I was Sarah Collins—23, idealistic, and clinging to my dream of making it big in Manhattan. My internship at Halstead & Grant Financial was a ticket to that dream. Or so I thought.
In reality, I was invisible.
No one cared that I graduated top of my class. To the executives, I was another girl in flats fetching overpriced coffee. Six different drink orders, six different personalities. I was a shadow with a name tag, a ghost in a pencil skirt.
Then the rain came.
That Thursday was all gray skies and glassy sidewalks. A storm had rolled over Manhattan like a curtain. I had stepped out to begin my caffeine pilgrimage—three cafes, one tray, zero mistakes allowed.
Balancing the drinks beneath my coat, I turned the corner toward the office when I saw him.
An old man, mid-fall, collapsing like a marionette with severed strings. His umbrella skittered down the street. His briefcase burst open, spilling sketches and notes into the storm.
No one stopped.
Hundreds of umbrellas passed him like debris in a flood. One man stepped over him. Another laughed.
I hesitated. If I delayed, I’d face reprimand. But then I saw his hand—trembling, reaching, failing to push himself up.
I dropped the tray beneath the building’s awning and ran to him.
“Sir, do not move,” I said, crouching down. “You may have injured your knee.”
“Do not worry about me,” he whispered through clenched teeth. “Simply… give me a minute.”
His coat was soaked, his eyes tired but sharp. I gathered his papers—intricate, hand-drawn sketches—and returned them, careful not to smudge the ink.
“Thank you,” he murmured.
I offered him my coffee. “It’s plain, but hot.”
He took it like it was gold. “You’ve got the kind of soul this city tries to steal.”
That’s when the laughter came.