The price of bad timing. After 1 AM, the world gets strange. A possum contemplates suicide on the double yellow line. A woman in a bathrobe argues with a fire hydrant. The stoplights blink yellow, then red, then yellow again—indecisive, like you. This fee exists because drivers deserve hazard pay for the version of you that texts your ex, deletes it, types it again, then deletes the whole thread.

The price of demand. It is not traffic. It is not a concert or a ball game. The surge is high because everyone else at this hour is either euphoric or undone, and the algorithm cannot tell the difference. You are competing for asphalt with a bachelorette party vomiting glitter and a nurse coming off a 16-hour shift. The algorithm does not care why you need to get away. It only knows that you are desperate enough to pay. SUBTOTAL: $62.84 Tip (Elena V.): $20.00 (“For the silence. For not asking. For the way she merged onto the highway like she was stitching the lanes back together.”)

The price of thinking. The silent stretches between streetlights. Your phone buzzes—three times. You do not look. You count the raindrops racing down the window instead. One of them wins. You feel a profound, idiotic kinship with the loser. Elena hums a song in a language you don’t recognize. It sounds like a lullaby for the newly broken.

The price of geography. The city unspools like a confession. Past the overpass where you got your first parking ticket. Past the hospital where your father said nothing for three hours. Each mile marker is a gravestone for a previous version of yourself. Elena, the driver, glances in the rearview. She knows you are not going home. You are going back .

The price of a witness. Elena does not ask if you’re okay. She does not turn up the radio. She simply drives. She slows down at the pothole that nearly swallowed a Honda Civic last winter. She checks the back seat twice. Not for valuables. For you. For the fact that you are still breathing, still buckled, still deciding to exist for another mile. That is the trust. You are paying for her to pretend not to see you cry.

The price of leaving. The last drink was a mistake. The second-to-last drink was a prophecy. Your jacket smells like cedar, cheap gin, and the ghost of an apology you didn’t make. The door clicks shut. The bar’s jukebox fades into a muffled bass line, and you realize you are now a stranger to everyone inside. This is the cost of deciding that staying would have destroyed you slower.