At 68, I believed the world had forgotten me. Then one freezing morning, a man I’d never met climbed out of my pickup truck with tears in his eyes.
For nearly 27 years, my life began before sunrise.
At 68, I owned the smallest repair shop on the edge of the town, though “owned” was starting to feel generous. The bank owned more of it than I did.
The roof leaked whenever it rained, the office heater coughed louder than most engines I fixed, and the sign out front had been missing two letters since a windstorm three winters ago.
Still, every morning, I unlocked the garage doors and whispered the same thing.
I wasn’t sure if I was talking to the shop, my pickup, or myself.
Maybe all three.
My name is Walter, and I have spent most of my life fixing things that other people gave up on. Cars. Trucks.
Lawn mowers. Once, even a church van that smelled like wet carpet and regret. People in town knew I charged less than I should have.
Some called it kindness. My friend Earl called it stupidity.
“You can’t keep letting folks pay you later,” Earl told me one afternoon while watching me repair a young mother’s radiator for half price.
I wiped grease from my hands and shrugged. “She had two kids in the back seat.”
“That doesn’t pay your electric bill, Walt.”
“No,” I said quietly, glancing at the little girl waving at me through the car window.
“But it gets them home.”
I could never look at someone stranded and see only a bill. Maybe that was why I lived alone in a trailer with a soft spot in the kitchen floor and cabinets that didn’t close right. Maybe that was why my pickup was older than some of my customers, with cracked leather seats and an engine that complained every cold morning.
But I never complained much myself.
Complaining didn’t patch the tires.
Complaining didn’t keep the lights on. And complaining sure didn’t bring back the wife I buried 12 years ago.
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