The man lived.
My hand healed.
The scar stayed.
Miguel stared at it for a beat too long, then looked back at me with something like recognition.
“If you need anything,” he said quietly, “anything at all, please let me know.”
There was weight in the words.
“Thank you,” I said.
Then Jason’s phone buzzed.
His face tightened as he glanced at the screen.
“I need to take this.”
“Who is it?” Amber asked.
“Derek. Work stuff.”
“On Mother’s Day?”
“It’s important.”
Jason walked toward the entrance, phone pressed to his ear, tension visible in his shoulders. Derek Hartman was his business partner, the man he had started the real estate company with back in 2009, right after I gave him the money. I had met Derek once. Slick man. Too many teeth when he smiled. The kind of man who called everyone buddy and made you feel like you should count your fingers after shaking his hand.
Something was wrong.
Jason returned 10 minutes later with his face pale under the golden lights. He sat down without a word and resumed cutting his steak.
“Everything okay?” Kathy asked.
“Fine.”
“Are you sure? You look—”
“I said it’s fine, Mom.”
His tone was sharp enough that she flinched.
Then she went quiet.
Dessert came after that. Amber ordered crème brûlée. Jason ordered chocolate lava cake. Kathy and I declined. The desserts arrived beautifully plated, $46 worth of sugar and cream, while my wife sat beside me with a bleeding foot and an untouched soup.
Then Kathy reached for her phone.
“Jason, honey,” she said, her voice tentative. “I wanted to show you something.”
His eyes stayed on his screen.
“Mhm.”
“I found some old photos of you when you were little. With the baby coming, I thought you might want to see them.”
She held the phone toward him. I could see the picture from my seat. Jason at maybe 3 or 4, gap-toothed and grinning, holding a toy fire truck I had bought him for his birthday.
“That’s you with the truck your father got you,” Kathy said. “You carried that thing everywhere for a year.”
“Uh-huh,” Jason said, not looking up.
“And this one,” she said, swiping to the next photo, “was your first day of kindergarten. Remember? You were so nervous, but you were so brave.”
“Mom, I’m kind of in the middle of something.”
Kathy’s smile faltered.
“Oh. I just thought with the baby—”
“Maybe later, okay?”
He never looked at the phone.
She lowered it slowly.
“Of course. Later.”
She placed the phone face down on the table and folded her hands in her lap, the way she always did when she was trying not to cry.
I looked at Jason and saw him at 6 years old in a hospital bed, fever at 104, pneumonia stealing his breath. I had sold my 1978 Ford F-150 to pay that bill. I had worked 50 and 60 hours a week for 3 months to catch us up. I had sat beside his bed and held his small hot hand in mine and whispered a promise he was too sick to hear.
I’ll always take care of you.
No matter what.
Forty years later, that same boy could not look up while his mother tried to show him a photograph.
Tyler returned with the check in a black leather folder.
He set it in the center of the table.
“Whenever you’re ready.”
Amber reached for it first.
Of course she did.
Her eyes moved down the receipt.
Appetizers: $131.
Entrees: $314.
Desserts: $46.
Wine: $142.
Tax and gratuity.
Total: $687.42.
I already knew the number would be close to that. I had given Miguel $600 and trusted him to protect Kathy from the humiliation I knew was coming.
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