An occurrence at the Steel Trolley Diner. |
This is the diner on Main Street, that quaint old establishment; breakfast awes me with Maxwell House coffee, scrambled eggs, a slab of thick bacon, toast with grape jam and a waitress with ponytail lively as today. Man enters suddenly, drops a thin key chain, but I discern no key; rather, a heart holds my eyes, as would beauty, as would outré often. There is a clunk from the heart drop and I see slight waves in the java. Stranger to posit a heart, I say, stranger this breakfast in diner placed, not constructed (tis trolley of steel, tis true Americana). Here with my USA paper and time, I watch a gaunt man depart; I hold the chain and the heart in my hand and then sip lukewarm coffee. Maybe there’s message in Twilight Zone drop, maybe there’s sterling in chain. Here comes the waitress, white-sneakers and Stetson, a grin like country warmth. Holding the heart in my hand (lucky stone sized and pink this wee keepsake.) Stetson girl Flo is the sun for a time with a countenance spring-like. She takes a-hold of the heart and the chain, whispers, “Wow,” as she readies more Maxwell House Joe. We question each other with looks null and crippled; this is peculiar, we both do agree--steaming hot coffee she pours. I am tight-lipped but not tight to a fault...so I look up and announce: “This is a diner that I love so dear, like a Norman Rockwell scene; this is breakfast repair, with a Coca-Cola clock on the back wall, silvery counter stools, placemats with red barns, sycamores, covered bridge..." "Here is a pocket of love for the time, even parking meters too.” “I see your point...“ and as she lays the heart back down, we both can agree; much can be gained from words, wherein oft more can be learned by mere actions. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 8-20-16 |