Thursday, October 1, 2020

The Box

 The light from the setting sun streams in through the trees, almost blinding the boy as he walks. In both hands, carefully, he carries a wooden box carved with intricate etchings of demons and angels. He must not let go of this box for any reason, or many people will die. He must carry it all the way to the farmhouse before the sun sets; that is what Mrs. Roberts told him in her voice that sounds like the leaves he loves to crunch under his feet. He tries to keep her voice in his head, to keep him steady, because a fly has landed on his nose and will not budge. He has tried to wiggle his nose, to shake his head, even to wipe at it with his shoulder, all to no avail. He can feel the tiny, scratchy legs as the fly walks up and down his freckled nose. 


Mrs. Roberts told him he’d be followed, and he’d be tested; that demons would be waiting to trick him and steal the box. Demons are very tricky, this was the first thing he remembers learning, his mother telling him stories as he fell asleep. He narrows his eyes, attempting to catch sight of the fly and perhaps scare it off. He does catch sight, but the fly only stares back, it’s multifaceted eyes seeming to watch him. “Are you a demon?” he whispers. 


The fly does not answer, merely continues walking up and down, up and down, it’s legs scritch-scratching across his skin. He sighs and walks faster, faster, needing to beat the sun before all is lost. He turns past the line of trees, relief flooding his body as he sees the farmhouse, it’s wrap-around porch lit by candlelight. He picks up his pace, racing against the sun. He steps onto the porch right before the last ray disappears past the horizon, and instantly Mrs. Roberts is there, shushing him, handing him a cup of cocoa, her dry voice soothing him. “You did well, Jeremiah.” 


Thursday, March 26, 2020

A Simple Door


Isabella did not hear their stifled giggles, nor the patter of their feet, as they snuck away. She was tired –her morning coffee was the first casualty of Eli’s meltdown this morning, followed shortly by the large bay window in the breakfast nook. She had managed to grab a sweater for over her house dress, which luckily obscured the stains from last night’s dinner, but she hadn’t had time to brush her hair or teeth.
Sam the salesman’s slick voice slithered into her brain. She hunched over the desk and tried to re-focus through misted eyes on the catalogue of windows. With a long-ago manicured nail, she pointed at one. “This one, then. That’s the cheapest you have in stock?”
“Yes, ma’am,” he drawled, “but that’s a single pane. Wouldn’t y’all want a double pane for only $150 more?”
She shook her head.  “No. That’s all I can afford.”
“We have no-interest payment plans, ma’am. We can fill out the application in minutes.”
She closed her eyes, seeing an image of her monthly ledger, full of red marks and scratched out entries. The knots in her back tightened, but she kept her voice level. “No. I don’t need another monthly payment.” She took a breath. “You said you have a man that can come out today?”
“Yes, it’s only an extra $50 for same-day installment.”
Only. That’s half a week’s worth of groceries. Jaw clenched, she gritted, “Then tomorrow?”
“Yes, ma’am, I have an appointment first thing in the morning.”
“Great.” She gathered her things and turned to her children. What she found was two mostly empty chairs, identical tablets resting on them with game music playing. “Shit!”
“Ma’am?” Sam gasped.
She ignored him, staring at the lack of children.
I should have known they would lose interest in their tablets. Why can’t I ever predict my children? I’ve been a mother for eight years now.
A door slammed. She grabbed their things, tablets shoved into her purse and headphones clutched in her fist, then hurried toward the sound.  Please don’t let there be another meltdown.
She wove her way through the rows and rows of doors of all different styles. She opened a stained cherry door, with a semi-circle window on top destined to one day be shattered by a wife, after she finds her husband in bed with another. No one. She turned the handle on an interior door, someday to be adorned with fairy and unicorn stickers by a curly-haired five-year-old princess. No one. She depressed the lever to a bright red door, slated for late-night rendezvous’ with boyfriends, the handle quietly turned by a teen wearing his varsity wrestling jacket. No one. 
She put a hand on the last door frame in the row. “Elijah? Macy?” Her voice echoed around the rafters, startling a pigeon.
She rounded the corner and found Macy pouting. Blonde tendrils escaped from her hasty ponytail, dirty cheeks – weren’t they clean when they got here? Isabella could tell something was wrong.  
“Ma!” Macy scolded, sagging against a double French door. “I can’t find Eli. He’s been hiding for HOURS.”
“You two were supposed to stay with me.” She scolded back.
Macy sighed. “Eli was getting antsy. You were too frustrated, Ma.”
Eli soaks up emotions like a sponge in water. I should have known. “You’re right, Mace. We’ll find him together.” They took each other’s’ hand, then together began walking the hallways of doors.
She called, trying for the voice of authority, “Eli? It’s time to go home.” Her voice boomeranged back to her ears, the store eerily empty for a Saturday morning.
They strode up one aisle and down the next, then another, and another. When they found themselves among the toilets, she turned them back around, to their starting point.
Macy flopped down onto the ground, arms and legs out like the beginnings of a snow-angel. “See? I told you, Ma. He’s disappeared.”
How many times is this now? Five? Six? Where he lost both me and Macy? Will we find him before we have to call the police?
Memories flashed: turning around to find both leashes hanging loose, two giggling toddlers hiding in the clothing rack at Walmart. Their slippery, sweaty palms sliding out of hers and their little feet running faster than hers. The cart that should have held two children suddenly empty. Finding Macy crying and hours later, finding Elijah on top of the freezer aisle, playing with the Christmas train display. 
As with all the times before, her stomach turned, the illogical possibilities brewing like a hurricane on the Atlantic.
She sat down next to Macy, running fingers through her knotted hair. “Where’d you last see him?”
Macy pointed to their right. “He went through that dark solid one. The super boring one with no windows or anything. Why would someone want something so boring, anyway?”
A half-smile perched on her lips. Macy has always cared about the aesthetics of things.
“I don’t know, Mace. Some people like simple.” She pushed herself up, then held one hand out to help Macy. “I know you tried with Eli. You always do. Let’s go for another round, k?”  
“I did, Ma. I was only seconds behind him, I swear. He disappeared so fast!”


