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When I was 16, our house caught on fire at night. My dad pulled me out through the front door. He went to get my mom and grandpa. But they didn’t come back. The fire took all three of them. After that, I wasn’t living. I was drifting. The fire took our house, our savings, our photos, and our clothes. Everything except me. And I wasn’t sure I deserved to be the one spared. A local volunteer service helped me get a room in a community dorm-style shelter. Shared kitchen, two bathrooms per floor, but it was safe, clean, and warm. I was grateful. Especially because my only living relative, my mom’s sister (my aunt), refused to take me in. “I don’t have the space, and I’m not about to give up my reading nook for a teenager,” she said. What she did do, however, was take half of the insurance payout I received. I didn’t argue because I’d already lost the thing most precious to me—my family. During the day, I studied to get into college and find work. At night, while everyone else watched TV in the common room, I took over the kitchen. I baked pies for the local hospice and the homeless shelter downtown. Apple. Peach. Strawberry rhubarb, when I could afford it. Sometimes 10 in one evening. Once, 20. I saved up for flour, fruit, and butter. Anything I could afford out of my monthly aid. I dropped them off anonymously, handing them to the nurses or volunteers. I never met the people who ate them. That was too hard. My aunt didn’t understand. “You’re wasting money. You should be sending that money to ME. I lost my sister,” she said. Still, I kept baking. It gave me purpose. Until two weeks after my 18th birthday, a brown box showed up at the front desk with my name written in neat cursive. No return address. Inside was A PECAN PIE. Perfectly golden, beautiful braided crust, lightly dusted with powdered sugar. The smell was enough to make me dizzy. I was surprised. I had no idea who sent it. But as I cut it, I nearly blacked out when I saw what was HIDDEN inside. ⬇️
I’m 28 (F), seven months pregnant, and on my own. When I told the father about the baby, he disappeared that same night, said he “wasn’t ready.” Since then, it’s just been me, the baby I call Bean, and my old Corolla that rattles all the time. I work part-time at a pharmacy, and the money disappears before I can even blink — rent, gas, utilities, check-ups. That Tuesday, I was at the grocery store when I heard raised voices at the checkout. At the register stood an elderly man, maybe around seventy, his shirt faded, one shoe worn through. In his basket: bread, milk, eggs, soup… and one bag of dog food. In his arms, he held a tiny terrier close. The cashier kept scanning and rescanning the old man’s items UNTIL the total came to $15.50. He began taking items out one by one and putting them aside. The line groaned. “ARE WE GOING TO STAND HERE ALL DAY?” someone shouted. “HURRY IT UP ALREADY!” another snapped. A security guard came over, arms crossed: “NO DOGS ALLOWED! EITHER THE BAG OR THE DOG GOES!” The old man clutched his puppy tighter. His voice cracked: “She’s all I have left. Please… JUST LEAVE THE DOG FOOD.” My heart clenched. Without thinking, I stepped forward. “I’ll pay for everything!” I told the cashier. He turned back, eyes wet: “Miss… I can’t…” “Yes, you can,” I said. And I handed him the bag with food for both him and his pup. The next morning, I was woken up by a SOUND ON THE PORCH. I thought it was the neighbor’s cat. I OPENED THE DOOR.⬇️