A sincere thank you to Harddaysknight for his critical read of my story before publishing. This started out very different and morphed into what this is now, and I needed to make sure I didn't leave too many things hanging out there.
I dragged my ass into the laundromat on a typical gray Sunday morning at 7. I really had no idea if the day outside was gray, but I think they all feel that way when you're in a laundromat on a Sunday morning.
I'd only been using a laundromat for the past year or so. Prior to that, my wife had done our laundry in our own laundry room in the basement of our house. I moved out about a year ago, and six months ago, my wife became my ex-wife, and the laundry room was now in my former house.
So my new routine had been to hit the laundromat about a mile from my apartment early on Sunday morning. While I don't necessarily enjoy getting up early or doing laundry, I didn't want this ritual impinging on my weekend, so I got down to the laundromat early and got out early. I avoided the hassle of having to wait for a machine on a busy day, and having to maybe engage some of the other patrons in a civil conversation. After all, weren't Sunday mornings for hangovers and quietly reading the newspaper?
I had been going to the same laundromat for the last nine months or so, and maybe I had seen her before but never really paid her any attention, but this time was different: one of the wheels on the wagon she was pulling seemed to be bent a little, causing the wagon to roll erratically. It was piled with dirty clothes, and she was having a hard time wheeling it in behind her with one hand while trying to keep the door pushed open with her other hand.
I saw this while glancing up from my sports section, and being the basically nice guy that I am, I put the paper down and went over to the door and held it for her like a gentleman while she pulled the wagon inside. She looked up at me and gave me a 100 megawatt smile with those beautiful white teeth and big brown eyes.
"Thank you, mister," she said as she headed over to a row of washers up against the far wall of the laundromat.
I guessed she was maybe 7, 8 years old, a mixed race or maybe Hispanic child, with a mop of long, curly brown hair. She was absolutely adorable. I turned back around expecting to see a parent trailing behind, but saw none. Now I was disturbed ... and intrigued.
I watched as the child loaded a washer with her entire stack of clothes, not separating colors from whites as I had been taught. She then put in some detergent she carried in the wagon, put her money in the machine and pressed the start button. She took a small stuffed bear out of the wagon, got into a chair, and quietly started to talk to the bear while the washing machine did its job.
From my seat almost on the other side of the laundromat, I could see that the clothes she was wearing -- jeans and a long-sleeve shirt with a pink jacket that was too light for the 20-degree morning -- had seen better days. While they weren't dirty, they were dingy from their age and wear and tear. She looked to be just one step above a street urchin, but there was a calmness to her demeanor that just didn't fit.
I also couldn't believe that a parent would send a child this young out by herself to wash the family's clothes. Being a parent myself, I just knew something wasn't quite right about this whole deal.
Which brought me back to my own deal. My children at this very moment were probably sleeping, tucked in their warm, comfortable beds in my former home. When they do wake up probably an hour or two from now, their mother, my ex-wife, will probably have a hot breakfast of pancakes and eggs ready for them, or maybe some bacon. My 13-year-old son, Ethan, is a huge bacon fan, while my 15-year-old daughter, Haley, prefers pancakes. My favorite was waffles, but those days of happy Sunday morning breakfasts with the family were fast-fading memories. As would figure in a divorce, my wife got custody of the kids, and while I got some visitation rights, my wife in all her nastiness turned the kids against me, blaming my selfishness for ruining our family. My kids wanted nothing to do with me, and they made that quite obvious the few times we were together.
My crime: not sitting still for my wife cuckolding me with another man on a long weekend getaway with three other couples and the man she wound up having sex with, a rich guy who made it a habit to have sex with other men's wives. She and he had worked up this plan to have sex for one night -- then she would come back to me and be completely faithful to me for the rest of our lives like she had been before the weekend. Since she told me about it beforehand, it wasn't cheating, she claimed, but just in case I wanted to make waves, she'd take half my money, half my stuff, the whole house, and just for spite, ruin my relationship with my kids, which of course she would get. When I balked, she got everything she said she would, and, of course, put the blame on me. The kids bought into it hook, line, and sinker. I was fucked.