҉ ҉ ҉
They stopped at the door. Macy was right. It was outstanding in its simplicity. Where did Eli go after this?
She turned the knob, praying to no god in particular that her son would be on the other side.
He was not.
Macy’s hand squeezed hers. “Ma? What’s next?”
“I guess now we go to the next level.”
They stepped over the fake threshold, then wove through the other doors back to the salesman’s desk.
Their shadows alerted him to their presence. She noted frustration in his eyes before he hid it with the typical Southern charm. 
“Hello again, ma’am. Did you change your mind about the same day delivery?”
She ran her hand through her hair. “No, no, that’s still a no.”
“Is something else wrong?”
“Yes, maybe. I mean, I can’t find my son. He’s—” She turned around to look at Macy. “Well, he’s about her height, eight years old. He was wearing overalls like her, and he has dark hair instead of blonde. He has a—” she drew a circle with her finger around her eye “—it’s called something like hemang—” She fluttered her hands. “I don’t remember. But he has a mark around his right eye, it’s dark red, it’s always been there. And he was wearing a Minecraft shirt, I think, or maybe it was Pokemon. And he’s scrawny, 70 pounds soaking wet, and—” She paused, bit her bottom lip.
“Yes?”
She pushed her hands into her forehead. “Well, he’s autistic. I don’t—” She caught a sob. “I don’t know what he’ll do if strangers confront him. He—He doesn’t know how to interact with people, he doesn’t talk a lot, he might hurt someone.”
His eyes showed no signs of understanding. “We can close the doors, make sure no one leaves without being checked.” He picked up the phone.
The music paused and the overhead speakers crackled. “I have a Code Adam in Doors and Windows. Can I get a manager please?”
She put one fist to her mouth, the other against the desk. Please don’t let it be as bad as Walmart two years ago.
The weight of Isabella’s repeated failure to keep her son safe whittled her to a jagged edge.


