My daughter Lily handed her packed lunch to a homeless man sitting outside her school gates on a Tuesday morning, and I almost made her take it back.
I’m ashamed to admit that. But I’m telling you the truth.
We were running late. We’re always running late. I’m a single mum working two part-time jobs in Cincinnati, and our mornings are held together with whatever I can scrape together the night before — usually a peanut butter sandwich, an apple, and a packet of crackers stuffed into a purple zip-up bag.
I hadn’t even noticed him at first.
I was looking at my phone, checking the time, already calculating how fast I’d have to walk back to the bus stop to make it to my shift at the laundry by 8:30.
Then Lily stopped walking.
Just stopped. Right there on the pavement.
I walked two steps ahead before I realized she wasn’t beside me anymore.
I turned around and there she was, standing in front of a man sitting slumped against the brick wall beside the school entrance. He was older, maybe sixty, maybe older than that. Grey beard, cracked hands, a sleeping bag folded under him that had seen better decades. A paper cup in front of him with a few coins in it.
Lily had already unzipped her lunch bag.
I said her name. Sharply. The way you say it when you mean stop.
She looked up at me. Not defiantly. Just with those wide, serious brown eyes she gets when she’s already decided something.





