The adventurer
It was so vivid the way I could see it from where I was seated
He was looking out the window, she was looking down her nose
She sneered at him for that full half hour as he devoured his meal
It’s extra value clearly wasn’t nutritional but traditionally cheap
As the paper bag grew see through from the grease
and you could tell he couldn’t tell you the next time he would eat
She was judging him; he was probably judging the clouds
and whether or not the weather would favor him or rain down
dropping water from the sky, his ceiling, flooding the street, his floor
but at the moment he was feeling blessed to eat a warm meal in the warmth of that grease pit
A luxury he deserved as much, if not more, than she did
His hair was matted from his tightly fitted knitted cap
And I noticed he had enough manners to place it in his lap
But the woman only sneered as the gears of her mind turned burning her gaze
Setting fire ablaze to the daggers she was shooting his way
It made me sick the way she looked at him
And it made me wonder if she instilled that ignorance inside of that child beside her
An innocent bright eyed boy about four or five
He sat there taking bird bite of his nuggets and playing with his fries
As he mother began picking up the trash and placing what was left is happy meal back into the bag
Grabbing the child by the hand she tried to rush past the vagabond and his synched army sack
She shot him a sneered that said his very being offended her
As the child tugged on her arm, and with an innocent charm said,
“Look mom, he’s an adventurer.”
The child looked at the man like he was a hero just stopping in
For a warm meal and cold drink before the next adventure began
Just then I realized that I was just as bad as her
I didn’t even know the man but I was so sure of his situation
In my minds eye I had no reservation, without knowing I labeled him homeless with no hesitation
It took the innocence of adolescence
To teach a grown man this life lesson and I was taking mental notes
Searing this into memory in hopes I would never forget
Before that moment I “knew” he was homeless
But now I’m not so sure
In that time and space, the look on that child’s face said so much more
The man wasn’t lost or alone in search of a home
He was brave and bold
He was an adventurer
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