An evening spent washing dishes makes my hands thin and wrinkling like tissue paper. It’s ten o’clock. Tonight each streetlight will pop on one by one and me and the guys who smoke out back will watch owls drop from the trees and sweep mice out of their holes. Inside the pizza boils in the oven, blistering up like pimples on elbows. They can smell it from the doorstep peeling the paint from the asphalt and the huger gnaws and claws deep into the belly. Onward the light crawls trying to outshine the stars and our Pizza Hut sign, blazes a banner of glory to the highway. I feel sick on gasoline and the cigarette breath that clings to your apron. No one can clean out the gutters like you. After the doors close everyone hitchhikes to the Greyhound bus stop nobly trying to stay awake over the thousand miles home.