have string cheese in my lunch bag.
I set my purse down on the bus stop bench, start digging for the
cheese. Out of the corner of my eye, Braid-y backs away from me.
Hmm. Plastic bag, big Tupperware, little Tupperware, stray
dollar bill, the packet of vitamins I had forgotten to take – there it is!
Triumphant, I pull the cheese out of the bag.
I look up to find the young man with the braids staring at me, a
cluster of fries in his hand, forgotten.
What had he thought I was digging for?
I grin sheepishly at him, hold the cheese up. “String
cheese,” I say.
Smiling, the man with the fries shakes his head, wanders to the
other end of the bus stop.
There’s some weird people waitin’ for the bus.