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#diners
Sometimes you feel like a flower in a glass vase decorating the center of a booth in a rundown diner surrounded by coffee cup stains and burger grease and accompanied by a hundred wearied faces that come and pass, blurs in the middle of the night, the fluorescent light of a single bulb that slowly burns out the only shining source, mucky water your one food supply, alone, carefully shriveling away forgotten, but other times you're the diner, the trusty booth, a shimmering light on a otherwise cavernous, empty road in the middle of nowhere, a guardian, always there waiting to help the exhausted on their journey, wherever that may be.
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May 16, 2014
May 16, 2014 at 10:20 PM UTC
Rose on a rundown booth - draft
Harry bends over the grill, beefy with years of drink and culled anger, scrubbing until silver shines, a bullet waiting for my shift. He believes if the French Toast is perfect, she will appear in a halo of steam, peacoat and Mary Janes, ready to forgive the life they never had. Outside Brother Juniper’s, Peachtree Street is a kingdom of late century's lost: druggies, rent boys, drag queens, pimps preaching Jesus to the homeless in Piedmont Park. The smell of grease stitches it all together. Inside, fluorescent light makes faces soft as wet clay, ready to be remade by morning. French fries sizzle like whips, blintzes bleed cherry onto chipped plates, and Tati, round as a blessing, delivers soup to the sobbing girl whose mascara becomes a confession. I clock in, busting knuckles and boots, young, stupid, just trying to keep up with him. I know he wants her to return. I know she won’t. I know he’s getting older. I watch Harry’s grace and sweat, serving a city that believes in one last plate of salvation. At dawn, he walks out slow, grease still on his arms, orders a drink he won’t finish, lets Ray Charles sing him home, searches the sidewalk for her red hair in every stranger.
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Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025 at 1:49 PM UTC
French Toast at 3 A.M.