The Last Bus on Marrow Street
Eli had driven the 9:40 down Marrow Street for thirty-one winters. Now the depot was retiring the route with him. Seven nights left, then the bus stopped forever. On this first night, sleet came down hard. As he pulled from the stop, he saw an old woman in a red coat running for it, too late. Hand on the lever, Eli stopped. He never waited. Not once in thirty-one years. But he idled there, doors open, watching her run.
The woman climbed aboard, soaked and gasping. She fumbled for coins, but Eli waved her on. 'No charge tonight,' he said. She sank into the front seat and caught her breath. 'Thank you,' she whispered. 'My husband's in the hospital. I'd have missed him.' Eli pulled the doors shut and drove.
At the hospital stop, the woman paused at the door. 'You broke a rule for me,' she said. 'Why?' Eli shrugged. 'Six more nights and this route's gone. Figured I'd spend them doing it right.' She smiled and squeezed his arm. 'Then do it right all week. People need that.'
So Eli did. Each night that week, he waited the extra few seconds for stragglers. Word spread fast. By the fifth night, the 9:40 was packed with regulars who'd switched just to ride with him one last time. They brought coffee, cards, and stories. The bus felt alive again.