"How's it going, hon?" said Dawn to a regular who walked into Lester's at 5 a.m.
"Still vertical and still employed," he returned. They continued the morning volley as she readied his tea.
"With lemon?" she asked, knowing the answer. Dawn indulged the formality. It was hospitable. They talked about the holidays, the first in years the diner that's been around since 1967 will be open on Christmas.
"I'm working that day," she said, as Billy Joel sang "Honesty" on the radio.
At a table, a trio of beefy guys hoovered plates of bacon, sausage, eggs, and home fries. "I feel like I'm doing the
walk of shame every time I take money out of my savings," one confessed.
Like the lone regular, they're focused on jobs and money.
Back in the kitchen, the baker wrapped up his morning's work, having
finished his shift by displaying trays of coconut macaroons, sticky buns, and fruit danishes. The
cakes were just made, too, the ones that spun in the 50's display,
decadent tributes to the genre.
I was just there for the scenery and to power through a bout of
insomnia. Diners remind me of my dad, who has gone to a diner just about
every day of his life for as long as I can remember. He is the
quintessential regular. He might have a problem here in South Florida,
since no one seems to carry an actual newspaper anymore. Remind me to
grab him one. I'm picking him up at the airport today.
Despite that the diner is open 24 hours, things were just getting going for the breakfast hour at Lester's.
New Times on Facebook | Clean Plate Charlie on Facebook | Melissa on Facebook | Clean Plate Charlie on Twitter | Melissa McCart on Twitter | E-mail Melissa |