He Told Me To End My Pregnancy At Breakfast—Then Found Me Hiding Behind A Café Counter-Ginny

Vicki stepped in front of him before his second breath finished leaving his mouth.

The bell above the café door kept trembling from the force of his entrance, giving off a thin metal jingle that didn’t fit the room. Rainwater spread under Eric’s boots in dark half-moons on the black tile. Coffee beans were grinding somewhere behind me, sharp and bitter in the air, and my fingers had gone slick around the dish towel even though the rest of me felt dry as paper.

“You need to leave,” Vicki said.

Image

She didn’t raise her voice. That made it land harder.

Eric leaned to look around her. His hair was damp and flattened to his forehead, his navy hoodie dark at the shoulders from rain. He looked like a version of the man I had loved after somebody had left him out overnight and all the softness had swollen, then collapsed.

“I just want two minutes.”

“No.”

He tried again. “Please.”

Vicki folded her arms. The fluorescent lights caught the silver in her hair and the steam from the espresso machine curled behind her like smoke. “You can beg on the sidewalk,” she said. “Not on my floor.”

I backed into the storage room and sat down on a crate of syrup bottles so quickly my knees cracked. Through the wall I could hear the scrape of his shoe, the low rumble of his voice, the louder silence of Vicki not moving. Then the door chimed again. A gust of wet air slid in, then out. Gone.

Vicki came back five seconds later and handed me the broom.

“The front needs sweeping.”

That was all.

So I swept. Cinnamon crumbs, wet dirt, a torn sugar packet, one napkin stuck to the puddle his shoe had made. My stomach rolled twice, but I kept moving the broom until the tile shone again.

The strange thing about disaster is how badly ordinary life insists on continuing. Milk still has to be dated. Tables still have to be wiped in circles. Trash still has to be tied and dragged out the back door where old grease and rainwater meet in the alley and make the whole place smell like burned bread.

That night Sandy was sitting cross-legged on her mattress with one of her cats in her lap when I came back. The TV painted the walls blue. The place smelled like cigarette smoke, dry kibble, and the cheap lavender detergent she used because it was on sale.

“Was he there?” she asked.

I nodded.

She rubbed her forehead. “You can’t keep living like a hunted person.”

I stood by the sink in my thrift-store cardigan and washed my only mug for no reason at all. “I know.”

“No, seriously. I mean it.” Her voice wasn’t cruel. That almost made it worse. “I can’t keep lying for you every day. He texted me from three different numbers. His mom called me twice. I blocked one and she used another. This is getting weird.”

I looked at the mug in my hand. A tiny chip near the handle. Soap sliding over my knuckles. “The shelter said three days.”

Sandy exhaled through her nose. “Then make it three days.”

The next morning I threw up so hard in the café bathroom I saw sparks at the edges of my vision. Vicki slid a paper cup of water under the stall door and waited without saying anything. When I came out, pale and damp, she was leaning against the sink with a box of crackers.

“Sit ten minutes,” she said. “Then peel potatoes.”

That afternoon I listened to one of Eric’s voicemails for the first time.

I was on my break in the alley behind the café, standing beside a dented trash bin with rain dripping off the fire escape. His voice came through cracked and too fast, words tripping over one another.

“I panicked. My mom was there. She got in my head. I know that sounds pathetic. I know it does. Just tell me where you are. Please. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.”

I deleted it, then stared at the dark phone screen until I could see my own face floating over it like someone else’s.

Back when things were good, Eric used to make banana pancakes on Sundays. He would stand barefoot at the stove, hair sticking up, flour on the front of his T-shirt, humming that same low tune he’d used on the fox years earlier. He once drove across town at 11:40 p.m. because I texted that I wanted salt-and-vinegar chips and didn’t want to leave the couch. He sat on the bathroom floor with me when my cat had to be put down, pressing a washcloth into my hand when I cried so hard my nose started bleeding. There were little kindnesses stacked everywhere in those four years. Coffee brought to bed. My charger always coiled neatly because he knew I hated bent cords. His hand finding mine at movie theaters before the previews even ended.

That was what made the breakfast sentence so violent.

It hadn’t come from a stranger. It had come from someone who knew exactly where to place the knife.

The shelter called the next day to confirm the bed. I wrote the address on the back of a receipt because my Notes app was full and my phone battery was at 12 percent. Sandy helped me fill out forms at her folding card table under the yellow kitchen bulb. Medicaid. SNAP. WIC. Housing waitlists. Every page asked the same thing in a different order: What do you have left?

Not much, it turned out.

$214 in checking.

Read More