Her Son Saved Dirty Lobster From The Floor. Then She Heard The Truth-thuyhien

I used to think humiliation was always loud.

I thought it would come with shouting, slammed doors, or somebody saying the cruel thing straight to your face.

That night, it came on a cold plate.

Image

It came with garlic butter dried around the rim, two hard tortillas beside a glass of warm water, and the head of a lobster sucked so clean it looked polished.

The house smelled rich when I walked in.

Butter.

Garlic.

Lemon.

Beer.

The kind of smell that tells you people have eaten well and had no intention of waiting for you.

I stood in the kitchen doorway at almost 10 p.m. with my salon bag cutting into my shoulder and my feet throbbing inside my work shoes.

My black uniform was stained at the sleeve with hair dye.

There was spray stiffening the hair near my temple.

My hands smelled faintly like shampoo and bleach, no matter how many times I had scrubbed them in the salon sink.

I had been standing for more than 12 hours.

I had taken walk-ins through lunch.

I had smiled at women who complained about split ends while my own lower back burned.

I had swept hair, folded towels, wiped stations, counted tips, and sent one text at 6:18 that morning because I already knew how things disappeared in that house.

It was a picture of the seafood receipt.

Five lobsters.

I had bought 5 of them before work, before the sun had fully come up, before the neighborhood trash cans had even been rolled back from the curb.

They were not cheap.

The cashier at the seafood counter had slid the receipt toward me and given me that look people give when they can tell you are buying something above your regular life.

I felt it in my stomach.

Still, I paid.

Read More