Victoria stood, walked over, and pushed the sandwich through an opening near the bottom of the fence.
He blinked at her as if kindness had taken him by surprise.
‘Take it,’ she said.
He did.
He ate too fast at first, then slower, like he was embarrassed by what hunger was making him do.
She gave him the apple too.
He mumbled thank you without lifting his head.
The bell rang.
She went back inside with her stomach hollow and her chest strangely full.
The next day he was there again.
So was she.
For six months Victoria kept feeding him.
Some days it was half her sandwich.
Some days it was all of it.
Once she handed him the little bag of pretzels her mother had tucked beside an orange and lied later that she had dropped them in a puddle.
When the weather turned cold, she hid the exchange in the few minutes before staff noticed who was missing from the lunchroom.
It became a ritual stitched together out of timing and silence.
He stood at the fence.