҉ ҉ ҉
Macy put a hand over her stomach to stifle the rumble. “Ma?”
Isabella stared straight ahead, unhearing, her body taut like a violin string, her thoughts caught in the meltdown from this morning. Elijah’s face, when he realized they were out of bacon. The coffee on the walls, her favorite mug in pieces on the linoleum floor, the #1 more a question than fact. What if--?
She shook her head. No. Wishes won’t make him come home. We have to keep going. Her legs did not follow the command her brain gave them.
“Mommy!” Macy shook her shoulder.
The childish moniker startled her, and Isabella returned to the present. “Yes?”
“I’m hungry. My legs hurt.” Macy’s stomach gurgled again, louder, in agreement. 
They had scoured the store, twice, but found no sign of Eli. Now, they were back at the beginning, their backs to the display of doorknobs and locks, facing the hallways of doors. The store had closed their doors to customers, so their only company was the police department. She could hear echoing voices calling out from all over the store.
Isabella took her hand. “No, Mace, I’m sorry, I didn’t plan for us to be here so long.” She checked her purse. “Here, I have two dollars. Let’s go see what the vending machine has.”
I should have known to bring food with us, even for the little trips. Why do I always forget?
“Can I get chocolate?”
Isabella’s shoulders dropped in resignation. “Yes, if they have some. Whatever you want.”
At the machine, a familiar officer came over and wrapped Isabella in a hug. “We have no news. How are you holding up?”
How do you think? Eli’s missing and I’m a wreck, like always, and I haven’t eaten since last night.
“Macy’s hungry. I—” She stepped out of Shelby’s embrace. “Thanks for coming, I’m sure you had other things to do. I wish he’d stop doing this.”
The officer shook her head. “We’ll find him. We always do, and we have a lot of people on this. Have you called your husband yet?”
Isabella snorted.  “You know Henry. I doubt he’ll deign to do anything.”
“You should. Just in case. That may be who he’s with.”
Isabella arched her eyebrows.
“Anything’s possible, Izzy. It’s worth a try.” She squeezed Isabella’s shoulder one more time. “I’m going to walk around again, but you give him a call, hear me?”
Isabella tried to smile. “Yes, ma’am.”
Macy jumped in delight. “Mama, they have the peanut M&Ms! Can I get those?”
“Sure, babe. Whatever you want.” Isabella chewed on a fingernail, only a few remaining chips of red left.  


҉ ҉ ҉
Back at the doorknobs display, she held her phone up to her ear, knuckles white. The other line rang three times before he answered. Always three.
“What?” He panted. Probably running on that damn treadmill of his.  
“I’m calling to let you know Eli went missing at the hardware store.”
“You lost our son again?” There was a shuffle and series of distortions, then a whirring sound. Probably putting the phone on the treadmill’s holder.
“He wandered off. I don’t know. He’s been gone for over two hours now. I thought you should know.”
His breathing accelerated. “Yeah, ok. What do you want me to do?”
“I just- I don’t know, figured you might want to know? In case you wanted to be here or something? Fuck, I mean, he’s your son!” She slammed her free hand on the display next to her.
Macy gasped behind her. Guilt permeated as she realized her daughter was hearing everything. She was supposed to be playing Plants Versus Zombies 2, not listening to me.
“Yeah, ok. Let me know when you find him.” Click.
She pinched her nose, trying to hold back the scream building inside.
“Mama?” Macy asked, her hand on Isabella’s shoulder, a jolt sparking through her body. “Are you getting one of your headaches?”
“Yes, sweetheart, I am. But I’ll be ok.” Will I?
“You brought your medicine?” The worry line creased on Macy’s forehead.
Isabella nodded. No, but she doesn’t need to know that. “Yes, I did, I’ll go get some water and take it. Want anything?”
“I’ll come with. I need to pee anyway.”

