Egg
“You didn’t pay.”
The words carried no heat. They were flat, and that made them sharper. They sliced through the diner’s quiet without raising a voice.
Morning light poured through the front windows in pale bands. Dust hung in the air and drifted over the battered wooden tables. Outside, the street was still damp from an earlier rain. Inside, the room felt warm.
Coffee rose in thin steam. Eggs crackled on the griddle. Silverware tapped softly against ceramic. It was the sort of place where people avoided looking too long at one another.Coffee
The boy stood beside a table, so small that the edge nearly reached his chest. He was eight, maybe nine. His jacket drooped off his shoulders, and the sleeves swallowed his hands. The cloth was thin in some places, patched in others. His sneakers were damp around the edges, not from today, but from many days of walking streets that never fully dried. His hair fell into his eyes in uneven strands, as if no mirror had ever been involved.
On the table sat a plate with leftovers. Half a piece of toast. Egg yolk smeared thinly across it. Potatoes pushed aside. For anyone else, it was nothing. For him, it was everything his body had been wanting since the night before, maybe longer.Eggs
He did not reach for it at first. He only looked. He watched the steam fade. He listened. He waited for someone to speak. Nobody did.