I started placing groceries on her table.
She froze.
“What is all this?” she asked.
“My grandma lives alone too,” I said quietly. “I’d hope someone would do this for her.”
She tried to stand but couldn’t manage the rug.
So I went to her.
She gripped my hand and pressed it to her forehead, sobbing.
“I worked forty-five years,” she said. “I did everything right.”
I stayed an hour.
Checked her windows for drafts.
Replaced a dead lightbulb.
Turned the thermostat up to 70.
“The bill—” she started.
“Don’t worry about tonight,” I told her.
I left with less money than I’d started my shift with.
But I couldn’t unknow what I’d seen.
The Next Morning
Compassion doesn’t always come with cinematic music.
Sometimes it comes with consequences.
My phone lit up when I plugged it in.
Missed calls. Texts.
One voicemail—from Darren.
Not my shift supervisor.
The manager.
“Call me. It’s about last night.”
Inventory was short.
Cameras showed I’d left route.
Came back with groceries.
Sat in my car too long.
I hadn’t stolen product for myself.
But I had given away a pizza.
And time.
I called him.
“You can’t just give things away,” he said flatly. “It’s not your money.”
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