҉ ҉ ҉
Isabella and Macy had fallen asleep in a pile of each other against the wall of handles, their accoutrements strewn about them. If they had been awake, they could have seen the door that Eli had walked through before disappearing. They might have heard, if they listened closely, a clang of a sword.
A voice jostled her awake. “Ma’am?”
A man towered over her, his blonde hair and smooth, his chubby cheeks incongruous with his police officer’s uniform. She slipped her arm out from under Macy and gently laid her back down on her sweater.
Thank goodness she sleeps like a log.
She pulled herself up and picked her hair out of her mouth. “Yes?”
“There’s— Well, it’s been over eight hours.” He looked down at Macy, who was curled up, snoring, her Pikachu sweatshirt a makeshift pillow. “It’d be best if you go on home, wait there. He may be already there.”
Tears stung her eyes as she blinked them back. “Oh.” That’s it?  
“Our search teams will continue in the morning.”
Fear threatened to overwhelm her. “But—It’s cold out there. He didn’t have a jacket.”  
“I’m sorry, ma’am. We don’t have the resources to search at night, especially with the expected storm coming.”
Her voice exploded out of her. “There’s a storm coming, and you’re more worried about yourselves than an under-dressed eight-year-old?!”
His cheeks flared bright. “I—”
She broke in, her hands trembling with the force of her anger. “No. You need to go back to your boss, tell him to keep looking. My son could die out there, and if he does, it will be your fau—”
Shelby appeared out of the dimness. She strode calmly over and put a cool hand on Isabella’s cheek, cutting her tirade short. “Iz, he’s new. Let him be. This came from higher up. And he’s right. There’s a hurricane brewing on the Atlantic, about an hour away it looks like, and we can’t risk our people in it. You should get home, with Macy, and lock yourselves in your storm shelter. It’s not safe, for anyone.”
“How did the weather people not see a hurricane coming? What about Eli?” she whispered.
Shelby’s radio emitted static, then a gruff voice. “Officer Jones, the storm is getting closer, it’s almost on land. You and Davey need to get out of there now.”
“Iz, we have to hope he’s found somewhere safe to be. And right now, you and Macy need to find somewhere. Go.” The two officers moved out so quickly Isabella wondered if they’d even been there at all.
So quick to leave me and Macy. So quick to forget about Eli.
The tears streamed down her face as a gale hit the side of the building and the ground shook.  The lights went out, then the generator kicked in. The lights were even dimmer, hazy almost, and an eerie feeling settled over her, like driving at 3 am when it’s foggy. 
She stared at his door from the end of the aisle.
Eli. Come back to me. We need to go home.
When nothing happened, she leaned down and started gathering her purse and the assortment of snacks the staff had bribed Macy with.
No point in letting food go to waste, especially if we’re going to be locked in the storm cellar.
A light flashed behind her, bright enough to illuminate all the corners around her, and thunder followed.
She jumped at the sound and turned. The door had opened. The light was coming from the other side, but there was nothing there. She felt drawn, found herself walking closer and closer as though pulled by a cord. When a few feet away, a bony, hairy leg emerged from the light, the foot bare and knobby.
A man’s foot.
She froze, hand to her mouth. As she watched, the leg extended and she saw threadbare fabric shorts, then a hand, a shoulder, the other leg, and finally the head. He turned to look straight at her and she almost fell.
He stood at least six feet tall. He wore tan coarsely woven shorts with a rope as a belt and no shirt. His shoulders were broad and strong, but his ribs showed through his bronzed skin. His dark hair was long and his lower face was covered in a bushy beard down to his chest. His eyes were wary. On his hip hung a sword in a scabbard. But most shocking, for Isabella, was the wine-colored birthmark circling his right eye, like a raccoon.
Like Eli.
The door slammed shut behind him. He jumped.
She stuttered. “Y-You have a sword.”  
He looked down. “There were beasts.” His voice grated.  
“In Home Depot?” She wrinkled her forehead.
“No. There.” He thumbed at the door.
Part of her wanted to run away from this strange man. No one else was around, except for her sleeping daughter, and the air felt heavy. Thinking she must still be asleep, she continued. “Where was there?”
He shrugged. “Paradise? Hell? Somewhere between?”
“Oh.”
He hesitantly sidled over. When he was within arm’s reach, he paused. “Have you been waiting long?”
She shook her head. “For what?”
“For me.”
“What? No.“ She laughed. “I’m waiting for my son. He’s eight, about this high—” she held her hand at about mid-chest level. “He has dark hair, like you, and a red—” She paused, her hands aching to wipe away the tear weaving across his birthmark.
“I know.” He croaked. “That was me.”
“No. What— How—" She coughed. “How would that even be possible? You’re at least in your twenties. You have a sword. My son didn’t have a sword. He’s only been missing for six hours, not over a decade!”
“The days—" He splayed his hands up. “They were all the same, eventually.”
She pushed the palm of her hand into her forehead, trying to make sense of this man in front of her, this man that came from nowhere and claimed to be her 8-year-old son.
“Look.” He said, holding something out to her.
She took it and held it up to her eyes, the dim light making it hard to read. “This is my son’s ID bracelet. How did you get this? Where’s my son?” Her voice rose with each word.
“I am.” He said, softly, gently.
“You can’t be.”
He shrugged. “Can’t, but am.”
She stared at his face, the same birthmark, the same colored eyes, the resemblance to Henry. She wanted to believe so that she could have her son back, even if he wasn’t the same. Something moved in the corner of her eye and she looked down.
His hands – he was tapping his index finger and thumb together in perfect intervals, the other fingers spread out in an OK sign.
Eli does that when he’s anxious.
They both startled at Macy’s voice.
“Hey, Eli. You got big.” She squinted through the sleep still crusted around her eyes.
“I did, Mace.” He whispered back.
“That’s cool.” She stumbled, then turned to Isabella. “Mommy, can we go home now?”
“Shit.” Isabella pounded her forehead. “I forgot. How could I forget? There’s a hurricane coming, we need to go!”
“Okay, Ma.” Macy walked to the man and touched his arm. “Can you carry me?”
I should carry her. She’s my daughter. But, she’s too big to carry.
“Yeah.”
I can’t let a strange man pick up my daughter. Can I? If I do it, I’ll hurt my back. But he’s a stranger, how can I trust him? Is he a stranger? Am I dreaming?
Before she could finish her internal dialog, he’d already hoisted Macy up into his arms where she nestled in.
“Go back to sleep.”
She was soon snoring again.
If Macy trusts him, can I? How does he know her name? Has he been stalking us?
She followed close behind them, out the doors and into the dark parking lot. The sky was clear, dotted with stars and a full moon. What happened to the hurricane?
The man navigated the darkness like a cat, around to the side of the building where Isabella’s car was hidden.  
Eli always remembers where I park, even when I don’t.
She stood back as she watched him gently buckle Macy into her booster, careful not to wake her.
Eli and Macy always had a strong relationship, a fierce one. Even in the midst of a meltdown like this morning, he somehow always keeps her out of it, keeps her safe.
The stress and emotions from the day finally caught up to her. She sobbed silently, glad of the dark parking lot, the moon hidden by clouds.
The door shut with a quiet thud and the man stood in front of her.
“Hug time?” He asked, quiet, somber.
That’s what I say to the twins when they’re upset. How would he know that?
“Um. No. I mean yes. I mean, I don’t know you.”
He hugged her anyway, his arms wrapped around her back, his face nestled into her neck.
Eli always gives amazing hugs.

