By Melissa Sevigny
We sold the good stuff in the first half hour—the cat crates, washing machine, and bicycles, most of it collected out of the abandoned rental apartments my boyfriend cleaned for a living. We were nineteen, dating, broke. The Swap Meet thrummed with desert heat, high summer, a hundred people trying to buy and sell, trade the worn and tattered for the not-quite-new.
As the day wilted on, I noticed the same six-year-old boy appear at our table again, eyeing the tiny Star Wars dolls collected from Happy Meals a decade before. Shyly, he passed nickels and dimes into my boyfriend’s palms and absconded with Luke Skywalker first, then came back for Han Solo. By late afternoon the stalls began to fold like accordions. Last chance, final sale, half price, two for one.
The boy appeared, for the first time linked to his mother’s hand, eyes turned toward our emptying table where a few dolls remained: princess, Wookie, droid. Didn’t I know that look of longing from a childhood spent in this very place, desperate for another dime, one more ragged toy? My boyfriend got up and waved an invitation. In a few years’ time, I would marry him. Maybe I knew it then, when he gathered the rest of the dolls and filled the boy’s waiting hands.
Melissa Sevigny is the author of three books of nonfiction, most recently Brave the Wild River (WW Norton, 2023). Her articles and poetry have appeared in the New York Times, Orion, High Country News, Sierra Magazine, and elsewhere. Sevigny has an MFA in Creative Writing and Environment from Iowa State University. She has published a Beautiful Thing in River Teeth before, “Young Moons,” in 2019.
Image by Silvestra courtesy of iStock
I grew up with swap meets and loved them. Your writing captures it well. I’m glad you married him.
This is wonderful! I could see it all!
I loved the story. The little boy, the Star Wars toys, and your husband. You married a good man and are a wonderful story teller.
That last sentence! It made me tearful. Bravo!
I loved the story. The little boy, the Star Wars toys, and your husband. You are a wonderful story teller.
Loved this, Melissa! Thank you.
Beautiful story, beautifully written. Well done, Melissa!
A poignant read, especially on Christmas Eve. Thank you for the good will and kindness this story provides. Lovely.