The Jaguar
My girlfriend’s parents hated me. On my way to meet them, I stopped to help fix a woman’s vintage car. I arrived late and covered in grease.
Then the woman I helped pulled up. I knew Emma’s parents disapproved of me long before that night. It was in the pauses after my name, the polite smiles that never reached their eyes, the way her father asked about my job as if it were a temporary condition he hoped would improve.
Tonight was supposed to be my chance to prove I was serious, stable, worth keeping. That’s when I saw the car. A forest-green Jaguar E-Type sat motionless on the shoulder of Route 9, hazard lights blinking like a quiet distress signal.
I slowed down. I checked the time on my dashboard—6:47 PM. Dinner was at seven.
I told myself someone else would stop. No one did. So I pulled over.
The Roadside
My name is Daniel Torres. I’m thirty-one years old, and I run a small design firm that specializes in making public spaces more accessible—parks, libraries, community centers. It’s meaningful work, but it doesn’t pay the kind of money that impresses people like Richard and Catherine Langford.
Emma’s parents. Emma and I had been dating for eighteen months. We met at a coffee shop where I was sketching redesigns for a playground and she was reading a novel so thick it looked like a weapon.
We started talking about books, then design, then everything. She was a teacher—fourth grade—and she had this way of making you feel like whatever you were saying was the most interesting thing in the world. Her parents, however, did not share that enthusiasm.
Richard was a commercial real estate developer. Catherine sat on the boards of three museums and two hospitals. They lived in a colonial in Brookline with a circular driveway and hydrangeas that looked professionally anxious.
I’d met them once before, briefly, at Emma’s birthday dinner. Richard had asked what I did, and when I told him, he’d nodded slowly and said, “That’s… admirable.” The way you might describe someone volunteering at a soup kitchen—nice, but not exactly what you’d want for your daughter. Catherine had been more direct.
“And you went to school for this?”
“Yes, ma’am. MIT.”
Her eyebrows had lifted slightly. “Architecture?”
“Urban planning and design.”
“Oh.” The word hung in the air like a punctured balloon.
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