He tossed his cup in the bin, waved to Maria through the glass, and stepped back into the night. The red "K" continued its steady, flickering pulse behind him, waiting for the next traveler.
He remembered coming here with his father years ago, sitting on the trunk of their old sedan while they shared a box of apple fritters. Back then, the world felt small and safe. Tonight, it felt vast and untethered. He had spent the last three hours driving, the "near me" search on his phone acting as a compass until the familiar red logo appeared through the fog.
A silver car pulled up to pump number four. A young woman stepped out, her face illuminated by the harsh overhead LED lights. She looked exhausted, her scrubs suggesting a long shift at the hospital nearby. She caught Elias’s eye and gave a small, weary smile—a silent acknowledgment between two strangers sharing a moment in the neon-lit void.
Elias took a final sip of his drink and stood up. The heaviness in his chest hadn't disappeared, but it had softened. Sometimes, you don't need a grand revelation to keep going. Sometimes, you just need a brightly lit corner of the world that stays open when everything else is closed.
Elias sat on the curb, the cool concrete biting through his jeans. In his hand was a Polar Pop, the condensation slick against his palm. For Elias, this specific wasn't just a convenience store; it was a sanctuary for the restless.