The Waitress Brought In Her Dad’s Rifle, And The Owner Went Silent-Quieen - Chainityai

The Waitress Brought In Her Dad’s Rifle, And The Owner Went Silent-Quieen

The laugh was the first thing that made me want to turn around and leave.

It came before the insult.

It came before the young clerk pushed my father’s rifle back across the counter like trash.

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It came before I understood that I had walked into that shop carrying the only piece of my father’s life he had never explained.

The gunsmith’s shop smelled like gun oil, dust, old wood, and the burnt coffee somebody had forgotten on the warmer near the back office.

The front window let in a hard square of morning light, and a small American flag decal on the glass threw a little patch of red and blue across the counter.

I remember that because grief makes you notice stupid things.

A scratch on a cash register.

A paper cup going cold in your hand.

The way strangers look at you when they decide you are not worth protecting.

I was still in my diner uniform from the night before.

Pale blue dress.

White apron.

Silver name tag that said Ellie.

My hair had come loose from its clip somewhere around 3:00 a.m., between a trucker asking for more coffee and a mother with two kids splitting one plate of pancakes.

By 7:18 a.m., I had not slept in two days.

My father’s funeral had been three days earlier.

The bills were stacked on my kitchen table in three piles: funeral home, mortgage, and everything else I could not pay yet.

I did not bring the rifle in because I wanted to get rich.

I brought it in because grief and money have a cruel way of standing in the same room.

My father, Ray Carter, had left behind almost nothing that looked valuable to anybody else.

A dented toolbox.

A garage radio that only caught two stations.

A coffee can full of screws, bolts, and old keys nobody could identify.

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