
The ceramic clink of coins falling into a glass jar had been the steady heartbeat of our home for six months. My fourteen-year-old son, Dilan, was a boy possessed by a singular, quiet ambition. Every weekend, while his friends were hunched over glowing controllers, Dilan was out in the neighborhood. I watched from the kitchen window as he wrestled with Mrs. Colton’s hyperactive golden retriever, raked the stubborn autumn leaves for the Parkers, and hauled heavy grocery bags for Mrs. Jensen. He never complained about the blisters or the exhaustion. He was saving for a dream: his first real bicycle.
Since my husband Simon passed away nine years ago, things hadn’t been easy. Dilan carried a slight limp from a childhood accident, a physical reminder of a difficult past that made him a target for bullies at his old school. But six months ago, we moved, and Dilan met Mr. Wallace. His history teacher didn’t just teach dates and battles; he saw the lonely soul behind my son’s quiet exterior. He gave Dilan a sense of belonging that I feared he had lost forever.


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