Double Shift

The diner glows fluorescent at 2 a.m.,
beckons boozers and truckers, runaways,
women between men.  

Mary receives them
as her namesake received Gabriel,
pours coffee unbidden, tends
to coconut cream and lemon meringue,
eggs over easy, a malt for the guy
with stringy hair, jittery for a fix.  

She saves her tips in a pickle jar
under the grill; enough, she hopes,
to post 50 bucks for her old man's bail
come morning.

 
           
        First published in Kentucky Review