What the air does out here
By Mile 51 the string lights are on, and the midway has changed clothes without changing anything else. The spun sugar wagon keeps its drum turning, and when warm evening air takes hold, the cotton candy picks up a perfumed edge it never carries at noon. Dusk is the only new ingredient. The whole midway smells like the night deciding to be young.
Who rides with it
Teenagers on a first date splitting one cone with great ceremony. The night shift at the wagon window, who have seen it all twice. Anyone whose first perfume came off a mall kiosk and turned out fine. The wagon does not change its recipe at dusk; the evening dresses it up for free.
Pair it at the next stop
Cotton Candy is the daytime cone you eat, back at Mile 45; this is the evening air you wear. It keeps company with the Stretch's other after dark corner, where Amaretto pours the polite nightcap at Mile 40.
