He Tossed His Grandfather’s Torn Shoes Into The Fire. Then The Room Froze.-tantan

The first thing the Harris family liked to notice about Michael was the shoes.

Not the house he had paid for.

Not the trust he had built.

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Not the birthdays he had remembered when everybody else was busy.

The shoes.

They were old brown work shoes, split at the toes and soft around the heels, the kind of shoes a man keeps long after they stop making sense to anyone else.

The right sole had been repaired twice.

The left toe had a tear that showed the dark edge of his sock when he walked across polished floors.

At seventy-three, Michael Harris knew exactly what they looked like.

He also knew exactly what his family said when they thought he could not hear.

“He’s doing it on purpose,” Tyler said once in Sarah’s kitchen.

Michael had been standing in the hallway, holding a paper coffee cup with both hands because the tremor was worse in the morning.

“He wants everyone to feel sorry for him,” Tyler said.

Sarah, Michael’s only daughter, did not defend him.

She said, “He has always been stubborn.”

That was the softer word people used when they had stopped being grateful.

Stubborn.

Difficult.

Embarrassing.

Declining.

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