What the bus driver said to me changed everything.
The driver on the 8:35 bus, my bus, was an African
American with a salt and pepper beard. Well, all bus drivers in DC are African American,
of course, but I thought I should put that in there for those of you readers
who don’t live here.
I’d been taking the bus for a few months, then one week I drove
to work because my boss had given me her parking pass to use while she was out.
(Without the parking pass, $15/day; hence, the bus.)
But after a week of parking in the underground lot at work, I was back waiting for bus 52 at 14th and Irving, like always. It was the driver with
the salt and pepper beard. When I climbed the steps and shoved my dollar in the
slot, it happened. He said, “We missed you lately!” I was stunned. He
recognized me? He knew I hadn’t been there?
As I worked my way back to find a seat, I heard his words
again and again: “We missed you lately.” He knew me! The morning sang.
Maybe they all knew me—hard to be invisible, after all,
being one of the only white riders, and with red hair, to boot. Maybe they thought
this was my bus, too. The 52 bus. My bus.
