It was just dinner with my parents—one of those familiar, slightly stiff evenings where the restaurant lighting is warm but the conversation is cautious. I got up to step away from the table, distracted for half a second, and that’s all it took.
I bumped into an older woman.
Her purse hit the floor with a heavy thud, and everything inside scattered like it had been waiting for an excuse—coins skittering under chairs, tissues floating down, a compact mirror snapping open, keys clinking, and a small photo sliding across the tile.
She was furious.
“Watch where you’re going, kid,” she snapped, and then she grabbed my wrist.
Her grip surprised me—strong, firm, the kind that said she didn’t spend her life asking twice. I froze, caught between embarrassment and that instinctive feeling you get when someone looks at you like they can see straight through all your excuses.
“I’m sorry,” I muttered, already crouching to help.
I started gathering everything as fast as I could, pushing aside the heat in my face. Coins. A lipstick. A few crumpled receipts. A tiny bottle of hand sanitizer. And then my fingers brushed the photo.
It was worn at the corners, softened by years of being taken out and put away again. A young man stood in uniform, smiling beside a younger version of her. The kind of smile that looks effortless in pictures because it belongs to someone who hasn’t been tested yet.
I handed it to her carefully, like it could break.
Her whole posture changed.
She stared at it longer than she’d looked at anything else, and her tough expression slipped for just a moment. Her hand trembled when she took it back, and her voice dropped into something quieter—something real.
“That’s my son,” she said. “He was about your age when we lost him.”
The words landed heavy, right there between the chairs and the spilled coins and the restaurant noise. I didn’t know how to respond without sounding rehearsed. “Sorry for your loss” felt too small. Like trying to patch a dam with tape.
So instead, I stayed where I was—on my heels, looking up at her.