I
knew I didn't have any dollar bills, the lunch line wasn't an option
today. I turned the puddle of nickels over in my palm. The California
sun or the light of childhood memories made or makes the crumbs of my
lesson money reverberate with liquid silver. Everything in the
vending machine was more than 65 cents. I'd have to try to sneak off
campus to get to the Albertsons on Longhorn Drive.
I sat with uncharacteristically bad posture, breathing in my classmates' lunches. Peanut butter. Pizza. Chicken strips. Lunch period talk in the band office was of the new Maslanka symphony, the wailing mother trombones in movement one, and the new piece whose title was an incomplete line of the Lord's Prayer. Bread. Banana. $1.00. A flute player unwrapped her muffin. Blueberry. Muffins, $1.50. “Where's your lunch, Brittany?” My teacher's question shot through the chatter. “Oh. Oh, it's okay.” Green paper fluttered into my field of vision. “Go get lunch.” Bread. “Oh, no, no, it's okay, it's, I'm okay.” Bread. “Take it.”
“Take
it.” I shouldn't have told him. I didn't even particularly want to
see her again. “No, I can't, professor. It's okay, I'll call my mom
and see, or I can work out a payment plan. Or I'll... I can't take
this.” Thirty dollars was a lot more than five. Therapy was a lot
more than bread, although it was bread I had faith in. “Call Betsy
and make an appointment for next week.” I didn't need therapy twice
a week. Once a month at the most. She'd already cut my bill to the
lowest possible she was allowed to accept. Desperate to make rent
(which I didn't end up making anyway), I'd cut back on the
none-essentials. I cut a lot more. And this man, who'd already given
me thousands of dollars of the university's money, gambled on me (and
lost, as it turned out, four years and zero Bachelor's degrees
later), and put up with so much of me, had noticed, and was making an
offer on his peace of mind. And I sold it to him. “Okay. Thank you.
Thanks. I'll call her in the morning.” “Promise? You will call
her tomorrow?” “Yeah, I will. Thanks. I definitely will. Thank
you.” I tucked the crisp, square money in the securely-hole free
front left pocket of my jeans, walked home in the perpetually
noontime Tucson sun, and tried to fall asleep before I felt hungry
again.
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