He Shared His Last Meal With A Stranger And Opened A Door In The Sky-felicia

Sal Romano had one hot meal in his hands and no good news waiting at home.

That was the whole shape of his life that afternoon.

The warehouse had let him go before lunch.

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The supervisor had not been cruel about it, which almost made it worse.

He had stood under the humming break-room lights with eleven other men and listened to words like restructuring, margins, and unavoidable.

He carried his work boots out in a cardboard box with a framed photo of Nico tucked between the laces.

Sal looked at that picture in the parking lot and felt something inside him buckle.

Gina had been gone for two years.

His wife had fought sickness with a bravery Sal still could not talk about without stopping halfway through a sentence.

At the end, when her hand had become light in his, she had made him promise one thing.

Keep him safe.

She meant Nico.

Sal had believed he could keep that promise by working hard enough.

Then a company memo took his name off a schedule, and the promise suddenly looked bigger than his whole body.

He did not go home right away.

He walked until the edge of panic dulled into exhaustion.

At the corner food place near the park, he stood under the red awning and counted the cash in his pocket twice.

So Sal bought a chicken plate with rice and vegetables.

He told himself he and Nico would split it.

He told himself tomorrow would be for fear.

Today, he wanted the apartment to smell like food when his boy came to the table.

The park was busy in that cold, hurried way cities get near sunset.

People moved fast with collars up and phones out.

Near the middle path, an older woman sat on a bench with a cloth bag beside her shoes.

Her coat looked too thin.

Her gloves were frayed.

She was not asking for money.

She was not speaking to anyone.

She was simply shivering while the city practiced not seeing her.

One man actually stepped around her bag and frowned as if the bag had inconvenienced him.

A woman pulled a child closer and looked away.

Sal knew that look.

He had used it himself on days when he had a paycheck and a list of errands and wanted the suffering of strangers to remain somebody else’s assignment.

The woman lifted her face.

Her eyes were wet from the cold, but they were clear and searching.

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