Good Evening… Sorry to Trouble You… Might You Have a Spare Crust of Bread or a Pastry You No Longer …

Good evening… sorry to trouble you… Might you have a bit of stale bread, or perhaps a cake nobody wants anymore?

It was nearly midnight when the door to the bakery at the end of the street creaked open. The little bell above the door gave a timid jingle, as if it too was worried about causing a fuss.

The shop window was still aglow, and the scent of warm bread filled the crisp night air.

A boy stood in the doorway, cheeks rosy with cold, a coat far too thin for the weather, and an ancient, battered rucksack hanging from one shoulder. He wrung his hands together, eyes darting nervously about the shop, half-expecting to be shooed away at any moment.

Good evening, he murmured, barely above a whisper. Sorry to bother you do you perhaps have a spare crust of bread or a bun no one wants anymore?

He wasnt begging. He didnt hold out his hand. He didnt raise his voice. He was simply asking for leftovers. Something others would just toss in the bin.

Margaret, the shop lady, paused mid-way through rearranging the loaves. She studied him, realising he wasnt cheeky or trying his luck. He just looked hungry. And frightened.

Of course, love come in here, she said gently.

The boy shuffled forward, each step as if he were treading on thin ice and hoping the floor wouldnt shout at him.

Margaret flipped open the bakery cabinet and began gathering up slices of warm bread, a couple of rolls, and a cream-filled donut.

Here, have these. Theyre nice and warm.

The boy took the donut with both hands. He bit into it shyly, cheeks burning with embarrassment, but hunger won out. Tears welled up in his eyes.

Thank you he whispered.

Margaret watched him eat. Every bite was like a punch to her heartnot from giving away food, but from seeing a child treat a humble donut as if it were a miracle.

Have you got any brothers or sisters? she asked softly. I can pack up a bit more if youre not on your own

The boy stopped, placed the donut on the counter and lowered his gaze. His shoulders curled inwards.

Yes I do, he said quietly. But please please dont call the council

Margaret felt her heart splinter.

Now why would I do that, pet? Who told you something like that?

The boy drew a shaky breath, screwing up his courage to share something far heavier than any child should have to bear.

Mums very poorly she can barely get out of bed anymore Dads left us And Ive got two little brothers to look after

He didnt cry. He spoke like someone much older. Like a child whod forgotten how to be a child.

Margaret turned her back, pretending to rummage for something on the shelf. Tears streamed silently down her face.

When she faced him again, she held a large carrier bag, overflowing with bread, rolls, cakes.

Take these, all of thembread, rolls, donuts And tell your brothers someone out there is thinking of them.

The boy met her gaze, his eyes shining.

Thank you thank you so much, he stammered.

And you must come tomorrow. And the day after. Youre not alone, all right?

He nodded. Words had abandoned him.

That night, a boy left the bakery with a full carrier bag. But far more precious was something he hadnt had in a long while: hope.

Because sometimes, miracles dont arrive with fireworks. Sometimes they creep in quietly, in a corner bakery, through people who choose to say come in instead of move along.

If youve read this far, dont let the story end with you. Pass it on. Somewhere, even now, there might be a child nervously stepping into a shop, in need of a kind word, not a closed door.

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Good Evening… Sorry to Trouble You… Might You Have a Spare Crust of Bread or a Pastry You No Longer …
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