Nancy cherished her son Henry beyond anything else. She couldn’t picture living without him. It had been 23 years since the awful accident that took his life, yet not a year had passed without her remembering his memory. Every year on his d3ath anniversary, she carried his favorite apple and cinnamon pie to his grave—a practice she had faithfully followed. This year, however, something unusual was going to occur.
Nancy, at 61, has never missed a year. Henry has loved the simple but excellent pie since he was a child. The aroma of apples and cinnamon always took her back to the days when Henry would rush into the kitchen, his eyes brightening at the sight of the newly prepared dessert. Those times had become treasured memories, and creating the pie was her way of keeping them alive.
Since Henry’s d3ath at the age of 17, the routine provided her with a little feeling of connection, allowing her to feel as if she was still doing something special for him. The agony of losing him had never totally subsided, but this annual practice had soothed her heart.
Nancy took the pie to Henry’s grave with care on this occasion, as she had done every year before. The dish seemed heavier with each step, as it usually did as she reached his final resting place. The burial was decorated with fresh flowers, demonstrating how much he was still loved.
Nancy kneeled before the gravesite and delicately laid the pie down. “Henry,” she said, her voice soft and emotional, “I brought your favorite again. “I miss you every day.” Tears welled up in her eyes, but she forced a faint smile, remembering how he would steal a slice before the pie was done. “I wish we could share it again, just once more.”
After a few moments of peaceful meditation, Nancy kissed her fingers and touched the top of the headstone to say her final goodbye. She would return the next day to clear up whatever remained of the pie, a sad tradition she had maintained for over two decades.
Something was different this time, though.
When Nancy returned the next day, her heart skipped a beat. The platter was empty. For 23 years, the pie had remained untouched or ruined by the elements, a somber reminder of Henry’s absence. But suddenly the pie was gone, and a little folded letter lay on the plate.
Her hands trembled as she lifted it up and unfolded it cautiously. The handwriting was wobbly, as if the writer had struggled to create the letters. The message simply said “Thank you.”
Nancy’s heart was racing with uncertainty and rage. Who had taken the pie intended for her son? Someone had intruded on this extremely intimate gesture. Nancy, determined to discover who had disrupted her sacred ceremony, resolved to take matters into her own hands.
The next day, she prepared another pie—Henry’s favorite—as she had done several times before. But this time, she did not depart. She hid behind a tall oak tree near the tomb, watching and waiting for the unknown person who had stolen the pie.
She waited an hour before seeing any movement. A little person emerged—a young lad, no older than nine, clothed in rags. He approached the grave gingerly and seemed hesitant. Nancy’s heart melted as she observed him. This was hardly the thief she had expected.
The youngster crouched beside the grave and took out a little scrap of paper, painstakingly penning something with a dull pencil. Nancy recognized it as the identical message she had found the day before. He wasn’t stealing the pie; he was simply a hungry youngster, appreciative for the unexpected gift.
The rage that had seized her vanished in an instant. She walked out from behind the tree, startling the youngster, who dropped the pie. “I’m sorry!” he said, terrified. “I did not intend to steal it. I was just so hungry.”
Nancy’s heartbroke as she knelt alongside him. “It’s alright, sweetheart,” she whispered quietly. “You don’t need to steal. “If you were hungry, all you had to do was ask.” Jimmy, the youngster, revealed that he did not have a family to care for him and had been surviving on whatever he could find.
Nancy’s eyes filled with tears of sympathy rather than grief. She seized his hand and asked, “Come with me. I will make you a fresh pie”
Nancy returned home and cooked another pie, exactly as she had done for Henry throughout the years. Jimmy looked at her carefully, his eyes wide with expectation. When the pie was finally finished, he gobbled it with such enthusiasm that Nancy couldn’t help but grin through her tears.
As she watched Jimmy eat, Nancy recognized that this unexpected encounter had given her a new sense of direction. In a sense, Henry’s memories had brought them together. By assisting this youngster, she was honoring her son in ways she had never expected. Her anguish had lead her to something beautiful: a relationship that filled the void in her heart.
Perhaps this was Henry’s way of sending her a message—that love and kindness should always find their way to those in need.
Nancy smiled, her heart warm with gratitude, knowing that she had found a new way to keep Henry’s memory alive.