His Son’s Stolen $400 Exposed a Lie His Wife Couldn’t Hide-myhoa

Two days before everything in my house cracked open, my son Jay walked into the pizza place where I was working my shift.

I saw him before he saw me.

He stood just inside the front door, under the harsh fluorescent lights, with his hoodie sleeves pulled down over his hands and his shoulders folded in like he was trying to make himself smaller.

Image

The ovens were roaring behind me.

The whole place smelled like burned cheese, hot metal, and flour dust.

A driver was calling for a delivery order, the ticket printer was spitting out another receipt, and somebody in the back dropped a pan hard enough to make the whole counter jump.

Jay did not move.

That was how I knew something was wrong.

My son is usually composed in that painful way some kids become when they have learned not to make their feelings a burden.

He says he is fine when he is tired.

He says he is okay when he is disappointed.

He says he does not need anything even when I know he does.

But that afternoon, his face was red, his lower lip kept trembling, and his eyes had the glassy look of someone who had already cried and hated himself for it.

I wiped my hands on my apron and stepped around the counter.

“Jay?” I said.

He swallowed once.

Then he said, “Dad, my money’s gone.”

At first, my mind went to the smallest version of the problem.

Maybe he had lost his wallet.

Maybe he had left a twenty in his work pants.

Maybe one of the kids at school had borrowed something and not paid him back.

Then he said the number.

Four hundred dollars.

The words came out of him broken and quiet, like he was embarrassed to be saying them.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *