The Kind Lie

Cedar Valley News
June 16, 2026
The Kind Lie
By George Khan

A man has come into the deli on Tuesday mornings for the better part of twenty years. He orders the same thing every week. The pastrami on rye, hot, with a pickle. I start it when his truck pulls in.

Last month, he started ordering the egg sandwich instead. He told me he was watching his cholesterol. I made it and said nothing, because the egg sandwich is two dollars cheaper than the pastrami, and a man is allowed to keep his reasons to himself.

I have stood behind this counter long enough to know the difference between a man watching his cholesterol and a man watching his wallet. They order the same way. They tell you the same thing. You learn to hear the second one underneath the first.

It is not only him. In the last few months, I have watched a dozen small changes like it. The family who used to get four sandwiches gets three and splits the fourth. The fellow who always added a side gets it plain. The woman who came in every Friday now comes in every other Friday. None of them says a word about money. People do not.

The newspaper has been explaining why. The country’s cattle herd is the smallest it has been in seventy-five years. Not since 1951 have there been so few. Years of drought thinned it out; the ranchers have not rebuilt it, and so the price of beef has climbed, with more expected before the year is done.

I read all of it in the slow hour between the breakfast rush and the lunch crowd. It is good to know why. But the why is not what I think about when I am making the egg sandwich.

I have cut meat for a living since I was twelve years old. I know the price of a brisket the way some men know the price of gasoline—in my bones. When it climbs, I feel it in my hands before I ever see it on an invoice. The newspaper and I noticed the same thing this year. We just noticed it from different sides of the counter.

The newspaper counts the herd. It counts the price per pound. It counts what the restaurants in the city pay and charge to make it back. Those are real numbers, and somebody should count them.

But there is a number nobody counts. Nobody counts the man who orders the egg sandwich and calls it cholesterol. Nobody counts the fourth sandwich split into halves. Nobody counts the small, quiet arithmetic a working family does in the doorway before deciding what they can have today. It does not show up in any report. It shows up at my counter, one order at a time.

What gets me is its dignity. Nobody complains. Nobody asks me to feel sorry for them. A man who has traded his Tuesday pastrami for a cheaper breakfast does not want a conversation about it. He wants his egg sandwich, his change, and his morning. The least I can do is give him all three without making him explain.

Last week, a young father ordered a single sandwich and told me he had already eaten at home. I have known him since he was a boy. I did not believe him. I wrapped his one sandwich, wished him a good day, and let it stand, because it was a kind lie, and it was his.

This is the part the price reports miss. The squeeze is real, but the people inside it are not asking to be counted. They are quietly getting on with less. And a town is held together, more than people know, by how gently we let each other do it.

Here is what I do, and you can do it too, wherever your counter is. When somebody orders smaller than they used to, and gives you a reason which is not quite the reason, take the reason. Make the sandwich. Give them their morning.

You cannot see all of a person’s arithmetic. But you can see the person doing it, right in front of you. Be kind to them.

Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. Tell us about the small swap you have made lately, or the one you have watched somebody else make with dignity. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, the U.S. cattle herd figures and rising beef prices described in this editorial are real.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Start Your Publishing Journey with Expert Guidance.
Unlock Exclusive Tips, Trends, and Opportunities to Bringing Your Book to Market.

About Us

Kindly contact us if you've written a book, if you're writing a book, if you're thinking about writing a book, we can help!

Social Media

Payment

Publication Consultants Publication Consultants

Copyright 2023 powered by Publication Consultants All Rights Reserved.