I was about to step forward when the glass doors swung open behind me. Three men in dark tailored suits walked in, followed by a woman in a navy dress carrying a leather folder. Then five more. Then ten. Doctors in white coats still clipped to their belts. A federal judge I recognized from the news. The chief of surgery from Mercy General. A state senator. They kept coming until nearly forty people filled the café, silent, staring at one person — my grandfather. The manager’s smirk cracked. “Sir, this is a private establishment, you can’t just—” The judge raised one hand without looking at her. He walked straight to my grandfather, took off his own coat, and draped it gently over those trembling shoulders. “Professor Whitaker,” he said, voice thick, “we’ve been looking everywhere for you. The reunion started twenty minutes ago.” One by one they came forward. “You paid my tuition in ’89, sir.” “You wrote the recommendation that got me into Johns Hopkins.” “You visited my mother in the hospital every week for a year.” The chief of surgery knelt down and picked up the crumpled ten-dollar bill from the floor. He pressed it back into my grandfather’s palm and closed his fingers around it. “Keep it, Professor. You gave us everything.” The manager had gone the color of old paper. She stammered something about a misunderstanding, about coffee on the house, about not realizing. My grandfather finally lifted his eyes to her. His voice was still soft, still kind. “Young lady,” he said, “I taught ethics at the university across the street for forty-one years. Today you gave my students a lesson I never could.” He set the ten dollars down on her counter. “For the next elderly man who walks in looking tired. Please serve him coffee.” Then he turned, and forty of the most powerful people in the city walked him out into the sunlight — leaving her standing alone in a café that would be trending online before the coffee got cold.
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