A Runner Saw the Same Little Boy Waiting Alone Every Morning-heyily

Every morning at exactly 7:15, the little boy sat on the same faded green bench beside the duck pond.

The park near downtown Portland always looked half-asleep at that hour.

Fog moved low over the grass.

Image

The pond gave off a cold, wet smell, and coffee steamed from paper cups in the hands of people who were too busy to notice anything outside the rhythm of their own lives.

Joggers passed with earbuds in.

Cyclists clicked along the path.

A city bus sighed at the curb, opened its doors, closed them again, and rolled away toward the next stop.

And the boy stayed.

Small.

Silent.

Waiting.

People assumed what people always assume when the truth would require them to stop.

Maybe his mother was nearby.

Maybe his father was tying a shoe.

Maybe someone had just stepped into the café across the street.

Maybe he was playing some serious little kid game no adult understood.

Nobody looked long enough to see that he barely moved.

Nobody noticed that he had the same tiny backpack by his feet every day.

Nobody wondered why a child that young knew how to sit still for hours.

My name is Daniel Harper, and I was thirty-nine years old the morning I finally stopped.

I was a family attorney, which meant I had spent most of my adult life listening to people explain why the worst thing they had done was not really what it looked like.

After my divorce three years earlier, I started running before work because sleep had become unreliable.

Routine was easier than grief.

Wake up.

Run.

Work.

Eat something over the sink.

Repeat.

That Tuesday morning should have been exactly like every other morning.

I remember the cold air against my throat.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *