Leslie was exhausted. Another long flight, another headache, another night spent trying to forget how much she missed her little boy back home. But midway through the flight, as she passed the lavatory, she heard soft sobs. Opening the door, she froze. Inside was a young boy, no older than seven, clutching a paper bag to his chest. “My name’s Ben,” he whispered through tears. “This is Granny’s medicine. I tried to bring it to her, but I got on the wrong plane. Now she’s going to die, and it’s all my fault.”
Leslie’s heart ached. She sat with him, comforted him, and when the plane landed, she promised to help. Using her own money, she bought him a ticket to Seattle and accompanied him there before returning home to see her own sick son, Joe. Ben’s reunion with his family was filled with love and relief, but Leslie’s was harder—her little boy was pale and weak, and doctors had no answers. Bills piled up, and she worried she would lose him.
Then one evening, there was a knock at her door. Standing there was Ben, his parents by his side. In his hands, an envelope. Inside was a check—money raised for his grandmother’s treatment, which she no longer needed. “We want Joe to have this,” Ben’s mother said softly.
Through tears, Leslie hugged them all. That gift paid for Joe’s care, and weeks later, he was healthy and laughing again. Looking at her son playing in the yard, Leslie whispered, “It’s all thanks to a boy I once found crying in an airplane bathroom.”