Walking back from the library, I told my 6-year-old not to wander. While searching for our bus card, I turned and saw him kneeling beside a man slumped against a wall, offering his sandwich with both hands.
I panicked, rushing over. “I’m so sorry,” I blurted, but the man smiled gently. “It’s okay. I was just telling your boy thank you.”
My son turned to me and said, “He looks like Grandpa. Can we give him the juice, too?”
The man’s expression shifted. I asked quietly, “Do you… know a Peter Colton?”
His eyes widened. “Used to. Long time ago. Why?”
“He was my father,” I whispered.
He looked between us. “Then I guess that makes you… family.”
I didn’t know what to say. But as he reached for the sandwich, I saw the tattoo on his wrist—the same one my father had. My son’s small kindness had opened a door I hadn’t expected.