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Picking up a stranger in the middle of the night wasn’t exactly in my comfort zone, but something about him wouldn’t let me drive past.
“Hey!” I called out through the rolled-down window. “Are you okay?”
“Get in,” I said, unlocking the door.
He climbed into the car, shivering so violently that I immediately cranked up the heat. He didn’t say much, just kept muttering under his breath as I drove him to my tiny house a few miles away.
“Thank you,” he said through chattering teeth.
That night, I gave him dry clothes. When my dad passed away, my mother packed most of his clothing away in boxes and dropped it off.
“I can’t look at them, Celia,” she said. “Please, darling. Keep them here.”
For months, I’d wondered what I’d do with his clothes, but tonight they had come in handy. I made him a batch of comforting chicken noodle soup and let him sleep on my worn-out couch.
“I’m James,” he said as he was washing his hands in the kitchen sink.
“I’m Celia,” I said, adding the chicken to the soup.
“Where do you live?” I asked, stirring the pot.
But he just shook his head and sipped on the tea I’d made. When it was time to eat, I set the bowl in front of him, sat with him until he was done, and then went to bed.
I didn’t know whether to lock my bedroom door, but I couldn’t get my mother’s voice out of my head.
“Don’t be stupid, Celia. That man is a stranger, and you’re going to just close your door and sleep? Lock it, dammit!”
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