The call came while I was in the middle of a board meeting.
“Mr. Webb? This is Jess from Meridian Market on Fifth. Your grandfather is here. There’s been an incident.”
I left without a word. Let the board wait.
I found Earl sitting on a bench near the entrance, a store employee pressing a cold pack to his elbow. His walker lay on its side three feet away. A jar of his favorite raspberry jam had shattered on the marble floor, red spreading like a wound across the white tile.
He was eighty-four years old. He had a Purple Heart and a bad hip and hands that could still fix a carburetor from memory. And someone had put him on the ground.
“Grandpa.” I knelt in front of him. “What happened?”
“I’m fine, Marcus.” His voice was steady but thin. “Some woman at the deli counter. She pushed my walker out of the way. Said I was blocking the line.”
“She pushed it?”
“Knocked it clean out from under me.” He shook his head, slow and disgusted. “I haven’t fallen like that since Korea.”
I stood up.
“Where is she?”
Jess hesitated. Then pointed toward the wine section.
I found her holding a bottle of Burgundy, comparing it against the light like she had all the time in the world. Fifties, cream blazer, heels that cost more than most car payments. Her husband stood nearby, expressionless, scrolling his phone.
“Excuse me,” I said.
She didn’t look up. “I’m not buying anything from you.”
“I’m not selling anything. You knocked my grandfather down.”
She turned then. Looked me over once — jeans, plain jacket, no watch — and her expression settled into something cold and final.
“Your grandfather was blocking the entire deli counter,” she said. “He moves at three inches per minute. Some of us have schedules.”
“He’s eighty-four. He uses a walker.”
“And this is a high-end establishment, not a nursing home.” She turned back to the wine. “If he can’t keep up, he shouldn’t be here.”
Something went quiet inside me.
It was the store manager, Pearce, who broke it. He appeared in the doorway, pale, walking toward us with the posture of a man who’d rather be anywhere else.
“Diane,” he said quietly. “I need to speak with you.”
“Not now, Gerald.”
“Now.” He stopped beside her. “Do you know who that is?”
She glanced at me again, unimpressed. “Some man in bad jeans.”
“That,” Pearce said slowly, “is Marcus Webb. Webb Capital. The holding group that owns this entire shopping complex. Every square foot. Including this store.”
The wine bottle lowered very slowly.
Diane’s husband let his phone drop to his side. “Webb Capital,” he repeated. Like he was calculating a loss he hadn’t seen coming.
“We’ve been in renewal negotiations for your commercial lease,” I said. “Your family’s food brand operates here under a licensing agreement with my company. That agreement expires in eleven days.”
“This is a misunderstanding,” Diane said.
“He was on the floor. His elbow is bleeding. He hasn’t fallen since 1968 and you knocked him down because he was taking too long at the deli counter.”
“I barely touched—”
“There are cameras.” I pointed up. “Eight of them in this section alone. I own those too.”
Her husband stepped forward, voice dropping to something almost reasonable. “Mr. Webb — I’m sure we can discuss this—”
“Gerald. Is your name on the lease, or hers?”
He hesitated. “Both.”
“Then you’ll both hear from my attorneys.” I pulled out my phone, sent a single message, and received a confirmation in twelve seconds. “I’m not renewing your license. Thirty days to vacate.”
“You can’t do this.” Diane’s voice cracked for the first time. “Our family has been in that space for sixteen years.”
“And my grandfather has been shopping here every Thursday for twelve.” I held her gaze. “He told me it was the best market in the city. He looked forward to it.”
I let that sit.
“Past tense,” I said.
Officer Tran appeared in the doorway, called by Jess the moment Earl hit the ground. He nodded at me once, professionally.
“Mr. Webb. Your grandfather would like to press charges for battery. We have the report.”
Diane’s head snapped toward her husband. “Richard, call—”
“Mr. Holloway,” Tran said calmly, “I’d advise against phone calls right now.”
She looked around the wine aisle. The other shoppers had drifted away. The staff had pulled back. There was no audience left who cared.
“I want a lawyer,” she said.
“You’ll have that opportunity,” Tran said, stepping up beside her. “At the station.”
Her heels clicked across the marble. Sharp, then muffled, then gone.
Gerald stood alone in the wine aisle, phone hanging useless in his hand.
“The thirty days start today,” I said.
He walked out without answering. The posture of a man who already knew everything he’d spent twenty years building was coming apart.
I went back outside to Earl.
He was sitting on a low wall, a paramedic checking his elbow. The cut was small. The bruise on his arm would be worse. He looked up when he saw me and let out a long, tired breath.
“You didn’t have to do all that,” he said.
“Yes I did.”
“She’ll say it was an accident.”
“The cameras will say otherwise.”
He was quiet for a moment. Then, quietly: “I just wanted my raspberry jam.”
I reached into one of the bags Jess had quietly re-packed and pulled out an unbroken jar. Set it in his lap.
He looked at it for a long moment. Then he smiled — deep and slow and certain.
“Good boy,” he said.
Three weeks later, Diane Holloway pled no contest to misdemeanor battery of an elderly person. The judge, presented with 4K footage of a woman deliberately shoving a walker out from under an eighty-four-year-old man, was not in a forgiving mood. Community service. Mandatory anger management. A civil judgment that made the front page of the local paper, right below a photo of a woman in a cream blazer leaving the courthouse in sunglasses, head down.
The Holloway brand vacated the commercial space on day twenty-nine.
Four months later, the space reopened as the Earl Webb Community Market — full-service, sliding-scale groceries for seniors and low-income families. No membership fees. No minimums. Fresh produce, a real deli counter, and raspberry jam always in stock.
Earl shops there every Thursday.
He always will.
Original fictional stories. AI-assisted creative content.
