My life has always been measured in the soles of other people’s shoes. I am a cobbler, a dying breed in a world of fast fashion and disposable sneakers. My shop, “Sole & Heel,” sits on the corner of 4th and Main in a small town in Ohio where the rust belt meets the cornfields. It smells of beeswax, leather glue, and the dust of a thousand miles walked by my neighbors.
Ten years ago, that shop was my entire world. It was quiet. It was predictable. It was lonely.Then came Laura.
She walked in on a rainy Tuesday in April, shaking a broken umbrella and holding a pair of pumps with a snapped heel. She smelled like lavender laundry detergent and rain. She was frantic, late for a job interview at the library, and she looked at me with eyes the color of polished amber.“Can you fix them?” she asked, breathless. “Please. I can’t walk into an interview barefoot.”
I fixed them in ten minutes. I didn’t charge her. She got the job.
