Seven Years After a Bridge Stranger Saved My Life, I Found Him at Union Station Holding the Same Night Again-yumihong

The lighter stopped moving.

Under the station’s fluorescent wash, his thumb stayed pressed against the dented silver wheel, and the little click that had been marking time every few seconds disappeared. On the bench beside him lay a grease-softened parts receipt folded into quarters. Purple marker showed through the paper in crooked lines.

A horse.

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The burnt-coffee smell from the kiosk drifted between us. Train brakes screamed somewhere down the platform. A woman in a red coat dragged a hard-shell suitcase past Track 19 without looking up. He kept staring at me, not at the cup in my hand, not at the dinner box by my boot, just at my face like he was sorting through a drawer he hadn’t opened in years.

“You talked about horses,” I said.

His mouth twitched once.

“On the river,” I said. “At 2:14 in the morning. You gave me your gloves and twenty bucks and told me not to make a permanent trade for a temporary hour.”

The skin around his eyes tightened. He looked older than seven years, but the voice, when it came, was the same quiet one from the rail.

“Bridge girl,” he said.

No name. Just that.

I sat down beside him before he could tell me not to.

The metal bench pushed cold straight through my coat. He glanced at the old receipt, then turned it face down with two fingers, like a man covering a wound that had started showing through his shirt.

“You lived,” he said.

“You too,” I said.

That almost made him laugh. It came out as air through his nose instead.

Seven years earlier, he had smelled like motor oil, diner coffee, and winter air. That night by the river, he told me about a mechanic shop in Cicero the way some people talk about church. Three bays. A soda machine that ate dollar bills. Country music on an old shelf radio. A little girl who sat on a red stool near the tool chest and drew horses on the backs of receipts while he changed brakes.

Back then I had thought he might have invented those details to keep my mind busy and my body on the right side of the railing.

He hadn’t.

“Your daughter was real,” I said, looking at the receipt he had just hidden.

The muscles in his jaw jumped once.

“Yeah,” he said. “She was real. Still is. Far as I know.”

A train announcement cracked overhead, words flattening against steel and tile. He flinched at the sound harder than he should have. The lighter started moving again, faster now.

“Give me five minutes,” I said.

His head tipped back against the bench. The station ceiling glowed white above us, all beams and shadow lines.

“That’s low,” he muttered.

“You used it first.”

This time the laugh happened, small and dry, but it happened.

Years before his own life split open, Daniel Reed had spent twenty-two years at Romano Auto Repair in Cicero. He told me that over eggs and burnt toast an hour later, but the bones of it started spilling out right there on the bench. Frank Romano had hired him at nineteen to sweep floors and sort lug nuts into plastic bins. By thirty, Daniel could hear a bad bearing from half a parking lot away. By forty, he was opening the shop at 6:00 a.m., shutting it at 7:00 p.m., keeping payroll straight in a coffee-stained ledger, and buying birthday sheet cakes for the two office ladies out of his own pocket because Frank always forgot.

Lily spent Saturdays there from the time she was six. Her mother had moved out to the western suburbs after the divorce, remarried, and made a cleaner life than the one Daniel could offer above a garage. But weekends were still his. He kept coloring books in the parts room, apple juice in the office fridge, and a little red stool by Bay Two. Lily hated coloring books. She drew the same thing every week anyway—horses with impossible legs, giant eyes, wild manes—on receipts, cardboard, oily envelopes, whatever she could flatten with her palm.

“She always gave them names,” he said later in the diner. “Thunder. Bishop. Pretzel. One was Kevin for some reason.”

The diner sat three blocks east of the station, a narrow place with orange vinyl booths, a pie carousel that hadn’t changed since the 90s, and a waitress who called everybody honey no matter what shape they came in. By then it was 9:06 p.m. The windows had fogged from the griddle. My husband, Ben, had already texted twice.

Everything okay?

Still with him?

I answered with one thumb under the table.

Yes. Put Owen down without me.

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