“Evan.”
“Well, Evan, you’re a rare kind of person. Come inside. Let me make you some tea.”
I glanced back at my truck.
“I really appreciate it, but I need to get home. My mom’s watching my kids.”
“Evan, you’re a rare kind of person.”
“You have children?”
“Yeah. Three. Triplets. They’re six.”
“Three six-year-olds? That must keep you on your toes.”
I laughed. “You have no idea.”
“And their mother?”
I hesitated. “It’s just me and my mom raising them.”
Gary nodded slowly, like he understood more than I’d said.
“It’s just me and my mom raising them.”
“You’re doing important work, Evan. Raising good kids. That matters more than anything else.”
“I hope so. I’m just trying my best.”
“Where do you live, if you don’t mind me asking?”
“Not far. About five minutes from my shop. The dull yellow house near the main road. Hard to miss.”
Gary smiled.
“Thank you again, Evan. For your honesty.”
“Goodnight!”
“The dull yellow house near the main road.”
I drove home feeling relieved.
I’d done the right thing.
Even though that money could’ve changed my life for a few weeks, it wasn’t mine. It belonged to an old man who needed it more than I did.
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