Friday, February 21, 2020

Why Don't Food Bloggers Have Mobile-Friendly Websites?

I recently got into an online debate with a food blogger, that has me thinking. Most things have me thinking, but this one has me thinking more, in a way that I can't turn off.

Back story: my son wanted lemon cookies. I searched on my phone for a lemon butter cookie recipe, and found one that looked good. I went to the site, started scrolling, and instantly, there's a video pop-up/ad obscuring my view of the page. Even more odd, it was a video of another, completely different recipe from the same blogger, so it took me some time to figure out I wasn't watching her make the current recipe but a totally different cookie. Worse, it followed me - it was one of those scrolling ads, so no matter where I was on the page, it stayed at the top. I couldn't read the recipe. I moved the view to read it better, and the video moved too. Eventually, about five-ten minutes of trying, I figured out how to close the pop-up. But then, every time my phone refreshed, the pop-up was back. Considering how often my phone falls asleep and the number of times I have to re-check the recipe to verify what's next, have I already done x y and z and so on, making these cookies took me about three times as long as it would have without that ad. So by the time I was done making the cookies, I hated this website. The dilemma came from me liking her writing style and the recipe itself. What to do?

I commented. Thanks for the recipe, but the scrolling video made it so I couldn't read your recipe. Or something along those lines.

I didn't really expect her to respond, and at the same time, hoped that perhaps, she might see my comment and think about making her site mobile friendly, so that I could come back for more recipes.

She did, indeed, comment: I have to have the ads on my page so that I make money and still keep the content free for you. Seeing the ads is a small price to pay. 
Again, I'm not quoting completely verbatim (though the phrase "small price to pay" is a quote).

My frustration, the added time and my literal inability to read her recipe were, in her opinion, a small price to pay for her profit.

Yes, I know my access to a website is low on the list of horrible things that occur in this world. Like, so low it's not even worth noting. Right? So why does it bother me so much? Why has it kept me awake at night, trying to figure it out? Trying to get over her complete lack of care for another person, if it meant a potential decrease in her profit?

I finally realized, it's the concept of someone else suffering being a 'small price to pay" for another's profit.

Amplified to a grander scale, this same mentality is everywhere and it *is* a big deal. That someone can think another person's pain and frustration are worth it, if it means they get paid  It's placing a priority of money over people.

We can look at any number of companies that are asshats to their employees, so that they can make more profit. I won't name them, because we all know them and I don't want to shame any particular one. It's the mentality that I want to call out - that someone's profit is worth more than another's comfort, pain, frustration, or life.

