I didn’t go to Humes myself. I went to Central, but my cousin lived in Lauderdale Courts same time as the Presleys. Said you could hear him practicing at all hours. Drove the neighbors crazy. She straightened up looking at the yearbook with something like fondness. Nobody took him seriously back then. A project kid with a guitar and dreams bigger than Tennessee.
People figured he’d end up working at the Precision Tool Factory like his daddy. Or maybe driving a truck if he was lucky. Elvis stared at her. What if I told you I was that kid? Ruth laughed, a genuine amused sound. Sure you are, honey, and I’m Marilyn Monroe. I’m serious, Elvis said quietly. Ruth’s smile became more indulgent, the way you’d humor a harmless eccentric.
Okay, so you’re Elvis Presley and you just happened to walk into my antique shop on a Tuesday afternoon to look at old yearbooks. That’s a good one. It’s the truth, Elvis said. Uh-huh, Ruth said, clearly not believing him. And what’s Elvis Presley doing browsing antique shops in Memphis? Shouldn’t you be in Las Vegas or Hollywood or something? I live here, Elvis said.
I never left Memphis. Graceland’s about 15 minutes from here. Ruth was still smiling, but something flickered in her expression. This guy was really committed to the bit. Most people would have laughed it off by now. Okay, Elvis, she said, playing along. If you’re really the king of rock and roll, prove it. Show me some ID or something.
Elvis reached into his back pocket and pulled out his wallet. He extracted his Tennessee driver’s license and handed it to her. Ruth looked at the license. Elvis Aaron Presley, with an address in Whitehaven. She looked at the photo, then at Elvis’s face, studying him carefully. Really looking. Her expression changed slowly.
Confusion gave way to recognition. Recognition gave way to shock. Oh my lord, she whispered. You really are Elvis Presley. Yes, ma’am, Elvis said gently. Ruth sat down heavily on a nearby wooden chair, her hand pressed to her chest. I was just I was standing here telling you about yourself. Telling you about being a poor kid from the projects.
Saying nobody took you seriously. I was Everything you said was true, Elvis interrupted, his voice soft. I was just a poor kid from Tupelo who lived in the projects. My family did barely scrape by. I did walk around with a beat-up guitar. And nobody did take me seriously. He looked down at his teenage photograph again. You weren’t insulting me, ma’am.
You were telling the truth. Ruth shook her head, still processing. But I said I said nobody thought you’d make it. “They didn’t.” Elvis said simply. “Why would they? I was nobody special. Just another poor kid with a dream and no realistic way to achieve it.” He touched the yearbook page, his finger next to his younger self.
“This kid right here, he had no idea what was coming. He was just trying to survive high school, trying to figure out who he was, trying to find something that made him feel less like an outsider.” Ruth was staring at him now, really seeing him. The puffy face that medication had created, the tired lines around his eyes, the weight that fame and pressure and loneliness had added to his frame.
But underneath all that, she could see the ghost of that skinny kid in the yearbook. “I can’t believe you’re in my shop.” She whispered. “I can’t believe I was explaining you to yourself.” “It was actually kind of nice.” Elvis said, a small smile touching his lips. “Hearing how people remember that kid, the details get fuzzy after all these years.
But you remembered things I’d forgotten. Like the neighbors complaining about the guitar practice.” “They complained constantly.” Ruth confirmed, her voice stronger now. “But my cousin said even then, even when you were just making noise in that little apartment, you could tell there was something different about it. Something special.” Elvis felt something loosen in his chest.
“Really?” “Really.” Ruth said. “She used to say, ‘That Presley boy’s got something. Don’t know what it is, but it’s something.'” “Course nobody guessed it would be this.” She gestured vaguely, encompassing everything Elvis had become. They stood in silence for a moment, two strangers connected by the strange accident of time and memory.
“How much for the yearbook?” Elvis asked finally. “Oh, honey, I can’t charge you for your own history.” Ruth said immediately. “It’s yours. Take it.” “You paid for it at that estate sale,” Elvis said. “You’re running a business. Let me pay the $3.” Ruth shook her head firmly. “Not a chance.
Consider it a gift from one Memphis native to another.” Elvis pulled out his wallet again and extracted a $100 bill. He laid it gently on the counter. “Then let me buy some other things, too.” He walked through the shop selecting items. The old Philco radio, the box of gospel 78s, a vintage picture frame. “These bring back memories,” he said.
Ruth rang up the items slowly, her hands still slightly shaking. When she tried to give him change from the hundred, Elvis waved it away. “Keep it,” he said, “and thank you, Ruth.” She blinked. “How did you know my name?” Elvis pointed to the embroidered name on her apron. “Oh,” Ruth laughed nervously. “Right. Of course.

” As Elvis gathered his purchases, Ruth cleared her throat. “Mr. Presley, can I ask you something?” “Call me Elvis, and yes, ma’am.” “When I said nobody thought that kid would make it, when I pointed at your photo and said all those things about being poor and different, did that hurt hearing it?” Elvis considered the question carefully.
“No,” he said finally. “It didn’t hurt because it was my truth. That’s who I was. That’s where I started. And the fact that I went from that kid in the projects to someone you recognize on a driver’s license, that’s what makes the story matter.” He picked up the yearbook. “If I could go back and tell the 17-year-old kid what was going to happen, he wouldn’t believe me. He’d think I was crazy.
And maybe that’s good. Maybe he needed to not know. Maybe the not knowing is what kept him hungry, kept him practicing, kept him believing.” Ruth nodded slowly. “That’s a beautiful way to look at it.” “It’s the only way to look at it,” Elvis said. “We all start somewhere. The question is whether we keep going when the whole world tells us we won’t make it.
” Before he left, Elvis signed a few items for Ruth, some old 45s she had in stock, a concert poster from 1956, and the inside cover of his yearbook. “For Ruth Henderson, who told me my own story and reminded me where I came from. Thank you. Elvis Presley, October 1977.” As he walked to the door, Ruth called out, “Elvis?” He turned.