Meanwhile, at my school, the Eleanor Lawson Scholarship was approved by the district board. Four students were selected for the first round of funding, two for school supplies, one for a summer reading program, and one for a music camp she couldn’t otherwise afford. Her name was Lily. She was eight. When I told her she’d been chosen, she hugged me so hard her backpack swung around and hit me in the knee.
I thought about Eleanor, about what she’d said all those years ago.
Money shows you who people really are.
She was right. It also shows you what you can become.
Two months after the reading, my phone rang on a Tuesday evening. I almost didn’t answer, but the name on the screen wasn’t Mom or Dad. It was Brandon.
I let it ring three times, then I picked up.
“I’m not calling to ask for money,” he said.
His voice was tired. Not the tired of a long day. The tired of someone who’s been arguing with himself for weeks and finally lost.
“Okay,” I said.
A pause. I heard him exhale. Somewhere behind him, a door closed.
“I just wanted to say I should have stood up for you at the reading. And before that, for years.”