Every morning I saw a woman on the bus carrying heavy grocery bags. One day I offered to help, and she smiled but said nothing. I didn’t see her for a week after that.
When we met again, she quietly slipped something heavy into my bag. She had the audacity to do it so quickly, I barely noticed until I got off the bus and felt the weight shift. At first, I thought it was a mistake.
Maybe she meant to put it in her own bag and missed? I opened it right there on the sidewalk, half-embarrassed, half-curious.It was a book. An old, hardbound journal with a leather cover, the kind that smelled of dust and stories.
No name. No note. Just tucked into my bag like it belonged there.
I turned around, but the bus had already pulled away. She was gone. That night, I flipped through it.
Most pages were blank, but scattered throughout were hand-written notes, drawings, and old photographs taped between pages. It was like someone’s personal time capsule, with thoughts scribbled in the margins. At first, I didn’t think much of it.
But the more I read, the more I realized the entries were about people. People on the bus. Observations, quiet thoughts, small acts of kindness.
A kid who gave his seat to an old man. A woman who cried silently into her scarf. A driver who stopped for someone who’d dropped a bag of oranges.
But it was more than that. These stories were hopeful. Like someone had been keeping track of all the good in a place no one really looked.
The last page had a note. It said: “If this ended up with you, it means you looked up when most people looked away.”
I stared at that sentence for a long time. The next morning, I brought the book with me on the bus.
She was there again, bags in hand, same spot. I sat beside her, holding the book in my lap. She glanced at it, then at me.
Still didn’t say a word. But her eyes softened, and she gave a small nod. That was all.
Days passed like that. I started noticing more. The old man who dozed off every morning but always folded his newspaper neatly before he slept.
The young woman with paint-stained hands who helped the driver tape a broken mirror with her own duct tape. A teenager who offered his headphones to a crying toddler just to calm her down. I started writing too.
In the blank pages of the journal. Just little things I noticed, just like she did. One day, I handed the book back to her.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
