The Produce Wagon
He came into the neighborhood with the slow authority of something older than convenience. The truck announced itself before it turned the corner, a cough and rattle of gears, then the sight of it, half pickup, half produce stand, rolling under a little tin roof that shimmered in the heat. Where the bed should have been, there was a wagon of abundance: tomatoes with their red shoulders shining, butterbeans in baskets, peaches bruised soft with sweetness, corn still wearing its pale silk like hair. Hanging near the side was a metal scale that swung lightly when he stopped, and below it, a stack of brown paper bags folded flat and waiting like promises. Beside the vegetables, as if to remind children that commerce was also a kind of magic, sat rows of taffy candy twisted in wax paper, bright as Sunday clothes. He knew how to call out without sounding like he was selling anything at all. His voice carried the way church bells do, plain, familiar, and impossible to ignore. Screen doors ope...