One
I knew people were staring, but I refused to shrink under it.
My son sat across from me in the café, legs swinging under the table, his school bag slumped beside him. He held his juice box like it was the only thing keeping him steady.
“Did you think about what you did?” I asked quietly, leaning forward. My tone was calm, but my chest burned. “Fighting at school is not okay. Ever.”
“I didn’t start it,” he muttered.
“I didn’t ask who started it.” My voice came out sharper than I meant. A couple at the next table glanced over. I ignored them. “I asked why.”
He went silent.
That silence hit harder than shouting. I closed my eyes briefly and inhaled, reminding myself I was the adult. That I had to get this right. Because lately, it felt like one public mistake and people were ready to label me the problem.
A shadow fell over our table.
“You shouldn’t speak to a child like that.”
I looked up and found myself staring at the most intimidating man I had ever seen.
“Excuse me?” I said, disbelief coating my voice. “Mind your own business, sir. You have no idea what’s going on here.”
He stepped closer, like space moved for him automatically.
“You don’t have to be so harsh on him. He’s just a kid. he clearly looks remorseful so You don’t have to drag him through hell to prove a point.”
My ears rang.
The call from school. The stress from work. The exhaustion. And now this stranger deciding I couldn’t parent my own child.
I stood, even though my eyes barely reached his chest.
“I will teach my son however I see fit,” I said, my voice low with fury. “Now move.”
“Do you know who you’re talking to?” he asked quietly.
The calm in his tone sent a chill down my spine, but I didn’t let it show.
“I don’t care who you think you are” I shot back. “You don’t walk up to a woman and tell her how to raise her child.”
Something flickered in his eyes. Surprise, maybe.
We locked eyes. His brown gaze was sharp, unsettling.
“Mommy?”
“It’s okay, sweetie. I’m okay. This man was just leaving.”
But he didn’t.
so i decided to walk away.
“Let’s go, Flavian. Get your things.”
“Flavian?” the stranger repeated.
I turned.
“His name is Flavian?”
“That’s what I called him genius,” I snapped.
A hint of a smile tugged at his mouth before he masked it.
I grabbed my son and headed out. As we stepped outside, I saw him speaking to the manager. Of course he was.
I strapped my son in and looked up.
Our eyes met through the glass.
For a split second, something passed between us. Not anger. Something else.
I turned my head and drove away.
I told myself I probably would never see him again.
I had never been more wrong.