Eventually, something did happen.
One afternoon, the center doors burst open.
A woman I vaguely recognized—another volunteer—ran inside carrying Noah. Her face was red and streaked with tears.
“Eliza! There’s been an accident… Marisol. Oh, God. She… the car came out of nowhere. Didn’t even stop. I need to get back. She’s still — please, take him.”
I took Noah into my arms.
He clutched a red toy truck so tightly his knuckles had turned white. His face was blank, as if someone had switched off the lights inside him, and that terrified me.
I set him down and knelt in front of him.
“Hey, Noah. You know me, right? It’s Eliza.”
He nodded once.
“When’s Mama coming?”
I couldn’t answer.
Marisol never came back. She died before the ambulance arrived.
Child services showed up within hours.
We all tried to remember if Marisol had ever mentioned family or friends. But there was no one.
Just a quiet little boy with serious eyes and a broken toy truck.
He would have to enter foster care.
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