I was clearing out Reina’s closet when I posted a free bundle of toddler clothes. Minutes later, a message came from a woman named Nura. Times were hard. Her little girl had nothing warm. Could I mail the box? She’d pay me “when she could.” I almost ignored it. But grief from my mother’s recent passing had softened me. I mailed it, paid the postage, and forgot about it. A year later, a package arrived. Inside were the dresses—washed, folded—and a crocheted yellow duck from my childhood I thought I’d lost.
A note read: “You helped me when I had no one. This duck kept my daughter’s bad dreams away. She’s better now. It’s time it comes home.”I cried on my kitchen floor. At the bottom of the note was a phone number. I called. Nura answered, voice tired but warm. She had fled an abusive partner with only a toddler and a duffel.
Someone at a shelter had shown her my post. We kept talking—photos, job leads, jokes at midnight. When she got part-time bakery work, I asked to visit. She welcomed us like family. Our daughters played on the floor. We shared soup and stories. Visits continued. Her life steadied; she helped steady mine.
Once, when I lost hours at work, she wired me €300. “Let me help you,” she said. Today she’s starting culinary school. Our girls call each other cousins. The duck sits on our nightstands, passed back and forth like a promise. Small kindness doesn’t stay small. Sometimes it becomes a life shared.