On my third day, the barista handed me a small card.
"Here β buy nine, and your tenth coffee is free. I'll punch it for you."
She struck the card once with a tiny tool, leaving a single mark.
One of ten sacred seals. A quest had been bestowed upon me.
I understood at once the weight of what I held.
Nine trials stood between me and the Free Coffee.
A pilgrimage of devotion. I would walk it with honor.
I returned the next day and presented the card with both hands.
She punched it. Two of ten. I bowed.
She had already moved to the next customer β for she is a keeper of many quests,
and grants them to all who are worthy.
I will be honest about the trials, for a true account must include hardship.
On the fourth seal, she forgot to punch it.
I did not correct her. To demand a seal is to dishonor the quest.
I drove home one seal short, and told no one.
On the sixth seal, I lost the card.
I sat in my car in silence for a long while.
Then I began again. From one. As a man must.
By the ninth seal, I had walked this path for five weeks.
My hand trembled as I ordered the tenth.
"Alright, that one's free! Nice, you filled the whole card!"
Five weeks. Nine purchases. A card begun, lost, and begun again.
All of it β for this.
It was the finest coffee I have ever tasted.
It was, I should note, the exact same coffee I had bought nine times before.
I wept anyway.
The man behind me assumed I had received bad news. I let him believe it.
She handed me a new card and punched it once.
A new quest. Already begun.
I keep eleven cards now, in a small wooden box, in order.
β¦I have started a card at a second coffee shop.
I do not have the strength to walk two paths at once.
But I will not abandon either.
A man must honor every seal.