I Carried a Stranger’s Groceries Up 63 Subway Steps — The Next Evening, I Learned Why She Never Looked at Me-yumihong

The turnstile clicked shut behind me, but the pressure of those paper handles stayed in my hands all the way home.

Cold air followed me up the block. A delivery bike cut through a red light. Somewhere behind me, the downtown train groaned into the station again, and I could still hear the thin, flat way she had said thanks, like the word had been taken out and put down only because manners demanded it. By the time I got to my apartment, the red grooves in my palms had deepened into two hard lines that looked almost penciled there.

Steam hissed from my radiator when I opened the door. I set my keys in the bowl by the sink and ran cold water over my hands. The skin stung first, then went numb. A drop slid from my wrist to the edge of the counter. The whole kitchen smelled like dish soap and old coffee. Usually I turned on the TV before I even took my shoes off. That night, the apartment stayed quiet except for the pipes knocking in the wall.

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Helping people had never felt complicated to me before.

My father made sure of that.

He drove a city bus for twenty-six years and treated every route like it belonged to the people on it. When I was ten, he stopped halfway home on a wet November night to carry a folded stroller up the broken steps outside our building for a woman whose kid had fallen asleep with a cookie in his hand. Another time, on Jamaica Avenue, he took one arm of an old radiator a man was trying to drag into a basement apartment and came back with both cuffs blackened from rust. He never came in telling stories about what a good guy he’d been. He just washed his hands, sat down to dinner, and asked for the salt.

His rule was simple.

If your back was straight and your hands worked, you used them.

So that was how I grew up. Holding doors. Taking the heavy side of furniture. Grabbing the stroller end on subway stairs before somebody had to ask. Most of the time there was a smile, a breathless thank-you, sometimes a joke. Once, a man at Union Square let go of a suitcase and nearly cried because he’d had shoulder surgery the week before. A woman outside Bellevue pressed a granola bar into my hand after I carried two cases of water to the curb for her. Little clean endings. Tiny exchanges that closed like a zipper.

What stayed under my skin that night wasn’t her distance by itself. It was how fast my mind had reached for one of those endings.

At two in the morning, I was still awake.

Headlights slid across the ceiling. The pillow had gone warm on both sides. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw the exact space she kept between us on those steps, precise as a ruler. Not fear in the dramatic sense. Nothing wide or shaking. Just calculation. Coat here. My sleeve there. One bag still in her hand no matter what. By three-fifteen, I was sitting on the side of the bed with both feet on the floor, rubbing the base of my fingers where the bag handles had dug in.

Morning came gray and flat. Work dragged. An email sat unanswered on my screen for forty minutes because my eyes kept skipping back to the same sentence. At lunch I caught myself staring at a woman outside the deli trying to hoist a case of seltzer into the back seat of a car, and for the first time in my life I didn’t move right away. My body had the impulse. My feet didn’t follow.

That bothered me more than the woman on the stairs had.

The next evening I took the same train home, more out of habit than intention. Rush hour again. Same station. Same pretzel cart at the corner, giving off that thick warm smell of salt and butter. The same cracked tile by the third stair from the bottom. A bus sighed at the curb. Somebody behind me was arguing through an earpiece about a shipment that hadn’t arrived.

Then I saw the gray coat.

She wasn’t on the stairs this time. She stood near the metal newspaper box by the street, one hand on two grocery bags, the other digging through her purse. The loose pieces of hair were falling out again at her temples. Her face looked drawn tighter than it had the day before, and her mouth had that same held shape, like even standing still cost her effort.

A man in a black puffer jacket moved toward her before I did.

He had the fast, easy confidence of somebody used to taking up space in crowded places. Mid-thirties maybe. Baseball cap low. Takeout coffee in one hand, phone in the other.

“You again,” he said, close enough to make her lift her head fast. “You always carry half the store by yourself?”

She stepped back.

The movement was small. Practice made it efficient.

“I’m okay,” she said.

He smiled without warmth. “Don’t be like that. I’m being nice.”

The pretzel vendor looked up from his cart, then looked back down. A woman in scrubs walked around them. Two men in office badges passed shoulder to shoulder and never broke stride.

The man in the puffer jacket set his coffee on top of the newspaper box and reached for one of the bags.

Her arm tightened.

“No.”

He laughed once through his nose. “Smile. I said I got it.”

That did it.

I crossed the last few feet before I had time to decide whether it was any of my business.

“She said no,” I told him.

He turned with that blank irritation people wear when they’ve already decided you’re an inconvenience.

“We’re fine here.”

“We?”

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