I whispered sorry to a woman who had burned me, and I walked to the back to change into a spare shirt. When I came out, the quiet man from booth 6 was standing. He wasn’t quiet anymore. He was on the phone, and his voice was the calmest thing I had ever heard. Yes, Marcus. The Riverside location. I want the franchise agreement pulled by end of business. Effective immediately. Vanessa’s fur coat froze mid-sip. She turned. She actually laughed at him. Do you have any idea who my husband is, old man? He turned the phone around so she could see the screen. Her husband’s name. Her husband’s company. And under it, in bold letters, PARENT HOLDING: KELLER GROUP. Then he tapped his own chest. Arthur Keller. I own the building your husband leases. I own the supplier that stocks his restaurants. And I have been coming to this diner every Tuesday for six years because this young woman is the only person in this town who ever asked how my wife was doing after her stroke. Vanessa’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. Arthur turned to me. Sweetheart. Show me your collarbone. I did. He photographed the burn without a word, forwarded it somewhere, and then he sat back down and finished his coffee. By Friday, Vanessa’s husband had lost three contracts, their country club membership was quietly revoked, and a certified letter arrived at my apartment. Inside was a scholarship in my son’s name, fully funded through graduate school, signed Margaret Keller, in loving memory. Arthur still comes in every Tuesday. He still orders black coffee. He still leaves a folded bill under his saucer. Only now, he looks up, smiles, and says, thank you for asking about her. Every single time. And every single time, I remember that kindness costs nothing, and cruelty costs everything.
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