I was bone-tired and one wrong beep away from crying in the bread aisle. The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, humming a little too loudly, casting everything in a tired, yellow haze that made the world feel even heavier than it already was. My feet were screaming after a 12-hour shift as a trauma nurse at St.
Jude’s, the kind of ache that didn’t go away with a hot bath or a cup of tea. It was the kind of ache that sat deep in your bones, vibrating up your shins, reminding you that being forty-three wasn’t as young as you thought it was when you were twenty. My scrubs, once crisp blue, were wrinkled and smelled faintly of antiseptic and the cafeteria chili I’d spilled during a three-minute lunch break.
I just wanted to get in and out of the grocery store. I needed to pick up bread, milk, cheese, and maybe something frozen for dinner that didn’t require much thought—pizza, lasagna, anything that could be thrown in the oven while I stared at the wall for twenty minutes. It was the usual survival kit for a working mom who hadn’t had a full night of sleep in years.
Since the divorce three years ago, the silence in the house had changed. It wasn’t peaceful anymore; it was heavy with the things we couldn’t afford and the time I couldn’t give. My daughters, fifteen-year-old Ara and seventeen-year-old Celia, were good kids, but they were struggling.
Both were sniffling through a lingering cold and drowning in homework I was too tired to help with. The house was falling into quiet chaos—laundry piles growing like stalagmites, mail stacking up on the counter—and I had reached the point of burnout where even pushing the cart felt like dragging a boulder up a mountain. I paused near the entrance, brushing a loose, graying curl behind my ear.
That’s when I spotted Rick, the store manager, at the front by the registers. He was adjusting a display of discounted flowers, his face lined with the same fatigue I felt. I offered him a half-smile and stepped closer.
“How’s Glenda doing?” I asked. My voice came out raspier than I expected, thick with the day’s dehydration. He looked up, his face brightening like I was the first good thing he’d seen all day.
“She’s doing a lot better, Ariel,” he said, wiping his hands on his apron. “She still talks about how gentle you were with her after surgery. She thinks you’ve got magic hands.
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