The T was not very full, but you still had to squeeze in next to a stranger in order to sit. A cheery, perfect-looking family stood by a vertical hand rail. The father, lightweight lad with glasses, had a baby back-pack with a 1.5-year-old in it. From the eyes of the boy starved overexcitement stared. The T stopped and a blue-shirted mountain of a man treaded within. He stood across from the family, unshakable and mute as the T surged forward. Suddenly, his heavy gaze found the boy, and he smiled, lifting his lips with heaviness, as if they were, indeed, made of rock. The boy smiled back and hit the edge of the backpack with impatient and awkward hand. At this, the mountain-man felt a rocking impulse to shake of his silence, and his eyes faced the father as he addressed him with a smile and a mumble. Father did not expect the address, and watched incredulously, as words were born from the mumble of a stranger:
- It is like, like he has to smile, you know, - the stranger said.
The wife and mother in law looked at the mountain man cautiously, nodded and looked away. The mountain man felt the discrepancy between his words and that which stirred him to speak. He looked at the smiling boy again and mumbled a little more, as a mountain rumbles, compelled by fire from within.
- He just like, just has to smile, - he said and hesitated, - even the eyes are smiling.
The father nodded and produced a "yeah"-like noise. The family considered the matter concluded, but the mountain still looked at them and at the boy.
- There is a fire in them, - he said finally.
And the mountain stopped rumbling, feeling, perhaps, that it has reached the summit of eloquence. It stepped uneasily from one foot to the other, looked at the boy for one last time and at the unseeing parents and shuffled to the other end of the train.
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