Callie was halfway through stacking a wobbly tower of clear storage bins when she heard that voice behind her.
“You know,” Eli said, “if I die buried under one of these things, I want you to tell my story. Make it heroic. Like I died saving a child from a runaway cart of Rubbermaid.” Callie didn’t turn around. “You’re overestimating how much anyone here would care.” He stepped into her peripheral vision, grinning. “Still, I think ‘Fallen in the Line of Tupperware’ has a nice ring.” She slid another bin into place. “You’d be lucky to get a cardboard memorial on the breakroom fridge. Maybe a sticky note.” “‘Here lies Eli,’” he said, miming it out with his hands. “‘He tried to alphabetize the plastic ware. He failed.’” “You're so dramatic.” “I prefer ‘theatrically underappreciated.’” That got her to crack a smile—small, but real. She didn’t hand those out easily. Eli noticed. He wasn’t sure how he’d become her aisle partner two days in a row, but he wasn’t about to complain. There was something steadying about her. Sharp edges, sure. Dry wit, definitely. But she was honest in a way most people weren't. And she worked with a kind of quiet precision that made him want to match her pace, to not get in the way. “I like your hair like that,” he said, nodding toward the bun at the top of her head. She gave him a flat look. “It’s held up with a pen I found in the lost-and-found bin. Don't romanticize it.” “Still,” he said. “It works.” “You’re flirting with me in front of the air fresheners.” “Strategic move,” Eli replied. “If it goes badly, I can always claim the fumes got to me.” “You say that like it hasn’t already,” she muttered, walking off with the cart. He trailed behind her. It wasn’t just that she was pretty—which, of course, she was—but it was the kind of pretty that snuck up on you. You noticed it when she tilted her head while trying to decode a broken barcode scanner, or when she muttered sarcastic commentary under her breath at the overhead announcements. At the breakroom later, she was already pouring a cup of the sludge they called coffee when he joined her. “You always drink it black?” he asked. “Less disappointment when you expect it to taste terrible.” He handed her a sugar packet. “Just once, try a little hope.” She raised an eyebrow. “Are you giving me a pep talk with Splenda?” “I believe in small gestures,” he said, sipping his own cup with a wince. “And in protecting your taste buds.” She took the sugar without a word and stirred it in. He didn’t know if that counted as a win, but she hadn’t insulted him for it, so... maybe progress. “I was going to hit the pet supply section next,” she said. “Unless you’ve got dibs on the dog biscuits.” “I’ll trade you if I don’t have to deal with the leaking bag of birdseed again.” She nodded. “Fair.” As they left the breakroom, Brenda passed them with a clipboard and an exaggerated eye-roll. “Look at the lovebirds. So cute.” Callie didn’t flinch. “Brenda, you’ve been watching too many soap operas.” Brenda smirked. “Don’t pretend you wouldn’t date a guy who knows his way around a pricing gun.” Eli gave a casual shrug. “I do have excellent scanning form.” Callie shot him a look. “Don’t make me regret partnering with you.” “I live for your regret.” The day stretched into the usual BuyMore haze—price checks, a woman yelling about expired coupons, and Marcus accidentally setting off the security gate with a mis-tagged phone charger. Somewhere in the middle of it, Eli got sent to clean up a spill in aisle ten and returned with paper towels stuck to his shoe. Callie didn’t say anything. Just pointed. “I’m choosing to believe that’s part of the new uniform,” he said, peeling it off. “Very fashion-forward.” They were unloading a new pallet of bathroom supplies near the end of the shift when he caught her laughing—not a big, loud laugh, but one of those small, reluctant ones when something sneaks up on you. He’d said something dumb, trying to remember how to pronounce “eucalyptus,” and she’d muttered, “Stick to chamomile, Shakespeare,” under her breath. He hadn’t expected to enjoy this job so much. It wasn’t about the shelves or the labels. It was about her. About the quiet rhythm she kept and how he’d fallen into step with it without even noticing. Later, just before closing, Callie found a note on the side of her cart. It was scribbled on the back of a damaged-item tag: Conquered the bathmats. Only minor injuries. –E She sighed. She rolled her eyes. And then she smiled. ** After close, the store emptied out slowly. The hum of fluorescent lights finally clicked off. Marcus was halfway through a long-winded story about a customer who tried to return a used plunger, and Brenda was laughing like she’d heard it for the first time, even though everyone knew she hadn’t. Callie grabbed her hoodie from the back office and slung it over one shoulder. Eli was locking up his till nearby, humming something that sounded like the theme from a video game she couldn’t place. “You walking home again?” he asked. “Yeah.” “You mind if I walk with you? I mean, if it’s not weird.” She studied him for a moment. “You always this forward?” “Only with people who intimidate me.” That made her laugh—just once, under her breath. “Fine. But no more bathmat stories.” “No promises.” They walked out together, the doors hissing shut behind them. Outside, the parking lot lights buzzed overhead. The pavement still held the heat of the day, and the street smelled faintly of rain even though the sky was clear. Eli kept a polite distance as they walked side by side. “So,” he said after a few minutes, “real talk. What’s the worst thing that’s happened to you at BuyMore?” Callie didn’t miss a beat. “A raccoon fell through the ceiling tiles in aisle five. Twice.” He stopped walking. “Twice?” “Same raccoon. Got away the first time.” “Did he leave a forwarding address?” “Only fur and trauma.” Eli laughed, a real one this time. “Okay, I have to admit... this job’s weirder than I thought it’d be.” “You’ll learn,” Callie said. “Give it