A Donor Saw Grandma at the Clinic and Exposed the Fake Fundraiser-tantan

Beverly Stone did not find out she was famous in any pleasant way.

She found out in a clinic waiting room, under fluorescent lights, with a paper number folded in her palm and a purse strap cutting into her thin wrist.

The room smelled like hand sanitizer, old coffee, and wet jackets.

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Outside, Los Angeles traffic dragged past the windows in tired little bursts, horns tapping through the glass like impatient fingers.

Beverly sat in the second row from the intake desk because the chairs there were closest to the wall.

At seventy-eight, she liked walls behind her.

They made her feel less likely to be in somebody’s way.

She wore a pale blue cardigan with one loose button, gray slacks, and the black shoes her granddaughter Olivia said made her look “adorably vintage.”

Beverly had laughed at that when Olivia said it.

She had not realized Olivia was already looking at her like content.

The clinic nurse called another name, not hers, and Beverly checked the little slip in her hand again.

Her appointment was at 9:30 a.m.

The clock above the intake desk said 9:18.

She had left home early because she did not trust the bus to be kind.

The bus was rarely kind to knees that ached and hands that could not grip fast enough when the driver braked.

Still, she came by herself.

She had always done what she could by herself.

After her husband died, Beverly learned the shape of quiet survival.

She learned which store marked down bread on Wednesdays.

She learned how long a can of soup could sit in a cabinet before the date on the bottom made her nervous.

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