The elderly woman walked into the dealership, pointed at the car, and said she wanted to buy it, but the salesman only gave a faint, dismissive smile, looked over her worn clothes, and coldly asked her to leave, as if she had no place being there. No one expected that just minutes later, the very woman they had looked down on would leave the entire showroom silent, while the man who had just shooed her away stood frozen as the truth came to light.
By ten-thirty on a windy Saturday morning, the showroom at Parker Chevrolet Buick in Tulsa had already taken on that particular kind of brightness dealerships always seem to manufacture out of thin air. The tile floors were polished hard enough to reflect shoes and chrome, the overhead lights flattened every shadow, and the cars sat…
