
The elderly woman, just like always, entered the store at exactly seven in the morning. It was the time when the 24-hour store was still empty — only night shift workers and the occasional sleepless passerby came in at that hour.
She always came right on schedule — every Tuesday and Friday. Everyone knew her visit would be quiet and unnoticeable, like the morning mist hiding the city from the sun.
“There’s our grandma again,” yawned the cashier, who seemed like she never smiled.
“So what?” asked the new stock boy.
“Nothing special,” the cashier replied indifferently. “She’ll stand around looking at price tags for half an hour, then grab half a loaf of bread. Sometimes tea, if she has any money left. We get lots like her in here.”
The elderly woman moved slowly between the shelves, her bent fingers sorting coins in an old purse.

When she reached the dairy section, she paused. She stared at the bottles of milk for a long time, but never reached out to take one.
“Are you looking for something?” asked a store clerk.
“I’m just looking, son,” she mumbled, clutching her purse. “These prices… I haven’t bought milk in a while. Thought maybe today…” She trailed off and slowly walked toward the bread section.
Approaching the register with a loaf of bread, she began rummaging in her purse again. She wasn’t in a hurry, carefully counting each coin.
“Sweetie,” she suddenly said, addressing the cashier, “could you buy me some milk… I don’t have anything left… My pension’s been delayed — they promised it’ll come Monday. I’ll pay you back, I promise.”
But the cashier didn’t even look up. She quickly scanned the bread and swept the coins into the register.
“This isn’t a charity,” she said coldly, in the tone everyone had grown used to. “We hear stories like this every day. No pension, lost cards… Just go already.”
The old woman’s shoulders sank even lower, and avoiding eye contact, she took her bread and headed toward the exit.
But just as she reached the door, a young woman approached the register. She gave the rude cashier a tough lesson — and helped the grandma
I’ll tell you what she did in the first comment

The girl placed money on the counter and quietly said:
“I’ll pay for the milk. And please add some vegetables and fruit for the grandma.”
The cashier snorted, not even glancing at the girl.
“Your money, your problem,” she muttered. “Just don’t start a scene.”
“Oh, there will be a scene,” the girl replied calmly, looking her straight in the eye. “But it won’t be me making it.”
She turned to the grandma: “Please wait a moment. We’ll take care of everything.”
She stepped closer to the register, took out her phone, and snapped a few pictures of the cashier, the counter, and the old lady.
“Hey, what are you doing?” the cashier exclaimed. “Put that camera away!”
“Do you know who I am?” the girl’s voice grew firm. “I’m a blogger. I write about people — about apathy, cruelty, and injustice. I have more followers than your store has customers. And I’m going to tell them all how you treat the elderly.”

The cashier turned pale, but smirked defiantly.
“You think anyone’s going to care?”
“The manager of this store is my uncle. And you know what? He’s been saying it’s time to ‘freshen up’ the staff. Looks like we’re starting with you.”
The red-haired woman quickly grabbed a basket — milk, cheese, apples, tangerines, grains, meat — and walked over to the grandma.
“Let’s go, I’ll walk with you. And don’t worry — from now on, you’ll always have what you need.”
The elderly woman nodded quietly, her eyes full of tears.
“Thank you, kind girl,” she whispered.
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