Coworker Used Her Phone Number at Dinner. Then the Manager Spoke-felicia

Memorial Day weekend was supposed to be the kind of memory Amanda Miller could keep without examining it too closely.

Her parents had driven into Havenport with her sister’s family, tired from traffic but trying not to show it.

Nobody was sick.

Image

Nobody was arguing over hotel rooms.

Nobody was pretending the holiday had become another obligation dressed up as togetherness.

The city felt warm and open, the way coastal towns do at the edge of summer.

The sidewalks smelled faintly of cut grass, hot asphalt, sunscreen, and restaurant patios already crowded before noon.

Amanda’s niece had asked three times whether they could eat somewhere with fancy shrimp.

She said city shrimp tasted better than regular shrimp.

Amanda’s father laughed so hard he wiped his eyes with a paper napkin from the coffee shop where they had stopped earlier.

That laugh was why Amanda chose Dragon Bay Seafood Restaurant.

It sat on Harbor Boulevard with tall glass windows, polished brass handles, and a hostess stand that made ordinary people feel like they should lower their voices.

Inside, the lobby smelled of ginger, garlic, butter, and steamed crab.

A blue-lit fish tank stretched along one wall, throwing moving light over the floor like water had spilled into the air.

Amanda’s sister leaned toward her as the hostess led them upstairs.

“Amanda,” she whispered, “is this place kind of expensive?”

Amanda did not need to open the menu to know what had scared her.

Dragon Bay was not careless with pricing.

It was the sort of place where a vegetable dish could cost more than Amanda’s first phone bill after college.

“I’ve got a membership card,” Amanda whispered back.

“There’s still money loaded on it. Plenty for today.”

Her sister relaxed, but not fully.

That was the thing about Amanda’s family.

They never took without measuring the weight of what was being given.

Her mother had spent Amanda’s childhood stretching soup, patching elbows, and saving good fruit for the children.

Her father had worked weekend shifts until the skin across his hands cracked from cold and chemical cleaner.

They never said they sacrificed for her.

They did not need to.

Amanda had grown up inside the evidence.

At Dragon Bay, seven people sat at the table and tried to order like strangers splitting a check.

Her father picked the cheapest fish without looking at her.

Her mother asked the server if the portions were large enough.

Her sister told the kids they could each choose one thing, then spent five minutes guiding them away from the lobster page.

Amanda watched it all with the old ache of love and frustration sitting in the same chair.

At 12:41 p.m., while everyone debated garlic scallops versus steamed ones, Amanda slipped downstairs pretending to use the restroom.

Read More