she is waiting outside baggage claim in blue jeans and a sweatshirt that says **** YALE she is texting, frowning without wrinkles her hair a thick braid to the small of her back even among the smell of jet fuel and diesel fumes her hair the scent of cedar smoke, campfires picture it as a long furry tail a meerkat, they’re cute, they’re carnivores she stares at oncoming cars she hops on one foot I bet she’s really smart, really nice she has an LL Bean backpack on rollers and a floral garment bag she turns to me and asks “Will you watch my bags? I need to ***.” before I can answer she dashes in short steps now I notice tall heels below frayed cuffs the heels lift her ***, nice *** but she’s younger than my daughter she trusts me, I feel elevated she’s gone so long the pack on wheels, could it be a bomb? and me standing, guarding leering old creep nominated to be smithereens of pink spray but she looked sweet in an intellectual touchy-feely way no lipstick, no eyeliner I appreciate girls with no makeup and nobody puts bombs in a garment bag, totally against the bombing code look there sticking out of a pocket of the backpack a copy of a book, ******* my novel that went out of print thirty-seven years ago which is twice her age there was soft down above her lip, meerkat fuzz my portrait on the back cover, a younger hairy me did she see? when she returns I will speak kindly a bevy of bluebirds will fly from my lips to her ears an SUV stops, a burly man in coat and sloppy tie steps out opens the tailgate, throws the portmanteau inside then the backpack with the book should I stop him? “Are you sure you have the right bags?” I ask somewhat unassertively the man looks at me like he’s bitten lime and says, “**** Yale?” and I nod okay and just then she bursts out the door breathless hugs the burly man not a glance to me, not a thank you for guarding the bags she hops into the shotgun seat the words I hear her say: “Finally, at last!”