Mr. Chen
Melanie’s third-floor condo in the Cypress Grove a gated community in Glencoe was, by every metric, a success. The silver SUV in her assigned spot, the minimalist furniture, and the corner office title on her email signature were precisely plotted and perfectly executed. Yet, every evening, the silence hummed louder than the traffic on the highway. She moved through her life like a polished ghost, disconnected from the very world she’d built. The shift began not with an epiphany, but with a crack in her routine. Her espresso machine, a monument to efficiency, broke one Tuesday. Forced to drive to a small, nondescript cafĂ© within the Cypress Grove’s gates where she ordered a simple tea. As she waited, feeling irritated and off-schedule, she watched the elderly owner, Mr. Chen, wipe the counter with a slow, circular care usually reserved for sacred objects. He placed her cup on the saucer, then with both hands, gave a slight, almost imperceptible nod before sliding it toward her. It...