I try not to be biased,
but I had my doubts about hiring Stevie. His placement counselor assured me that
he would be a good, reliable busboy. But I had never had a mentally handicapped
employee and wasn't sure I wanted one. I wasn't sure how my customers
would react to Stevie.
He was short, a little
dumpy with the smooth facial features and thick-tongued speech of Downs
Syndrome. I wasn't worried about most of my trucker customers because
truckers don't generally care who buses tables as long as the meatloaf platter
is good and the pies are homemade.
The four-wheeler drivers
were the ones who concerned me; the mouthy college kids traveling to school; the
yuppie snobs who secretly polish their silverware with their napkins for fear of
catching some dreaded "truck stop germ"; the pairs of white-shirted
business men on expense accounts who think every truck stop waitress wants to be
flirted with. I knew those people would be uncomfortable around Stevie so
I closely watched him for the first few weeks.
I shouldn't have worried
After the first week, Stevie had my staff wrapped around his stubby little
finger, and within a month my truck regulars had adopted him as their official
truck stop mascot.
After that, I really
didn't care what the rest of the customers thought of him. He was like a
21-year-old in blue jeans and Nikes, eager to laugh and eager to please, but
fierce in his attention to his duties. Every salt and pepper shaker was
exactly in its place, not a bread crumb or coffee spill was visible when Stevie
got done with the table. Our only problem was persuading him to wait to
clean a table until after the customers were finished. He would hover in
the background, shifting his weight from one foot to the other, scanning the
dining room until a table was empty. Then he would scurry to the empty
table and carefully bus dishes and glasses onto his cart and meticulously wipe
the table up with a practiced flourish of his rag.
If he thought a customer
was watching, his brow would pucker with added concentration. He took
pride in doing his job exactly right, and you had to love
how hard he tried to please each and every person he met.
Over time, we learned
that he lived with his mother, a widow who was disabled after repeated surgeries
for cancer They lived on their Social Security benefits in public housing
two miles from the truck stop. Their social worker, who stopped to check on him
every so often, admitted they had fallen between the cracks. Money was
tight, and what I paid him was probably the difference between them being able
to live together and Stevie being sent to a group home. That's why the
restaurant was a gloomy place that morning last August, the first morning in
three years that Stevie missed work.
He was at the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester getting a new valve or something put in his heart. His
social worker said that people with Downs Syndrome often have heart problems at
an early age so this wasn't unexpected, and there was a good chance he would
come through the surgery in good shape and be back at work in a few months.
A ripple of excitement
ran through the staff later that morning when word came that he was out of
surgery, in recovery, and doing fine.
Frannie, the head
waitress, let out a war hoop and did a little dance in the aisle when she heard
the good news.
Belle Ringer, one of our
regular trucker customers, stared at the sight of this 50-year-old grandmother
of four doing a victory shimmy beside his table.
Frannie blushed,
smoothed her apron and shot Belle Ringer a withering look.
He grinned.
"OK, Frannie, what was that all about?" he asked.
"We just got word
that Stevie is out of surgery and going to be okay."
"I was wondering
where he was. I had a new joke to tell him. What was the surgery
about?"
Frannie quickly told
Belle Ringer and the other two drivers sitting at his booth about Stevie's
surgery, then sighed: "Yeah, I'm glad he is going to be OK," she
said. "But I don't know how he and his Mom are going to handle all
the bills. From what I hear, they're barely getting by as it is."
Belle Ringer nodded thoughtfully, and Frannie hurried off to wait on the rest of
her tables. Since I hadn't had time to round up a busboy to replace Stevie
and really didn't want to replace him, the girls were busing their own tables
that day until we decided what to do.
After the morning rush,
Frannie walked into my office. She had a couple of paper napkins in her
hand and a funny look on her face.
"What's up?" I
asked.
"I didn't get that
table where Belle Ringer and his friends were sitting cleared off after they
left, and Pony Pete and Tony Tipper were sitting there when I got back to clean
it off," she said. "This was folded and tucked under a coffee
cup."
She handed the napkin to
me, and three $20 bills fell onto my desk when I opened it. On the
outside, in big, bold letters, was printed "Something For Stevie."
"Pony Pete asked me
what that was all about," she said, "so I told him about Stevie and
his Mom and everything, and Pete looked at Tony and Tony looked at Pete, and
they ended up giving me this." She handed me another paper napkin that had
"Something For Stevie" scrawled on its outside. Two $50 bills
were tucked within its folds. Frannie looked at me with wet, shiny eyes, shook
her head and said simply: "truckers."
That was three months
ago. Today is Thanksgiving, the first day Stevie is supposed to be back to
work.
His placement worker
said he's been counting the days until the doctor said he could work, and it
didn't matter at all that it was a holiday. He called 10 times in the past
week, making sure we knew he was coming, fearful that we had forgotten him or
that his job was in jeopardy. I arranged to have his mother bring him to
work. I then met them in the parking lot and invited them both to
celebrate his day back.
Stevie was thinner and
paler, but couldn't stop grinning as he pushed through the doors and headed for
the back room where his apron and busing cart were waiting.
"Hold up there,
Stevie, not so fast," I said. I took him and his mother by their
arms. "Work can wait for a minute. To celebrate you coming back,
breakfast for you and your mother is on me!" I led them toward a large
corner booth at the rear of the room.
I could feel and hear
the rest of the staff following behind as we marched through the dining room.
Glancing over my shoulder, I saw booth after booth of grinning truckers empty
and join the procession. We stopped in front of the big table. Its surface
was covered with coffee cups, saucers, and dinner plates, all sitting slightly
crooked on dozens of folded paper napkins.
"First thing you
have to do, Stevie, is clean up this mess," I said. I tried to sound
stern.
Stevie looked at me, and
then at his mother, then pulled out one of the napkins. It had
"Something for Stevie" printed on the outside. As he picked it
up, two $10 bills fell onto the table.
Stevie stared at the
money, then at all the napkins peeking from beneath the tableware, each with his
name printed or scrawled on it. I turned to his mother.
"There's more than $10,000 in cash and checks on that table, all from
truckers and trucking companies that heard about your problems. Happy
Thanksgiving."
Well, it got real noisy
about that time, with everybody hollering and shouting, and there were a few
tears, as well.
But you know what's
funny? While everybody else was busy shaking hands and hugging each other,
Stevie, with a big, big smile on his face, was busy clearing all the cups and
dishes from the table.
Best worker I ever
hired.
from my
Dad, who forwarded it to me on the internet
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