Sitting on a bench just off the Liberty Trail in Boston, waiting as the rest of my family made a restroom stop. An old man with a thick, greyish beard and heavy eyelids took a seat next to me. His ***** white hair caught a cotton seed sailing through the air.
The bag of tobacco in his hand was wide open, and he pulled a roll of Zig-Zags out of his pocket—he tore the paper about six inches long and proceeded to roll a cigarette. His fingers, bent and forlorn, worked tediously as a diamond cutter’s.
He lit the cigarette, let out a ring of smoke, and introduced himself as Lenny. I told him my name and we talked for a few minutes. "What brings you to Boston young fella?" he said in his aged Boston accent. "Family vacation--personally, I'm interested in all the history of the town."
By now his cigarette is half-burnt, and my family is ready to continue on the trail. Lenny turned to me with a low look in his eyes, but he cracked a smile. He had a couple teeth missing
Before I got up he said to me, “When I want to sit and think, a cigarette isn’t long enough to burn through my thoughts, but a conversation with a stranger every day is what keeps my mind from running away in smoke.”