Thinking about those family breakfasts got me hungry as I hadn't had anything to eat since the last brat slid down my throat with the Mickey's Malt at the bar I was at watching the Knicks' game. There was a poor imitation of a vending machine on one wall, with a Coke machine sitting next to it. I was sure whoever owned the laundromat collected the money from both machines every day, otherwise they would have been broken into and ruined long ago.
I bought a pack of M&Ms and a Diet Coke. Just as I was getting the can of pop, I glanced over to the little girl. She appeared to be watching me quietly, but then I realized it wasn't me she was watching, it was my snacks.
Like I said, I am somebody's father, and the look on her face as she was watching my snacks hurt my heart. I walked over to where she was sitting, and I quietly asked her if she would like my Diet Coke and M&Ms. She brightened considerably and sat straight up in her chair, then got a sad look on her face and turned down my offer.
"Mommy says I'm not supposed to take food from strangers, especially from men," she explained.
"That's a very good rule, Sweetheart, and you should always listen to what your mommy says," I agreed. "Tell you what. I'll just put the soda and the M&Ms on the chair next to you, and you can take them if you want. I'll get myself more and go back to my seat."
I set the snacks down, went back to the machines and got myself another Diet Coke and another bag of M&Ms. I then went back to my seat and picked up my newspaper, surreptitiously watching her over the top. About five minutes later, she picked up the soda and the M&Ms and got to it. I smiled to myself.
I left about 90 minutes later, having folded my two loads and put them in my car. I didn't give the child another thought as I left, being absorbed in my own life and how I was going to spend the rest of my Sunday.
I honestly didn't think about the child again until I got to the laundromat the next Sunday, again at about 7 a.m. Then I wondered if she would show up again. Sure enough, about a half-hour later, she approached the door, again pulling the wagon piled high with clothes. I once again held the door open for her, and she again thanked me and headed for the machines on the far wall. I noticed she was wearing the same clothes that she had on last week.
I waited for her to get her load started, then I approached cautiously, sitting in the seat next to her.
"I see you've got a problem with a back wheel on your wagon, Sweetie. Would it be OK if I tried to fix it?"
She nodded affirmatively while playing with her bear. I turned the wagon over and saw that the back right wheel had gotten bent on its axle. I used my hands to straighten it back, then I rolled the wagon back and forth to check my work. Instant wagon fix! My little friend seemed impressed.
"I'm Alex Rogers, by the way," I said, holding my hand out for a handshake. She stuck out her little hand with as much dignity as she could muster, and said in a somber voice, "Maddie Ruiz. Very glad to meet you, sir."
"Well, now that we've introduced ourselves, we're not strangers anymore," I said. "What would you say to a soda and some candy?"
"Could I have a real Coke this week?" she asked, her eyes wide and questioning.
"Sure thing. One real Coke for you, a diet for me, and some M&Ms for both of us."
We sat and visited for almost two hours. I grabbed a pad and a pen from my car and introduced her to Tic-Tac-Toe. It took her about five minutes to catch on, then she was pretty good. I let her win a few times, just like I used to let my kids win sometimes.
I drifted off into my own little world for a minute or two thinking about playing games with my kids. Then I drifted off to the sight of my then-wife, Traci, looking me square in the face and telling me she was going to sleep with Robert Goldstine III, big-city lawyer, on the night that my life as I came to know it ended.
"It's just this one night, Alex. It won't mean anything. It will just be sex."
"What? Are you fucking kidding me? It won't just be sex. It will be the end of our marriage!" I yelled back at her.
"Don't be that way, Alex!" she yelled back. "Don't throw away 18 years of marriage over one night. I didn't sneak behind your back like I could have. We could have done this and you would probably never have known. Just give me this, Alex!"
Traci took Robert's hand and went off to his bedroom with him in the four-room cottage. After standing with my mouth open for what seemed like hours, but was probably only a minute, I got my stuff and left.
"Alex, it's your turn," Maddie said, bringing me back to the present once again.
I marked an "X" in one of the side boxes, and that gave Maddie a chance to get three "Os" in a row diagonally for the win. She gave me her best face of triumph as she marked a line through her trio.
"High-five, Kid!" I said, holding my hand all the way up and out of her range. She looked at me sideways, then stood on her chair and was able to reach my hand to complete the high-five.
"Gotcha!" she said.