She took the stairs down to the ground floor, avoiding the elevator with its cheerful muzak. Outside, a light rain had begun to fall—the kind of drizzle that doesn’t wash anything, only makes the grime stick. She walked without direction, feet carrying her toward the old bridge over the rail tracks.
The old man laughed—a crackling, genuine sound. “ Mara? ” he repeated. “Look at me. I have no legs. My wife died last year. My son doesn’t know my name. And still, every morning, I light one stick for the sun. Because the sun doesn’t know it’s supposed to set on me.” mei mara
The old man nodded. “Ha. Mei mara. Now go. Go be dead somewhere else. But first, buy one stick. For your mother’s room.” She took the stairs down to the ground
Her mother stroked her hair. “Then who is sitting here?” The old man laughed—a crackling, genuine sound
An old man, maybe seventy, sat on a plastic tarp. His legs were gone from the knees down. He was selling something—tiny, hand-rolled incense sticks arranged in neat rows on a piece of plywood. He wasn’t begging. He was working. The rain spotted his white hair, but he didn’t move to cover himself. Instead, he was carefully lighting one of his own incense sticks, holding it up to the grey sky as if offering it to something he couldn’t see.