
Tessa Hadley Reads Nadine Gordimer
The New Yorker: Fiction
A Black Woman and a White Woman
He bought a box of chocolates and left it with a note for her to find. She saved him the trips to the supermarket and brought him his groceries two or three times a week. He decided he should give her a twenty cent piece for her trouble. Ten cents would be right for a black, but she said, oh no, please,. standing outside his open door and awkwardly pushing back into his hand the change from the money he'd given her. It was difficult to know how to treat these people in this country, difficult to know what they expected.
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