Amara pov:
The evening air hit gently against my face.12Please respect copyright.PENANAqHBF3BSRM2
Cool. Still.12Please respect copyright.PENANAeolB1R85h5
The streets were lit with soft yellow lights, and the hum of quiet city life drifted through.
People passed me.12Please respect copyright.PENANAYdBvxgnFiL
Some in suits. Some in slippers.12Please respect copyright.PENANA8hT3zyFTi4
Talking. Rushing. Existing.
I walked silently through it all.
The light from shop windows spilled across the footpath. Cars passed slowly.12Please respect copyright.PENANAvvftw2J17w
I crossed a street and turned a corner. The little bell of a bicycle rang somewhere behind me.
After a few more steps, I reached it—12Please respect copyright.PENANASRNipzIV0P
The small restaurant on the corner. Warm light glowing from inside, glass door slightly fogged from the inside heat.
I pushed open the door.
The familiar scent of spices, soup, and dish soap hit me instantly.
"Hey, Amara," a voice called from behind the counter.
I smiled faintly. "Hi."
I hung my coat on the hook near the back door and pulled on the apron over my clothes.12Please respect copyright.PENANA19ydkbcweT
It was stained a little—rice water, curry, maybe dish soap too.12Please respect copyright.PENANAR7uTOjmlv1
But it was mine. My shift had started.
More than a waitress.12Please respect copyright.PENANACKm9FOEgao
More than a dishwasher.12Please respect copyright.PENANAfRhyVIRamN
Less than seen.
But I was here.
The small restaurant buzzed with the usual evening rhythm—clinking cutlery, distant chatter, the low hum of the kitchen fan. The warm air carried the scent of fried garlic and steam from boiling pots.
I tied my apron tighter, rolled up my sleeves, and walked toward the sink full of dishes.
Mara stood beside me, already scrubbing plates, her dark hair tied into a loose bun, sleeves wet up to her elbows.
"Late again, huh?" she said with a little smirk.
I gave her a soft smile. "Traffic."
"Liar. You just walk like a ghost," she laughed.
I let out a small laugh too, grabbing a plate and dipping it into the soapy water. "Maybe."
We stood together, shoulder to shoulder, washing dishes like we'd done a hundred times before. Talking in pieces—bits of stories, silly comments, silence in between.
Mara was the only one here who really noticed me.12Please respect copyright.PENANATYLeVgXtTo
She never asked too much. Never pitied. Just stood with me.12Please respect copyright.PENANAaKrncs9NBQ
And that was enough.
A voice called out from the kitchen window.
"Order for table four! Serve it, please."
I wiped my hands quickly, took the tray, and walked out into the dining area.
Two people sat at the table—laughing, dressed in clean, expensive coats. A man and a woman, maybe a couple.
I smiled politely, placing the dishes in front of them carefully.
"Here you go. Enjoy your meal," I said softly, bowing just a little out of habit.
They barely looked at me.
I turned, walked back to the kitchen, and returned to the sink where the mountain of dishes waited like always.
I again lost in my thoughts ..
We work because we have to.12Please respect copyright.PENANA1xiknBOobi
Because life doesn't give discounts for soft hearts or sad eyes.12Please respect copyright.PENANAWHmWN7SQgW
We work to eat. To wear. To live.12Please respect copyright.PENANACKAAyaYSQl
That's it.
Some people work to survive. Others work to show off.12Please respect copyright.PENANAb07lDRTSiZ
To post it. Frame it. Flaunt it.12Please respect copyright.PENANA4RDaaSiRRz
New phones. Expensive bags. Fancy food... they don't even finish.
And then there's us—washing their plates after them.12Please respect copyright.PENANAsOCpvsuFPJ
Counting every coin. Stretching every bill.12Please respect copyright.PENANAylxpldznFj
Because we don't have backup plans. We don't have inheritance. We don't have "just in case" savings.12Please respect copyright.PENANAjlLUwKzIOV
We only have "just enough."
Mara glanced at me as I stared too long at the water.
"What's going on in that overthinking head of yours?" she asked, bumping her shoulder into mine gently.
I blinked, smiled faintly. "Just thinking."
"Don't. The water's already depressing," she joked, waving a soaked hand.
I chuckled, then sighed. "People don't realize how heavy life is for some of us."
She didn't say anything for a second.12Please respect copyright.PENANAoYll6j3D2M
Then quietly muttered, "They don't want to know. It ruins the taste of their food."
We kept washing.
The sink gurgled. The clock ticked slowly. More orders came and went. More dishes piled up.
But here we were—two girls in aprons, soaked hands, and hearts stitched quietly together by the need to keep going...for living .
The rush slowed for a while.12Please respect copyright.PENANAGW2KHNjX6K
The restaurant had entered that brief lull between dinner and closing. The kitchen buzz had softened, and the noise outside was distant.
