The Park Bench Note That Asked For One Day With A Mom Again Today-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Park Bench Note That Asked For One Day With A Mom Again Today-nhu9999

Vanessa Croft had gone to Willow Pond because the apartment had become too quiet again.

It happened most Saturdays after lunch, when the errands were done, the laundry was turning in the dryer, and there was nothing left to distract her from the shape of her own silence.

She did not call it loneliness because that sounded too dramatic for a woman who had a job, friends, a clean kitchen, and enough ordinary plans to look busy on paper.

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She only knew that the park helped.

The pond caught the late October light in broken gold pieces, the benches were usually half empty, and the little train that circled the far path gave the afternoon a sound that belonged to families without demanding that she join one.

She bought coffee from the cart, sat on the black iron bench near the water, and let the cup go cold in her hands.

That was where Charlie Hartwell found her.

He came toward her with careful steps, not running, not wandering, but marching with the nervous purpose of a child who had practiced being brave.

His blue hoodie was zipped high, his sandy hair stood up at the crown, and his two hands held a folded paper as if a gust of wind might steal the whole plan.

Vanessa noticed the paper first.

Then she noticed the man on the path behind him, moving fast with a bakery bag in one hand and the terrified expression of a father arriving three seconds too late.

The boy stopped in front of her.

“Excuse me,” he said, so politely that it almost hurt.

Vanessa smiled because children who used that much courage deserved a soft face waiting for them.

“Yes?”

He held out the paper.

“Can you read this, please?”

Behind him, the man called, “Charlie, buddy, wait.”

The boy did not turn around.

Vanessa accepted the note.

She had no idea that one square of folded paper could make an entire life tilt a little to the side.

The printing inside was uneven but careful, with some letters pressed darker than others where the pencil had been held too hard.

Dear Lady, it began.

My name is Charlie.

My mom died two years ago.

I am looking for someone to be my mommy for one day, this Saturday.

You do not have to keep doing it after.

Just one day.

My dad is sad a lot even though he tries to hide it, and I think it would help if we had a nice day with a mom in it again.

You seem nice.

Would you please consider it?

Thank you.

Charlie Hartwell, age eight.

Vanessa reached the last line and forgot the coffee in her hand.

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