This is why you have to be careful being kind to strangers. I was at Subway when 3 kids emptied their pockets to share one sandwich. When I heard the youngest sigh, “Not enough for a cookie,” I immediately told the cashier, “I’ve got it.” They smiled so brightly I almost cried. But the sweet moment shattered when the cashier grabbed my arm, looked around nervously, and whispered: “Don’t do it. They’re…”
“…bait.”
I stared at him, my credit card hovering halfway between my pocket and the card reader. The cashier, a scrawny teenager who looked like he had aged ten years in the last five seconds, didn’t let go of my wrist. He pretended to wipe down the counter, keeping his voice barely above a breath.
“Look at the reflection in the glass,” he murmured, nodding toward the sneeze guard protecting the lettuce and tomatoes.
I shifted my gaze. Behind the overlapping reflections of the brightly lit menu boards, I saw them. Two men were standing just outside the glass doors of the restaurant. They weren’t looking at their phones. They weren’t talking to each other. Their eyes were locked directly on my wallet.
“They come in here every Tuesday,” the cashier whispered, finally releasing my arm. “The kids play the sympathy card. They wait for someone with a nice watch or a designer bag to take pity on them. The moment you open your wallet, those guys outside see exactly how much cash you’re carrying and where you stash your cards. Then, they follow you to your car.”
A cold spike of adrenaline hit my chest. I looked back down at the three children. The youngest, the little girl who had just sighed about the cookie, was still looking at me. But the innocent, heartbreaking smile from a moment ago had vanished. Her expression was entirely blank, and her eyes briefly flicked toward the men outside before returning to me. It was a cold, calculated look that did not belong on the face of a seven-year-old.
My heart broke, but this time, for an entirely different reason. These kids were being weaponized.
I had to think fast. If I backed out entirely, the men outside would know the cashier had tipped me off, putting him in danger. If I used my card, they’d have me marked as a target.
I shoved my wallet deep into my coat. Instead, I dug into my front jeans pocket and pulled out a crumpled five-dollar bill I had received as change earlier that morning.
“Actually,” I said loudly, pasting on a bright, oblivious smile, “I’ve only got a fiver on me today. But that’s enough for three cookies, right?”
The cashier caught on immediately. “Yeah. Three chocolate chips.” He took the bill, his hands shaking slightly, and handed the cookies over the counter.
I handed the cookies to the kids. “There you go, guys.”
The oldest boy took them. “Thanks,” he muttered. There was no joy in his voice. The transaction was over; the mark hadn’t flashed the big bucks.
I didn’t stick around to watch them eat. I grabbed my sandwich, gave the cashier a subtle nod of immense gratitude, and walked out of the store. As I pushed through the doors, the two men had already lost interest in me, turning their backs to scan the parking lot for better prey. I walked briskly to my car, locked the doors the second I got inside, and sat in silence for a long time, watching the neon Subway sign flicker in the dusk.
I had bought the cookies, but the sweetness of the act was entirely gone, replaced by the bitter reality of the world outside those glass doors.