Mara and I sat on two overturned crates in the back, near the small window that never quite shut.12Please respect copyright.PENANAOuINDmiCUW
Steam clung to the ceiling. The fan creaked above us.
She was tying and untying her apron string with her head down.12Please respect copyright.PENANArUdz5KA0lK
I sipped the lukewarm tea someone had handed us earlier.
"I swear," she muttered suddenly, voice tight, "I didn't even say anything this time."
I looked at her.
She wasn't joking now.
"I just walked in," she continued, eyes not meeting mine, "he was already angry. At Mom. At the noise. At the silence. At dinner being late. At breathing, maybe."
She laughed bitterly. It cracked slightly in the middle.
"I tried to ignore it. I tried to eat quietly. But he looked at me and said, 'What are you staring at?'"12Please respect copyright.PENANA2C7cs1AAoR
She blinked slowly.12Please respect copyright.PENANA17hOcrPR0T
"I said nothing. Just that—'nothing.'"12Please respect copyright.PENANAyvRLK5qyqd
A pause.12Please respect copyright.PENANAEZ26qsqIWX
"And that's all it took. One word. That's all it ever takes with him."
She rubbed the back of her neck.
"Next thing I know, he throws the glass—at the wall, not at me, but it shattered everywhere. Mom starts crying. My little brother hides again. Like always."
Her fingers trembled as she twisted the apron tighter around her palm.
"I shouted back this time," she whispered, "and he told me I'm becoming like my mother—useless. That I should be glad he didn't hit me yet."
I didn't say anything.12Please respect copyright.PENANAXMOqk8FTOC
Not right away.
What do you say to pain that familiar?
Mara finally looked up, eyes not wet, just tired.
"So yeah," she said with a broken laugh, "That's the current episode of the lovely drama that is my life. Welcome back to hell."
I placed my cup down gently.
"Don't worry," I said quietly.12Please respect copyright.PENANA7VXMJtjKQP
"Life will move through this too."
She looked at me. For a moment, I thought she might argue. That she might say No, this won't pass.12Please respect copyright.PENANAkspszr3q8l
But she just nodded. Just once.
A voice from the kitchen broke the silence.
"Girls! Come on, break's over!"
We stood up slowly, brushing off our aprons.12Please respect copyright.PENANAvF3KILd1t4
She tied hers again. I tied mine.
No more words were said.
But something was understood.
And in a world where understanding is rare—12Please respect copyright.PENANAX8SAuPO7IJ
That was enough.
The shift had ended.12Please respect copyright.PENANAxyDCZ6pilS
I walked through the night streets slowly, the cold biting through the thin fabric of my coat sleeves.12Please respect copyright.PENANAoIwPvzdgyD
The city lights flickered in the puddles on the road. A quiet kind of noise hung in the air—soft engines, distant voices, and the hush of people getting ready to sleep.
As I passed a small bakery, I stopped.12Please respect copyright.PENANALxhxcwcYA9
The window glowed warmly, golden lights spilling onto the footpath.12Please respect copyright.PENANAXWhDng8hnP
Inside, on the counter, I saw it—the puffy chocolate brownie Mona always loved.12Please respect copyright.PENANAxWFyhDYws1
The one she used to point at every time we passed by.
I walked in, the doorbell chiming gently above me.
A few minutes later, I stepped out again with a paper bag in my hand and a small smile tugging at my lips.
When I reached home, the lights inside were dim.12Please respect copyright.PENANAqrVbVQnhPn
Mona was curled up on the couch in her pajamas, a blanket around her legs, watching a cartoon quietly.
She turned as I entered.
I held out the paper bag.
"Guess what I got?"
Her eyes lit up instantly. "Brownie?! No way!"
She jumped up and ran toward me, hugging me tightly.
"Thank you!" she said, grinning up at me.
I smiled, resting my chin gently on her head for a second. "Eat slowly."
She ran back to the couch with the bag in her hand like it was treasure.
I looked around.
Mom's room door was shut. I knocked lightly.12Please respect copyright.PENANANJq4Zbu8h5
No answer.
I pushed the door open—empty.
Like always.
I didn't feel like eating.12Please respect copyright.PENANArq5zEnHqD2
like always .
I walked to my room slowly, changed into my skin pale coloured nighty, and pulled open the window.12Please respect copyright.PENANAIGqTpOM940
The night air slipped in, cool and heavy.12Please respect copyright.PENANA0e9Zyge2Sm
Outside, the world looked tired too.
I glanced across the street.
The neighbor's window—closed again.12Please respect copyright.PENANAqAdhycgSf1
Curtains drawn. Lights off. Silent.
I stood there for a moment longer, then closed my window.
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