
She would appear way down our dirt road at the turn-off, leaving a quarter mile more to walk to our house; ample time to run, get mother and for her to get her saved change, put away weekly in her left dresser-drawer. Momma! Momma! The Avon Lady’s coming! Lugging two big black satchels, yanked her arms down, rounded shoulders, trudged her gait, but she never wavered, never stopped. Her long dresses, dark, austere; dark as those high-tops and thick, opaque wrinkled hose amazed a near-naked kid in steamy, white air. I never saw any evidence of the woman-things she sold on her face or arms of weathered skin or her unadorned, piercing…..unblinking eyes. Her brimmed straw-hat sprinkled her plainness with points of white light, seemingly, seeping from within, bathing her existence in radiance.