Somewhere in Ohio, en route to Washington, D.C., to protest a new president, two clashing worlds came together with a handshake.
It was Friday at 9 p.m., the night before what turned out to be a massive women's march on Washington, and a group of Minnesota women bound for the nation's capital collided with a group of truckers taking a smoke break outside a convenience store on Interstate 90.
The women were hard to miss, their heads capped in homemade pink knit hats, the unofficial uniform of the march. Clustered together under artificial light, they were a striking sight.
"Who'd you vote for?" one of the truckers called out, to no one in particular.
Most of the women didn't answer, slipping inside to find a late dinner. Sarah Buchanan stayed behind.
"Hillary Clinton," she told him.
"See, I just don't agree with Hillary Clinton," said the trucker, a Missourian named Leslie McAlister who just finished a route and was waiting for his next gig. His earpiece glowed blue in the misty parking lot.
As the other truckers watched with amusement, McAlister and Buchanan each named faults in the other's choice for president. Once done, they smiled and shook hands.