A Balloon Vendor Saw A Father Yank His Daughter And Made A Choice-tantan

The sidewalk was busiest at the exact hour when nobody wanted to notice anybody else.

People were coming out of work with their shoulders tight, pushing through the late afternoon noise with paper cups in their hands and grocery bags bumping their knees.

Cars rolled through the wet shine left by an earlier rain.

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The air smelled like warm pretzels, damp concrete, and exhaust.

Michael stood behind his balloon cart with a roll of ribbon looped around his wrist, tying knots the way he had done thousands of times before.

He had balloons shaped like stars, puppies, cartoon crowns, and one bright red heart that kept bobbing higher than the rest.

That was the one Emma saw.

She was seven years old, small for her age, with a faded purple hoodie and sneakers that had clearly been scrubbed more than once.

She stopped in front of the cart as if she had reached a window in a museum.

She did not touch anything.

She did not beg.

She only looked up.

Michael noticed children like that.

The loud ones were easy to serve.

They pointed, laughed, hopped from foot to foot, and asked parents for the biggest balloon on the rack.

The quiet ones made him careful.

They watched with their hands behind their backs, already practicing disappointment before anyone said no.

Emma lifted one hand, then pushed it into her sleeve.

Her father, Daniel, was a few steps ahead of her with a plastic grocery bag in one hand.

He turned when he realized she was no longer beside him.

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