Used to wait tables. One woman came in already angry – snapped her fingers, sent food back for no reason, tipped nothing, and wrote: “Try smiling more.” So I did. Then I flipped the receipt and wrote: “Try tipping more.” She saw it and froze.
For a second, she looked like she was about to explode. Her eyes flicked back to mine – narrow, cold. I thought I was about to get fired or at least yelled at in front of everyone.
Instead, she stood up, grabbed her purse, and walked out without another word. I figured that was the end of it. Just another unpleasant customer in a long line of them.
I was used to them, honestly. Working at a mid-tier diner on the edge of downtown, you get all types. The ones who pretend you’re invisible.
The ones who treat you like a servant. And the rare kind ones, who leave a smile and a decent tip. But her?
She stuck in my mind. Not because of what she said, but because I recognized something in her face as she left. Not anger.
Not offense. Guilt. A few days went by.
Life went on. Pancakes flipped, orders messed up, coffee poured. Then, on a slow Tuesday afternoon, she came back.
I saw her before she saw me. Same stiff walk, same sharp blouse. But something was different.
She looked tired. Not in the “bad day” way – more like she hadn’t slept properly in weeks. She sat down at the same corner booth.
This time, she didn’t snap her fingers. She waited. I walked over, unsure of what to expect.
My stomach was doing this weird little flip. “Hey,” I said cautiously. “Back again?”
She didn’t smile, but her voice was softer.
“Yeah. I owe you an apology.”
That was not what I expected. “I didn’t tip you that day because… well, not because you didn’t deserve it.
You were fine. It’s just… I was angry. Not at you.
At everything.”
I didn’t say anything. Just stood there while she fidgeted with her hands. “My son… he died.
A month ago. Car accident. I haven’t been okay.
And the day I came in, it was his birthday.”
It hit me like a wave. Her coldness. The snapping.
The note. It wasn’t about me at all. It was grief, lashing out at the nearest thing that moved.
I suddenly felt terrible about my little comeback on the receipt. “I’m really sorry,” I said. She shook her head.
“No, I’m sorry. What you wrote? You were right.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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