I walk past the old woman who wears unflattering red lipstick, vivid as cartoon blood, and jeweled chopsticks in her hair. We meet haunted eyes, full of defiant sorrows.
The pudgy little girl streaks past, pigtails askew, sandals mismatched by herself or a harried mother she is either running to, or away from.
The boy with the closed face, like a letter that no one opens for fear of what it might hold, reaches for the same book I am reaching for. We smile at one another, surprised.
Such small things bring recognition. We are the same inside.