I thought my son was just feeding a lonely old man near our church. Then the police knocked on my door and told me he wasn’t who he claimed to be. What they revealed broke my heart and changed the way our whole town saw him.
The morning the police came to my door, my thirteen-year-old son was standing at the stove, stirring chicken soup for a man we thought was named Mr.
Bennett.
One officer held up a photograph.
“Ma’am,” he said. “How do you know this man?”
I looked at Noah. He looked at me.
Then I looked back at the photo and said the only thing that made sense.
“My son feeds him.”
The younger officer glanced at his partner.
The older one opened a folder, looked down, then looked at me carefully.
“Ma’am,” he said, “the man you know as Mr. Bennett is not who he claims to be.”
My hand tightened on the doorknob.
“Then who is he?”
He took a breath.
“His name is Walter.”
The pot behind me kept simmering, Noah kept holding the spoon, and my heart dropped hard enough to make the whole morning feel strange.
***
Three months earlier, Noah had noticed him first.
We go to Saint Luke’s every Sunday. I sing badly, Noah mouths half the hymns, and afterward we get donuts.
That Sunday was bitterly cold.
I was digging in my purse for my gloves when Noah touched my sleeve.
“What? You okay?”
He pointed across the church lot.
An old man sat on a bench near the fence, shoulders tucked in, coat too thin for December, hands wrapped around nothing.
“He looks freezing,” Noah said.
I glanced over. “I see him.”
Noah looked at me like seeing him wasn’t nearly enough.
That was Noah. He moved first and figured the rest out later.
Before I could stop him, he jogged across the lot.
I followed, annoyed and proud.
“Sir?” Noah said. “Do you need help?”
The old man looked up slowly.
His beard was white, his face weathered, but his posture was oddly straight. Even shivering, he sat like a person who had once been taught never to slump.
“I’m all right,” he said.
Noah frowned. “You don’t look all right.”
I almost apologized for him, but the old man’s mouth twitched.
“Fair enough,” he said.
That was how we met Mr.
Bennett.
He told us he was eighty, had fallen on hard times, and preferred the bench to a crowded shelter.
On the drive home, Noah lasted maybe half a minute before saying, “Can we take him dinner?”
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