Not because she was in a hurry.
She did it because she looked at my broom, my work vest, my old shoes, and decided I was the kind of man she was allowed to humiliate in public.
It happened in the underground parking garage of one of the most expensive office towers downtown.
The kind with polished concrete floors, glass elevators, private security, and people who think a luxury car makes them royalty.
That morning, I was doing what I always did.
Sweeping.
Collecting bottles people tossed near the elevator bay.
Keeping the place clean before the tenants started pouring in.
I’d worked in buildings my whole life. After a while, you learn something simple: the people who have real power rarely need to announce it. The loud ones usually borrow theirs.
At around 8:15, I heard the engine first.
A black SUV came down too fast, tires squealing slightly as it turned into the reserved lane.
The driver’s side window rolled down before the vehicle even stopped.
A woman in oversized sunglasses leaned out and snapped, “Hey! You. Move that junk cart.”
I looked up.
She was maybe in her forties. Perfect hair. Perfect makeup. Expensive coat even though the weather didn’t call for one. The kind of woman who dressed like every hallway was a runway.
My cart wasn’t in her spot.
It wasn’t even touching the driving lane.
But that didn’t matter. What mattered was that she wanted to feel important, and I was the closest target.
“I’ll move it in one second, ma’am,” I said.
That should have ended it.
Instead, it seemed to offend her that I hadn’t panicked.
She parked crooked across part of the lane, stepped out in high heels, looked me up and down, and gave a short, ugly laugh. The loud ones usually borrow theirs.
At around 8:15, I heard the engine first.
A black SUV came down too fast, tires squealing slightly as it turned into the reserved lane.
The driver’s side window rolled down before the vehicle even stopped.
A woman in oversized sunglasses leaned out and snapped, “Hey! You. Move that junk cart.”
I looked up.
She was maybe in her forties. Perfect hair. Perfect makeup. Expensive coat even though the weather didn’t call for one. The kind of woman who dressed like every hallway was a runway.
My cart wasn’t in her spot.
It wasn’t even touching the driving lane.
But that didn’t matter. What mattered was that she wanted to feel important, and I was the closest target.
“I’ll move it in one second, ma’am,” I said.
That should have ended it.
Instead, it seemed to offend her that I hadn’t panicked.
She parked crooked across part of the lane, stepped out in high heels, looked me up and down, and gave a short, ugly laugh.