
The Stockbroker - 18
Can I get you anythin else?
He turned from the window. Say, do you have a boyfriend?, he said.
I don’t.
Well, what would you say if I asked you out.
Are you askin me out.
I’m just asking what you would say.
Well that there is your problem.
What is.
They call it E-G-O.
He nodded.
So. Can I get you anything else?
One more just like I had. To go, please.
She was walking away when the couple came in from the parkinglot. They had their hands all over one another still and the waitstaff and customers alike started clapping and some whistling and he put his hands together and clapped quietly in the booth and he sat there for some time eyeing the waitress making her rounds, until the busboy brought over his plastic bag of food. He paid at the cashier. He went outside to the phone booth once more and dialed Wes and hung up again. Through the parkinglot and to the truck he’d come now. Taking up his key, he thought to hold it out against the driverdoor and walk the key against the side of the cab. He pocketed the key and kicked the jumble of cans and went on.
It was late morning by now. At the streetcorner he handed the bag of food over to the crossdresser, regarding him while he tucked his cardboard sign beneath his arm. He followed him down the knoll and below the underpass where he laid his sign in the dirt and sat down on top of it. Cars whirred overhead. Morris sat down across from him and eyed the man.
From the bag he reached out the styrofoam container. He opened it and reached out the baggie of plasticware and with his teeth tore it open and turned the contents over into the cover side of the container and he took up the salt and pepper packets and tore the tops back also with his teeth and emptied their contents onto the eggs. He looked into the bag.
No hotsauce.
Morris shrugged.
He watched the man eat. He ate laboriously and continually. He coughed up the food a few times but kept on until there wasn’t a scrap remained in the greased container. You want any water, Morris, he said.
He shook his head and the other went to where he had a sleepingsack rolled away in the corner and he took from behind it a Nalgene bottle and took a drink. You sure, Morris, he said.
I’m good, Leslie. Really I’m good.
He walked back over and sat again on top of the cardboard sign.
You don’t look like you’re good. He studied Morris. What has it been three years.
Five.
Five. Well, I guess it does feel like five.
He nodded. Feels more like ten to tell you the truth.
He laughed and then coughed up again and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. You still over there in Towerville?
I am. Except I don’t know for how much longer. You know what I do and I can do it for other people just fine but I can’t seem to hold on to my own.
Well. You could come back and do this again. Problem solved.

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