She Was Invited Late To Pay The Bill. Then The Manager Spoke-Tep

The first thing I noticed when I walked into Alameda Garden was the smell.

Butter.

Garlic.

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Steak searing somewhere behind the swinging kitchen doors.

It was the kind of smell that usually made people relax, but that night it went straight to my stomach and turned hard.

The late air outside had been cold enough to sting my fingers, and I still had a paper coffee bag pressed against my coat because I had stopped for beans on the way.

I had wanted to bring something small.

Something ordinary.

Something a mother brings when she still believes she is being invited because she is wanted.

My phone said 8:30 p.m.

The message from Valeria said 8:30 p.m.

“Anniversary dinner, 8:30 p.m., Alameda Garden. Don’t miss it, Mom.”

That last word had done most of the work.

Mom.

Valeria did not usually call me that unless she wanted something to sound sweeter than it was.

Still, I came.

A woman can know a door is cold and still knock because her child lives on the other side of it.

The dining room glowed with warm light from the chandeliers.

Silverware tapped against plates.

Somewhere near the bar, a glass broke and someone laughed the big harmless laugh people use when nothing is at stake.

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