Most commonplace chocolate companies get their chocolate from farms that hire children to do the dangerous work - this site here  shows children wielding machetes. The chocolate that my children eat has a high likelihood of having been farmed by other children who have perpetually empty stomachs (as a side-note, I am making a concerted effort to only purchase fair trade chocolate from reputable companies - see here for a small list. But that is not to say my kids don't get chocolate from other sources, that I haven't screened). The major chocolate companies make greater profit because they use cheap labor in the form of children. These children are not valued, but the profit is.

Sugar is bleached using sulfur dioxide, and acquiring that sulfur is done by dramatically underpaid workers ($5-$13 per day, per this site, or $10-$15 per day, per this one) who carry 90kg loads long distances with no protective gear, working around poisonous clouds that can eventually melt their teeth. In western/civilized countries, we pay people barely any money, for the privelege of having white sugar, as opposed to brown sugar. Profit and aesthetics are prioritized over the lives and well-being of others.

I could share more, but I think you get the picture. We live well, because other people don't. I know this, and at the same time, I don't always know how to stop or fix it. If I go to the grocery store, I can't check every single brand, every single source of fruit or vegetable. I have to trust that I'm not doing harm, when I buy strawberries or a chicken or a bag of flour. I try to shop sustainably and from transparent companies, but the cost is usually much higher, to the point that I wouldn't be able afford to feed my kids if I only bought food from known reputable sources.

I recently read an article (from 5 years ago, so perhaps it's changed?) that Trader Joe's - a name that I'd thought was reputable and trustworthy - actually is (was) not transparent and will source its food from companies and then rebrand the food as their own. Trader Joe's will buy chips from Stacy's, then re-bag them and label them as their own. What other companies are they buying from and re-branding? Are they buying chocolate from one of the companies in the above article, the ones using child labor, and then selling it as their own? The theme is repeated - they buy this food at a low cost, then sell it higher, making a profit and not being transparent about where it came from. The profit matters more than honesty, more than the consumer knowing where their food came from.

The prevalent use of video ads on food bloggers' websites - and it does seem primarily to be food bloggers, at least in my experience - is obviously drastically different from child labor and dangerous, underpaid labor. But it is a systemic undercurrent through our culture, that profit is primary over the well being of others.

My husband put forth, while we watched a YouTube video of a Japanese way to work with bamboo, that in the US, we do not have a history of craftsmen, we are founded on the concept of industrialization. Always making things more efficiently, finding ways to get more profit, rather than making things well. In the above mentioned video, there was a concept repeated several times (starting around 16 minutes in), of creating the object with the user in mind. The function of the object and how well it worked was a priority for the craftswoman, and so she took great care in each part of the process. It was beautiful to watch her. I am sure her work was expensive, as it took a lot of time. Or I hope it was, that she was properly compensated. And I'm sure that if we were to watch the American way of making a similar object, it would be done with a machine, in a mass assembly line with very little care and even less beauty. Efficiency would be valued, over the beauty, because efficiency would yield greater profit.












Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Bread Girl

I bought a man with bread money because I liked the look of his hands. He married me because he liked the taste of my dough.

I went to the charity ball to deliver an order - tarte tropézienne, eclairs, canele. Unlike previously, my contact was not in the kitchen.

I searched amongst the guests, out of place in my dough-crusted apron, my hair pulled back in a messy bun, flats on my feet. Jewel-adorned women and diamond chandeliers refracted light; I found her by the cloying stench of perfume.

“You shouldn’t be here.”

I sighed. “Hello, Karen. The pastries are in the kitchen. If you don’t mind paying me now, I’ll be on my way.”

But then I saw him.

He stood on the stage, holding a number 6, unremarkable in all ways. Except his hands. They called to me, pulling me closer. I wanted to trace the lines on his palms, caress his knuckles, feel his fingers on my bare stomach, inching lower and lower until-.

“Like what you see?” his voice, melodic, slipped into my fantasy.

“Is this the Graecostadium?”

He laughed. “Yes? It’s a fundraiser for the hospital.” He gestured to the others near him, then at the sign above his head. ‘Win Dinner with a Firefighter.’

Karen shoved her way between us, towering over me. “Excuse me, bread girl. What are you still doing here?” 

“Bidding.” I folded my arms and glared.

She huffed and walked away.

Turns out, my paycheck was exactly enough to win the bid.

In the taxi after dinner, he put those hands on my hips, triggering a cascade of shivers up and down my body. “Am I worth the price?” he whispered, then kissed me gently.

I put my hand on the window to block Karen’s view and kissed him back.