I’d spilled coffee down the front of my white blouse, missed my regular freeway exit, and cursed under my breath as the reroute took me down a winding country road. I was already late to the office, and my boss, Brian, wasn’t exactly known for his patience. But as I sped past fields still heavy with morning mist, something caught my eye.
A small wooden table stood by the side of the road, barely steady on its legs.
It was covered in a blue-checked cloth, faded and a little torn. Lined up on top were seven glass bottles of milk. Behind them stood a man—older, wiry, sun-weathered skin, dressed in a tan corduroy jacket that looked older than I was.
He had no sign, no banner. Just the bottles and a paper cup.
I don’t know what made me stop. Maybe the guilt of having yelled at the GPS moments earlier.
Maybe curiosity. Maybe it was the way he stood—straight-backed, still, like he belonged to a time before rush hours and deadlines.
I rolled down my window. “How much for a bottle?”
The man didn’t smile.
He didn’t even speak at first. He just nodded at the plastic cup beside the bottles. “Taste first,” he said, voice low and calm.
I took the paper cup, filled it from a bottle, and took a tentative sip.
Cold. Creamy. Fresh.
Not like store-bought milk. It tasted… real.
“How much?” I asked again, handing the cup back.
He finally looked at me, really looked, then said, “Pay what you think it’s worth.”
I fished out a five-dollar bill and handed it to him. He gave me a bottle, nodded once, and turned his gaze back to the road.
That was it.
But somehow, that bottle of milk made it home with me.
I poured some into my coffee the next morning, and it changed the taste entirely. The kind of taste that lingers even after the mug is empty.
So the next day, I detoured again. And the next.
Soon, it became a ritual—every weekday morning, I’d find him at the same spot, same table, same seven bottles lined up like soldiers. He never introduced himself, and I never asked. We exchanged a few quiet words.
I’d sip from the cup, hand over some money, and drive off.
It became… peaceful. My quiet pocket of stillness before the madness of the day. I didn’t tell anyone.
Not Brian, not my coworkers, not even my roommate Chloe. It felt too sacred, too strange, to explain.
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