There was a particularly unhygienic kid in the class. The other children wouldn’t hang out with him because he smelled really bad. So the teacher sent a note to his parents saying he should bathe more frequently.
The next day, the boy came to school with a note from his father, which read:
“My son tries his best, but we don’t have hot water at home, and we can’t afford soap right now. I’m sorry.”
The teacher read the note twice before folding it carefully and slipping it into her desk drawer. She looked at the boy, his hair matted and his shirt stained, and her heart ached.
That day, she couldn’t focus on the lesson. She kept glancing at him, noticing how he tried to keep to himself, how he avoided raising his hand so no one would get close enough to smell him. At recess, the boy sat alone under the big oak tree.
A couple of boys from his class were kicking a ball nearby, but every time the ball rolled towards him, they’d run over quickly, grab it, and hurry away without saying a word. The teacher watched from her window and sighed. She remembered her own childhood, how her family had struggled, how she’d once been the kid with holes in her shoes.
After school, she called the boy over and knelt to his level. She asked if he’d like to come by her house sometime, saying she had some extra soap and maybe some clothes that would fit him. His eyes widened, but he just nodded quietly.
That weekend, the teacher, Ms. Patel, drove her small red car to the address listed on the note. The neighborhood was worn down, with cracked sidewalks and stray cats darting between trash cans.
She parked in front of a pale yellow house with peeling paint. The boy’s father opened the door. He looked tired, with dark circles under his eyes and hands that seemed too big for his thin frame.
He greeted her politely, apologizing for the smell drifting from inside the house. She waved it off, stepping inside. The smell was a mix of mildew and old cooking oil.
Clothes were piled in corners, and a single electric heater buzzed loudly in the living room. The boy, whose name was Arjun, was sitting on the floor playing with a broken toy truck. He looked up, surprised to see his teacher.
Ms. Patel sat on the couch, explaining that she wanted to help. She offered to bring over soap, shampoo, and clothes.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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