time.” He wanted to ask more. Ask what she did outside of work, if she lived alone, if she’d always had that little scar above her eyebrow or if it came from the raccoon incident. But he didn’t. He just walked beside her, careful not to say too much. Not yet. When they reached the corner where her apartment building came into view, she slowed. “Well,” she said. “Try not to trip over anything tomorrow.” “I make no promises,” he said. “But I’ll bring extra Splenda.” She gave him a nod and turned toward her door. He watched her go, still smiling. Not a bad day. Not bad at all.A new kind of energy buzzed in the air at the BuyMore store. It wasn’t frantic or heavy like the weeks that came before. It was hopeful, bright, and even a little electric—as if the very floor tiles knew something monumental had just shifted. The decision had been made. The store was staying. And the moment the announcement hit, the staff didn’t just exhale with relief. They got to work. It was Naomi who first said it aloud, standing at the front counter as she watched the afternoon sun streak across the polished floor tiles. “We should do something. Like… a proper rebuilding.” Kai, restocking a row of phone chargers nearby, blinked. “Like construction?” “No.” Naomi grinned. “Like team-building. Goal-setting. What we want BuyMore to be, now that we know it’s not going anywhere.” She was right. For too long, they’d been reacting—dodging layoff rumors,
The BuyMore breakroom had never been this full—or this quiet.A usually loud and bustling space where laughter, microwave beeps, and coffee machine grumbles harmonized into a familiar chorus was now shrouded in silence, punctuated only by the faint hum of the fluorescent lights overhead.Marcus sat at the edge of the battered old couch, elbows on his knees, nervously tapping a pen against his palm. Brenda perched beside him, scrolling through her phone, though her eyes weren’t really reading anything.Naomi sat at the plastic lunch table, arms crossed over her apron, biting her lower lip. Beside her, Kai had already finished an entire bottle of water and was now drumming his fingers against the empty container like a makeshift tambourine.And then there were Eli and Callie.They stood near the door—Eli leaning casually against the frame, trying and failing to appear relaxed, and Callie with her arms folded tightly, like she was holding he
The night before the verdict was due, the BuyMore store rested in rare stillness.The lights were dimmed, the registers were silent, and the floors gleamed beneath soft moonlight filtering through the front windows. Outside, the parking lot had long emptied, and only the occasional hum of passing traffic broke the hush.Inside, a familiar silhouette stood by the seasonal aisle.Eli leaned on a rolling cart, one hand idly adjusting a small stack of decorative candles, though his mind wasn’t anywhere near home décor. He had volunteered for the final shift—a pointless gesture, really, since everything was already in order—but it gave him something to do. Something to delay the inevitable.He knew the email would come tomorrow.He also knew there was nothing left he could say or do to change it.What he hadn’t expected was to hear approaching footsteps.Callie.She appeared from the front of the store, still in her
There was something different in the air at the BuyMore store that week.The clock still ticked the same. The automatic doors still whooshed open with their usual hydraulic sighs. Customers still pushed carts down the linoleum aisles, searching for discounted air fryers and shelf-stable snacks.But behind the employee badges, under the blue and green uniforms, the staff moved with a quiet, shared purpose.It was the waiting that did it.The waiting—and the unspoken truth that any shift could be their last together.So instead of drifting into fear, the BuyMore team chose something else.They chose to show up.For each other.For their store.For the family they’d built.It began on Monday morning, with Naomi arriving two hours early.She claimed she was there to reorganize the front display tables, but really, she just didn’t want to be alone with her thoughts. She ended up sweeping th
The fluorescent lights buzzed low overhead, casting a pale wash of color across the nearly empty BuyMore floor. It was Friday evening, and though the store had technically closed an hour ago, Marcus found himself lingering behind, inventory clipboard in hand, aimlessly scanning the same display he’d already checked three times.Across the floor, Brenda moved with practiced ease as she folded the last stack of sweatshirts near the apparel section, her movements slower than usual, like her thoughts weighed her down.The board’s decision still hadn’t come.They were all trying to pretend it didn’t hang in the air like smoke from a slow-burning fire. But it was everywhere.In the way Naomi triple-checked her work before going home.In the forced jokes from Eli that didn’t quite land.In the way Callie smiled—but didn’t mean it.And in Marcus’ case, in the way he kept clenching and unclenching his jaw without even realizing i
The days leading up to the board’s final decision stretched longer than a slow Sunday shift at BuyMore. Callie could feel it in everything. The way Naomi kept double-checking the endcaps even though they were already aligned. The way Marcus paced during his breaks like a caged tiger. The way Brenda had gone unusually quiet during the morning huddle, her normally bright tone tempered by something tight around the edges. Even the regulars seemed to sense the shift in atmosphere. Mr. Toliver didn’t linger to talk about his vintage cassette player. Mrs. DeSantis from aisle five brought cookies and left without her usual banter. Customers came and went, polite but brisk, like they were tiptoeing through a place they feared might disappear. Callie clung to structure. She updated the scheduling template. She ran inventory reports. She audited the shipping log and caught a discrepancy in the headphones category—fifte