Coworker Used My Phone Number at Dinner and Exposed a Hidden Theft-QuynhTranJP

Memorial Day weekend was supposed to be the kind of weekend families remember for harmless reasons.

My parents had come into Havenport with my sister’s family, and the plan was simple: dinner, a walk near the water, maybe ice cream for the kids if nobody melted down first.

The city had that early-summer feeling where every sidewalk smells faintly of hot asphalt, cut grass, sunscreen, and somebody else’s grilled onions drifting from a patio.

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My niece decided before noon that she wanted fancy shrimp.

Not regular shrimp.

City shrimp.

My dad thought that was the funniest sentence he had heard all year, and he kept repeating it in different voices until my sister told him he was going to encourage her.

I did not mind.

I had wanted to do something nice for them for a long time.

My parents are not people who ask for much.

They are the kind of people who say they already ate when they are not hungry enough to justify spending money.

They compare parking prices before they compare menus.

They still fold paper napkins into neat squares when they leave a table, even in a restaurant where people are paid to clear them.

When I was growing up, money was never presented as tragedy.

It was presented as math.

My mother patched my winter coat instead of replacing it.

My father took weekend shifts and came home with cracked hands that smelled like industrial cleaner.

My sister and I learned which cereal brands were on sale before we learned how to spell some of them.

So when my parents came to Havenport, I wanted one dinner where they did not calculate.

I wanted one table where my mother did not check whether water was free.

Dragon Bay Seafood Restaurant sat on Harbor Boulevard, bright with glass and brass and that careful expensive calm that makes people lower their voices the second they walk in.

The lobby smelled like ginger, garlic, butter, and steamed crab.

A blue-lit fish tank stretched along one wall, throwing silver ripples across the faces of people waiting for tables.

My niece pressed both hands against the glass until my sister pulled her back.

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