Peter Grayson stood in front of his bedroom mirror at seven o’clock on a Tuesday morning, staring at a stranger. At seventy-one years old, he’d always taken pride in his appearance—pressed shirts, clean shaves, shoes polished every Sunday evening while his wife Ruby read beside him in their Connecticut living room. These small rituals had defined their retirement years, the quiet dignity of a life well-lived.But today, Peter wore clothes he’d pulled from a donation bin behind the Methodist church on Fifth Street. A stained gray jacket two sizes too large hung from his shoulders. Pants with a deliberate tear at the knee that he’d widened with his pocketknife sagged around his waist.
Shoes without laces completed the transformation into someone he barely recognized. Ruby emerged from the bathroom, and Peter’s chest tightened painfully. His wife of forty-three years—the woman who had taught piano lessons for three decades, who had sewn Halloween costumes until her fingers ached, who had packed lunches with handwritten notes tucked inside—looked like she belonged on a street corner holding a cardboard sign.