“He talked about his desire to become a doctor and ate his chopped cheese.”

Dear Diary:

I was on my way to a tax office in Jackson Hewitt in the Bronx on a Monday evening. I stopped at a Bengali restaurant for dinner. I left with two samosas, plus dinner and lunch the next day.

It was 9pm when I arrived at the subway station. I looked around and noticed a boy on the platform. He was playing a video game.

I opened the container with the samosas, but before I could dip one into the sauce, the waiter interrupted me.

Excuse me, miss, he said. Have you a dollar for water? I’m thirsty.

I put my food away.

Let’s go, I said.

We went down.

Are you hungry ? I asked him.

Yes, he said.

We walked to a local Jamaican restaurant known for its jerk chicken, breadfruit, and steamed fish.

Please, miss, asked the boy, can we go to a delicatessen?

We found one nearby. He ordered a cheeseburger and an Arizona iced tea. I paid and we ran to the station.

The train arrived immediately. We got on and the boy brought out the sandwich. I listened as he talked about wanting to be a doctor and ate his chopped cheese.

Stay focused, I started to say. Before I could say more, he hugged me and said goodnight.

I got off at the next stop and entered Jackson Hewitt.

You’re my last client, the tax preparer said.

Oh, great, I said. I stopped at a Bengali restaurant to kill time and…

Oh really, he said. What did you get?

Once my taxes were paid, I left without my curry. I saved my dinner for lunch the next day.

—Lystria Hurley


Dear Diary:

It’s a windy day, the kind where the wind rushes down the Third Avenue canyon and seems to be trying to blow the unstable down.

A dozen loose papers floated in the air like leaves. Two women ran after the papers in the gutter. One, clutching the slightly crumpled papers in her hand, thanked the other profusely, and they parted ways.

Across the intersection, a crisp Yankees Starter cap flew off the head of a tall young man. A small, older woman chased after him, grabbed it, and handed it back to him.

-Sarah Jung


Dear Diary:

I was in the locker room of my Hell’s Kitchen gym, changing into my street clothes. A man tying his shoelaces said “see you soon” to a friend who was leaving.

“You just missed a golden opportunity to say ‘see ya, I wouldn’t want to be you,'” I told the man.

He looked at me.

“I’d like to think I’m past that point,” he said.

“Of course not,” I replied.

The man got up to leave.

“Take care of yourself,” I said.

“See you later,” he said. “I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes.”

—Daniel Bowman Simon


Dear Diary:

I approached the window of a popular Brooklyn taco truck as an older man did the same.

I was in a hurry to get home, but I shrugged and told him he had to go first. He did the same.

“I don’t know who came first,” he said.

“Me neither,” I replied, “but go ahead.”

“You could go too!” he said.

I suggested a game of rock, paper, scissors to solve the problem.

Even or odd? he said.

Even, I answered.

After a 3-2-1 countdown, we each took out a finger.

We laughed and I walked up to the window to order.

“Even or odds, who pays for?” the man asked.

—Emily Spilko


Dear Diary:

I was heading home from a doctor’s appointment in Midtown when I suddenly felt like the city was spinning around me.

I tried to lean against a scaffolding in front of a building on Second Avenue, but it wasn’t enough to keep me upright. Everything was still spinning and I heard myself calling for help.

There was a woman with a dog a few feet from me who was on the phone. I could hear him crying. She approached me as I hit the ground.

“Are you okay?” we asked ourselves.

“Yes, but I need a minute to see if I can stand,” I said as a man who worked in a nearby building joined us.

I stood up and, embarrassed and stunned, thanked them both for their help. I explained that I felt fine and would be able to walk home on my own.

The woman with the dog offered to come with me to make sure I was okay, and I asked her again if she was okay because I had seen her crying.

“I was talking to someone who called me to tell me that Chita Rivera had just died,” she said.

-Sue Weiner

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