She Could Only Pay in Pennies

When she pressed the Ziploc bag into my hands, it made a dull, heavy sound—metal knocking against metal in a way that felt louder than it should have in the quiet night. The plastic was cloudy from reuse, the zipper slightly warped, and inside were layers of pennies stacked like sediment at the bottom of a riverbed. “I think there’s enough,” she whispered, her voice fragile, almost embarrassed, as if the coins themselves might argue back. The total was $14.50. I stood on a sagging wooden porch that tilted slightly toward the yard, wind slicing straight through my jacket like it had somewhere more important to be. The delivery instructions had said: Back door. Knock loud.

The house sat at the edge of town where streetlights thinned out and sidewalks cracked into gravel. The siding peeled in long strips, the mailbox leaned at an angle, and the windows were dark except for a faint amber glow from somewhere deep inside. Not quite a trailer park, but close enough that you could feel the town had quietly stopped investing in it years ago. No porch light. No television flicker through curtains. No sound except the wind and the distant hum of a highway.

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