I'm reading a book and this is what the paragraph says:
I didn't see how Riley came into this. Riley and the cheeseburger of pain. I wanted that part of the story, but now I felt bad for pushing him to answer.
Is this a regular phrase I just haven't heard of? I couldn't find anything on Google and I'm awfully confused. Thank you!
Edit - the book is The Short Second Life Of Bree Tanner & apparently this was referencing a literal cheeseburger
laurpr2 t1_ja2iy4e wrote
Your question is the best thing I've read all day. Apparently it's referencing a literal cheeseburger.
According to this person (spoilers? I haven't read the book and it's unclear whether this info is revealed before or after the line in question),
>>!It turns out that Bree was a 15-16 year-old abused homeless runaway. Riley ("the hottest boy I had ever seen, tall and blond and perfect... And his voice was so gentle, so kind") offered to get her a burger. Bree figures she knows "what he would want in exchange," but she's eaten nothing but trash for two weeks, so small-scale prostitution it is.!<
Meyer has several editors, after all; small things might slip by but if "cheeseburger of pain" managed to escape notice as an unintended typo then several people are straight-up incompetent.