I thought the police had come because my son had made a terrible mistake. Instead, that terrifying knock at our door led me to a truth I never saw coming: sometimes the quietest acts of kindness leave the biggest mark on everyone watching.
The morning the police came to my door, I thought my son had done something terrible.
That was my first mistake.
My second was assuming I’d known the full story a few nights before, when I walked into David’s room with a laundry basket on my hip and noticed the empty space by his desk.
His guitar was gone.
“David?” I called.
“Yeah, Mom?” he yelled from the kitchen.
That was my first mistake.
“Where’s your guitar, son?”
“Mom,” he said, appearing in the doorway to his room. “I’m sorry I didn’t tell you…”
“David, what’s going on?”
He lowered his eyes. “I sold my guitar, Mom.”
“You did what?!”
I set the basket down on the floor because my hands had gone weak. “Why would you do that? That guitar meant everything to you.”
He swallowed. “It did. But Emily needed a new wheelchair.”
“David, what’s going on?”
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