Two Las Vegas Seniors Turned Trash Into a Lifeline for Neighbors-tantan

Nora used to say Las Vegas was loud even before it woke up.

She could hear the trucks before the sun came over the roofs, their brakes sighing behind the grocery stores, their metal doors rattling open, their engines coughing into the cool desert morning.

At 84, she moved slowly, but she still moved.

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That was what mattered.

Every morning, she pulled on the same faded sweater, tied a scarf around her gray hair, and walked the few blocks to the alley behind the grocery store with a canvas bag folded under her arm.

Eddie was always waiting.

He was 89 and proud in the particular way old men become when they have lost almost everything except the right to make jokes about it.

He carried a paper cup of coffee so weak Nora could see the bottom when he tilted it, and he always greeted her with the same line.

“Morning, business partner.”

Nora would snort and say, “Some business. We don’t even have a cash register.”

They laughed because the other option was not laughing.

Neither of them had much.

Nora’s apartment had a window unit that sounded like it was grinding gravel whenever it kicked on, and Eddie’s place had a kitchen chair propped with an old phone book under one leg.

Their checks disappeared into rent, medicine, utilities, and the little emergencies that never looked little when you were already counting quarters.

A co-pay.

A bus pass.

A prescription refill.

A carton of eggs that cost more than it used to.

They were not dumpster diving because it was interesting.

They were not doing it for some online challenge, some thrift-store hobby, or some story they could tell to make themselves sound humble.

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