Long before the sun rose, she began brewing coffee in the percolator her mother had given her. It took about half an hour to brew; as each minute passed, the clear water turned black, and the aroma grew stronger. And then the sound grew quiet. And finally, the coffee was ready to drink.
She had visited the henhouse to gather half a dozen eggs, which she planned to scramble as soon as he came downstairs. She set out a tray of real butter, a jar of apple butter she had canned the previous autumn, and some strips of bacon, covered with a cloth to keep them warm.
Hearing the floorboards creaking, she greased the iron skillet and poured in the eggs, knowing he would walk into the kitchen any minute and kiss her cheek while saying good morning. His morning newspaper sat folded on the table, which he opened as she poured his coffee.
All of her hard work was consumed in just a few minutes, but that didn't bother her as she tended to the dirty dishes, already preparing dinner in her mind. After finishing his meal, he got up from the table, kissed her cheek, and said goodbye, before heading out the door.
Her day was full and well-planned, with only a little time to sit down and enjoy a cup of coffee from the old percolator her mother had given her. It didn't taste as good as his first cup, but she didn't mind. She glanced at the newspaper, opened to a half-page ad for new cars, and chuckled a little, wondering if he was planning to surprise her with one. However, he had been driving the same car for as long as she had known him, and he wasn't one for change very often.
Her life wasn't perfect, and she often wished for more than just a kiss on her cheek three times a day, but that was her reality, and she never complained—at least not to him. There was a whole world outside her house, but as her mother once told her, life is like a percolator and you have to be patient if you want to reap the rewards.
They grew old together, but little had changed over the years. She went through the motions so familiar by then she could do them while her mind was a million miles away. The eggs were scrambled, and the bacon was covered with a cloth. Her dinners were planned, and her cheek waited for the first kiss of three.
He passed away before she did, and she found herself no longer cooking breakfast. A slice of toast was all she wanted, and that first cup from the percolator her mother had given her so very long ago.
Mike 2025