The woman stood frozen in the doorway.
The cold air touched her face.
The warm restaurant glowed behind her.
For one second, she looked like she could still walk back inside and pretend she hadn’t seen anything.
Her friends laughed again.
“Don’t ruin the night.”
The boy lowered his eyes.
“It’s okay,” he whispered. “People don’t let me in either.”
The puppy shivered against his chest.
The woman looked at the bread she had thrown away.
Then at the child who asked mercy for a dog before asking it for himself.
Her lips trembled.
“What’s your name?”
The boy hugged the puppy tighter.
“Noah.”
The woman’s face changed.
That name hit something old inside her.
Her little brother’s name had been Noah.
The brother she once watched get pushed out of a restaurant years ago because he looked poor, while she stayed silent.
She had spent her whole life becoming the kind of woman nobody could throw out.
And somehow, she had become the person doing it.
Her friends appeared at the door.
“Are you seriously crying over him?”
The woman turned slowly.
“No,” she said, her voice shaking. “I’m crying because I almost became you.”
She took off her gold shawl and wrapped it around the boy and the puppy.
Then she opened the restaurant door wider.
The boy didn’t move.
“Me too?” he whispered.
The woman knelt in front of him.
Her eyes filled with tears.
“You first,” she said. “He goes in because you saved him. You go in because no child should have to beg behind a door.”