I’d always known my son Ben carried a kind of goodness that made the world feel softer just by having him in it. He was twelve then—tall in the wrong places, elbows and knees always bruised from moving too fast through life, with the kind of open optimism that makes you both proud and protective at the same time. He believed adults meant what they said. He believed effort deserved fairness. He believed promises were something you kept because breaking them didn’t just change a situation—it changed people.
I used to watch him do small, quiet things that most grown-ups had stopped noticing: holding doors for strangers, picking up litter without being asked, giving his sister the bigger half of a cookie and pretending it wasn’t a sacrifice. So when he burst into the kitchen on that early December morning, cheeks pink with cold and hair damp from melting snow, telling me Mr.
Dickinson offered him ten dollars every time he shoveled his driveway, I smiled without thinking. Mr. Dickinson was the kind of neighbor who loved to be seen as successful—cars that gleamed like trophies, loud opinions about “hard work,” and a habit of talking about business like it was a sport where you won by outsmarting someone else.