The Card I Never Wanted to Touch
The day I walked into that Chicago bank, I had one simple goal: to erase the last reminder of a night I’d spent five years trying to forget. I wasn’t there to discover anything. I wasn’t there to uncover secrets or confront the past.
I was there to close a door that should have been shut a long time ago. But sometimes the universe has other plans. Sometimes the thing you’ve been running from is the only thing that can set you free.
Chicago in January doesn’t forgive. The wind comes off Lake Michigan like it’s got a personal vendetta against anything warm-blooded, cutting through layers of wool and denim like they’re made of tissue paper. I’d tucked my chin deep into my collar, hands jammed in the pockets of my Army surplus coat, boots hitting the frozen sidewalk with the kind of rhythm that comes from marching drills and muscle memory.
The city moved around me—taxis honking, steam rising from grates, people hunched and hurrying like extras in a movie about urban survival. I’d been back in Chicago for three days. Three days of avoiding old neighborhoods, old memories, old wounds that never quite healed right.
Liberty Union Bank rose up ahead of me like a monument to old money and older secrets. All marble columns and floor-to-ceiling windows that reflected the gray sky back at itself. The kind of building that whispered “legacy” and “trust” and “we’ve been handling fortunes since before your great-grandparents were born.”
I’d walked past it a hundred times growing up.
Never once went inside. The revolving door swallowed me into sudden warmth and cathedral-like quiet. My boots squeaked on polished floors that probably cost more per square foot than my entire month’s rent.
Chandeliers hung overhead like frozen waterfalls of crystal. Everything smelled like expensive leather and the faint chemical sweetness of fresh-printed money. I felt every eye in the place track me as I crossed to the customer service area.
My coat was clean but worn, military-issue green with patches I’d never bothered to remove. My jeans were practical. My boots were scuffed.
I looked like exactly what I was—someone who worked for a living, someone who didn’t belong in a place where the chairs probably had their own insurance policies. The line moved slowly, each transaction conducted in hushed tones like they were discussing state secrets instead of account balances. I shifted my weight, felt the familiar shape of the card in my back pocket.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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