I came back to my old school with twelve tiny brown paper bags and memories I had never managed to outgrow. Years ago, a few classmates fed me without making me feel small. Others tried to break me. This time, everyone would learn exactly what I had carried with me.
I was thirty-seven, sitting in a rental car across from my old high school, wearing a blazer that cost more than my mother used to make in a week.
Still, my hands shook on the steering wheel.
“You run a company with four hundred employees,” I muttered. “You can walk into a cafeteria.”
Then I saw the side door.
Same rusted handle, same brick wall, same long window where I used to check if anyone was looking before slipping inside.
My hands shook on the steering wheel.
***
For a second, I was twelve again, wearing worn shoes and the same gray hoodie. No lunch, no money, and no way to make the hunger quiet.
I almost turned the car around.
Then I saw a little girl sitting alone near the cafeteria window with no tray in front of her.
Her eyes were fixed on everyone else’s food.
I knew that look.
“Not again,” I whispered.
I knew that look.
I opened the car door and reached for the bags.
Back then, I was quiet Mara, the girl teachers called “soft” because “hungry” made people uncomfortable.
My dad left when I was ten. My mom worked two jobs after that, and some nights, she came home with red eyes and said, “Baby, I’m so sorry,” like sorry could be boiled into soup.
At school, I hid during lunch.
The bathroom was safest. The library was warmer. The cafeteria was for days when my stomach hurt too much to pretend.
But some people noticed.
My dad left when I was ten.
Dylan noticed first.
One Tuesday, he slid across from me and pushed over half a sandwich.
“My mom packed too much,” he said.
I stared at it. “It’s half a sandwich.”
“Yeah,” he said, shrugging. “She’s like that.”
I almost smiled. It was turkey with mustard, cut crooked.
I remember because hunger remembers everything.
“It’s half a sandwich.”
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