A Janitor Found A Toddler At An I-80 Rest Stop With A Hidden Note-Quieen - Chainityai

A Janitor Found A Toddler At An I-80 Rest Stop With A Hidden Note-Quieen

I had cleaned that lonely Interstate 80 rest stop for so many years that I knew the building by sound.

I knew the buzz of the vending machines when they were about to fail.

I knew the ugly metal rattle the restroom doors made when the wind came hard across the plains.

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I knew the hollow slap of a trash bag hitting the dumpster wall at three in the morning.

Most nights, that was all my job was.

Trash, mop water, paper towels, coffee spills, muddy footprints, and the kind of silence that only exists beside a highway when everyone is passing through and nobody plans to stay.

People think rest stops are just bathrooms and vending machines.

They are not.

At night, they are places between lives.

Truckers come through rubbing their eyes with gas station coffee in one hand.

Parents carry sleeping kids against their shoulders while trying not to wake them.

College students stretch beside old sedans.

Couples fight quietly by the map board.

Some people arrive looking like they are headed somewhere.

Some arrive looking like they are running from something.

After fifteen years, you learn the difference.

That Tuesday morning, the clock over the maintenance closet read 3:15 AM.

The wind was bitter enough to make my eyes water.

It came in hard from the open plains, cutting through my work jacket and rattling the doors of the restroom block so sharply that it sounded like somebody knocking from inside the walls.

I had just finished wiping down the sinks.

The paper towel dispenser in the women’s restroom had jammed twice that night.

Someone had dropped a paper coffee cup by the vending machines.

A family in a dark SUV had left behind chicken nugget boxes, two juice pouches, and a little red mitten under the bench near the information board.

Ordinary things.

Annoying things.

Human things.

I rolled the janitor cart out back and tied off the last two trash bags.

The concrete behind the building had a thin silver skin of frost on it.

The dumpsters smelled like sour soda, old fries, and wet cardboard.

The small American flag decal on the rest stop information board snapped faintly whenever the wind pushed through the breezeway.

That was when I saw the car seat.

It was tucked against the brick wall near the overgrown landscaping, partly hidden by the shadow of the dumpster enclosure.

At first, I honestly thought somebody had dumped it.

People dump all kinds of things at rest stops.

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