Vanessa told me the scarf was reserved for serious clients and suggested I try the outlet mall two towns over. A younger clerk giggled behind the counter. I was turning to leave, eyes stinging, when the private elevator at the back of the store chimed open. A tall man in a charcoal suit stepped out, flanked by two assistants carrying leather folios. Vanessa straightened instantly, smoothing her blazer, ready to greet the CEO of the entire Beaumont & Vale group for his quarterly walkthrough. His name was Daniel Vale. He was also the boy Charles and I had fostered for two winters when he was eleven, the boy who used to fall asleep at our kitchen table with a math book under his cheek. He saw me before he saw anyone else. The folios lowered. The assistants froze. Daniel crossed the marble floor in six long strides, and in front of every gasping customer he wrapped his arms around me like a son who had finally found his way home. You look exactly like I imagined after all these years, he whispered into my hair, voice cracking. He turned to Vanessa, who had gone the color of paper, and said quietly that this woman had paid for his first pair of glasses, his first suit, and every dream he was standing inside today. He asked her to bring the navy scarf with the gold cranes. Then he asked her to bring every scarf in the case. He fastened the navy one around my neck himself, the way Charles used to, and told the manager that from this moment on, my name was on the founder’s list, and that any employee who ever spoke to a customer the way Vanessa had spoken to me would be restructuring leadership somewhere very far from his stores. Vanessa’s hands shook as she wrapped the box. I walked out into the autumn light with silk against my throat, a son’s arm around my shoulders, and Charles, I swear, smiling somewhere just behind the clouds.
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