I guided him to the supply closet near the break room.
It was cramped, packed with paper towels and extra napkins, but at least it was warm.
I grabbed a clean towel, wrapped it around his shoulders, then ran to the kitchen and filled a bowl with leftover soup and grabbed a few rolls of bread.
When I handed it to him, his hands trembled so badly he almost dropped it.
“T-Thank you,” he whispered. And then, as he took a sip, he started crying — silent, shaking sobs between spoonfuls.
“You can stay here tonight,” I told him, my voice low.
“Just until morning.”
He nodded, eyes shining.
But I wasn’t even two steps out of the closet when I heard it.
“What the hell is going on back here?”
I turned and there he was.
Mr.
Callahan, the owner.
Wide shoulders, always red-faced like a volcano seconds from eruption.
His eyes zeroed in on the open supply closet, then back to me.
“Is that—” he stormed past me, yanked open the door.
The man inside cowered.
“You brought a homeless man into my restaurant?!
Are you insane?!”
“Please,” I said, holding my hands up.
“He was going to freeze.
I was just trying to—”
“I don’t care!” he roared. “This is a business, not a shelter!”
The shouting echoed through the hallway.
The staff stopped what they were doing.
Even the clatter of dishes from the kitchen fell silent.
“Fire him,” Callahan barked, jabbing a finger at me.
“Right now.”
My heart dropped.
“Wait — Mr.
Callahan, come on,” said Mark, the floor manager. “He didn’t mean any harm.
He—”
“I said fire him!” he barked again.
He looked at me.
His lips parted like he wanted to say something else… but all he managed was a whisper.
“I’m sorry, Derek.
You’re done.”
