I stared at the linoleum.

Then I said the truth that scared me.

“I don’t know what to do,” I admitted.

Maya looked surprised.

“Everyone thinks you do,” she said.

I let out a humorless laugh. “Everyone thinks because I yelled once I have answers,” I said. “I don’t. I just… couldn’t stand there and watch.”

She nodded slowly. “Then don’t stand there,” she said. “Come back.”

“What?” I asked.

“Come back to the store,” she said. “Not as the video. Not as the hero. As a person. Be there. If you’re there, maybe people act better.”

I stared at her like she’d handed me a weapon again.

Not a gun.

Something heavier.

Presence.

I didn’t want that job.

I didn’t want attention.

I didn’t want to be a symbol.

But I also knew something I’d learned the hard way:

Sometimes you don’t get to pick what your fight is.

Sometimes it picks you.

I left the hospital with the night air biting my cheeks.

On the drive back, talk radio bled from a car beside me at a stoplight—someone arguing about “personal responsibility” like it was a slogan, not a human life.

In my rearview mirror, a lifted truck rode my bumper like it wanted to climb into my trunk.

Everyone was in a hurry to get nowhere.

I pulled into the grocery store lot and saw two cars parked near the entrance with their headlights on like spotlights.

I parked farther away.

I walked in with my shoulders squared.

The shelf was still there.

But now there were people around it.

Not shopping.

Watching.

A woman in a puffy jacket held her phone up, live-streaming.

Her voice was loud, performative. “See? This is what I’m talking about. They put this out and people just TAKE. No shame.”

A young mom stood near the table, baby carrier on her chest, eyes darting like a trapped animal.

Her hand hovered over a pack of diapers like she was reaching toward a hot stove.

The live-stream woman swung her phone toward the mom. “Go ahead,” she said with a fake smile. “Tell everyone why you deserve free stuff.”

The mom’s face crumpled.

I felt my blood go cold.

I stepped forward.

“Turn that off,” I said.

The live-stream woman spun toward me, eyes widening as she recognized me.

“Oh my God,” she squealed. “It’s YOU. Guys, it’s him.”

People’s heads snapped up like prairie dogs.

Phones lifted.

I could almost hear the algorithm purring.

I wanted to disappear.

I didn’t.

I looked at the woman and said, calm as I could, “Put your phone down.”

She laughed. “Why? Freedom of speech, right?”