He had only wanted milk, bread, a few small things to get through the week. Instead, he found himself shadowed by a tiny woman with trembling hands and eyes that wouldn’t let him go. When she confessed he looked like her late son, his annoyance dissolved into pity. Saying “Good-bye, Mom” as she left felt like a harmless kindness, a small gift to a grieving stranger.
The bill, however, told a different story. Her groceries were stacked on his tab, her tenderness revealed as a quiet con. In the echo of the clerk’s words, his embarrassment mixed with reluctant admiration at the audacity. Later, another scene: a child asking why her mother’s hairs turn white, and with innocent precision, pointing out what a lifetime of “little wrongs” can do. In both moments, love, guilt, and mischief collide—funny, cutting, and painfully human.