A Little Boy Asked A Barista To Be His Mom, Then His Father Came-hothiyenvy_5

The hundred-dollar bill was wet when the little boy pushed it across my counter.

It left a dark rectangle on the laminate beside the card reader, and for a second I just stared at it because nothing about the moment made sense.

He could not have been more than six.

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His blazer was navy, his shoes were polished, and his tie was crooked in the way only a child’s tie gets crooked after a long day of being expected to behave.

Rain clung to the ends of his hair.

His eyes kept flicking toward the windows of The Daily Grind, where the lights of Wilshire Boulevard smeared gold and red across the glass.

“Please,” he said.

His voice was so small I almost missed it under the hiss of the espresso machine.

“Can you be my mom just for today?”

I had heard strange things on the closing shift before.

I had heard breakups, drunk confessions, business deals, apologies, and one woman telling her sister she was leaving her husband while calmly stirring oat milk into a latte.

I had never heard that.

I looked at the bill.

Then I looked at him.

The first thing I should have done was call 911.

The second thing I should have done was call the school number on his blazer patch and keep him safely inside until an adult with paperwork showed up.

Instead, I came around the counter and knelt in front of him.

That is the part people judge first when they hear the story.

They ask why I did not follow the perfect procedure.

They ask why I trusted a child I did not know.

They ask why a woman with two jobs, an overdue electric bill, and a mother in the hospital would step into someone else’s disaster like it had her name on it.

The answer is not noble.

It is simple.

He looked terrified.

“My name is Victoria,” I said gently. “What’s yours?”

“Leo.”

“Okay, Leo. Where are your parents?”

His lips trembled.

“My dad has men.”

The back of my neck went cold.

“What kind of men?”

“The kind who don’t ask twice.”

Outside, a black SUV rolled past the shop slowly enough for me to notice it.

Leo noticed it too.

His whole body jerked.

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