I gave my scarf and last $100 to a shivering girl at the train station, thinking I’d never see her again. But when I boarded my flight, there she was in first class! “What does this mean?” I asked her, and her answer left me reeling.
I stood in front of a long glass conference table, facing down 12 board members who watched me with expressions that could freeze lava.
I took a breath and clicked to the first slide.
“Good morning,” I began. “My name is Erin, and I’m here because I believe no young person should ever end up on the street, fighting to stay alive.”
“I believe no young person should
ever end up on the street.”
A few of them exchanged skeptical glances.
I continued anyway, voice gaining strength.
“My project is a transitional support program for teens aging out of foster care. We focus on safe temporary housing, job readiness, and long-term mentorship.”
I paused, hoping someone would show a sign of interest.
Nothing. This was not going well.
I pushed through with my presentation, showing slides featuring success stories, budget projections, and testimonials from kids who’d been through our program.
Finally, I clicked to the final slide and lowered the remote.
“I’m asking for seed funding to expand our pilot program from 30 youths to 200. With your help, we can give these young people a chance to succeed in life.”
One of the board members cleared his throat.
I pushed through with
my presentation.
“We’ll be in touch.” He gestured to the door with barely a glance in my direction.
I smiled and thanked them for their time, but I knew then that I’d probably never hear from them again.
This foundation was my last shot at serious funding.
I walked out of that meeting, certain it had been a waste of time, but I had no idea that the real interview hadn’t even started yet.
The real interview hadn’t
even started yet.
I returned to my sister’s place, where I’d been staying while I was in town. At least the meeting had been a good excuse to visit her.
She took one look at my face and let out a heavy sigh.
“Something else will come up, Erin. You’ll figure it out. You always do.”
I shook my head. “Who’d have thought it would be this hard to get people to help kids in need?”
The next morning came too fast.
She took one look at my face
and let out a heavy sigh.
It was one of those bone-cold mornings where the wind cuts straight through your coat.
I was heading to the airport after saying goodbye to my sister, dragging my suitcase and praying I’d make it through TSA without losing my mind.
That’s when I saw a girl, maybe 17 or 18, curled up on a bench near the station entrance. No coat — just a thin sweater and a backpack for a pillow.
I saw a girl curled up on a bench
near the station entrance.
Her lips were blue, and she’d tucked her hands between her knees.
She was shivering so hard I could see it from 20 feet away.
I don’t know what made me stop. Instinct, maybe, or the fact that I’d just spent 24 hours thinking about kids with nowhere to go and nothing to keep them warm.
“Sweetheart, you’re freezing.” I crouched beside the bench.
She blinked up at me, startled, eyes red from the cold and probably from crying.
Her lips were blue, and she’d tucked
her hands between her knees.
There was something raw in her expression, like she’d been holding herself together for too long and didn’t have the energy to pretend anymore.
Without thinking, I unwound my scarf.
My mom had knitted it ages ago, back before the Alzheimer’s took those kinds of memories. I wrapped it around the girl’s shoulders.
She tried to protest, shaking her head weakly, but I held it in place.
I unwound my scarf and wrapped
it around the girl’s shoulders.
“Please,” I said. “Keep it.”
She whispered something that sounded like “Thank you.”
My rideshare pulled up to the curb then, and the driver honked impatiently.
Before getting in, I pulled out a $100 bill and handed it to her. It was supposed to be my emergency airport money, but this felt more urgent.
“Go buy yourself something hot to eat, okay? Soup, breakfast, anything warm.”
I pulled out a $100 bill
and handed it to her.
Her eyes widened. “Are you sure?”
“Absolutely,” I said. “Take care of yourself.”
She clutched the money and the scarf like they were fragile, precious things. I gave her a small wave before hurrying to the car, the driver already muttering about schedules and traffic.
I figured that was it. One small moment of connection in a cold world with someone I’d never see again… but when I boarded my flight three hours later, that same girl was seated beside me in first class!
That same girl was seated
beside me in first class!
My sister had used her airline miles to upgrade me, insisting I deserved something nice after my big meeting flopped.
I found my seat and nearly dropped my coffee when I spotted the person seated beside me.
It was the girl from the bench!
But she’d undergone a dramatic change from the shivering girl I’d met so briefly.
It was the girl from the bench!
She was clean, poised, and wrapped in a tailored coat.
I might not have recognized her if she hadn’t still been wearing my scarf around her neck.
Two men in black suits stood beside her, the kind of security detail you see protecting celebrities or politicians.
One leaned in close to her ear.
“Miss Vivienne, we’ll be right outside if you need anything.”
She was still wearing
my scarf around her neck.
She nodded calmly, like having bodyguards on a commercial flight was perfectly normal. Then she looked up at me, and I swear time stopped.
I froze mid-step, my carry-on bag sliding off my shoulder.
“What… what does this mean?”
She gestured to my seat. The vulnerability was gone, replaced by an air of confidence and entitlement.
“Sit, Erin.” She folded her hands neatly in her lap. “This is the real interview.”
My stomach dropped. “I’m sorry? Interview for what?”
Her expression hardened.
“Yesterday, you gave a presentation requesting funding for a project to support teens aging out of foster care. One of the board members told you we’d be in touch. My family owns that foundation, and this is your follow-up.”
I dropped into my seat. I was still reeling from what she’d said when she pulled out a folder and flipped it open.
She pulled out a folder
and flipped it open.
“You gave a stranger — me — $100 and your scarf. You want funding to provide temporary housing and mentorship to these kids.” She sighed. “Some would call that generosity. I call it gullibility.”
Heat rose to my cheeks. “How can you say that? You were freezing.”
“I was a trap, one you fell for hook, line, and sinker.” She looked up sharply, her eyes like ice. “You act on impulse and make emotional decisions. Weak foundation for leadership.”
“I was a trap, one you fell for
hook, line, and sinker.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “What was I supposed to do, walk past you?”
She flipped another page in the folder, ignoring my question.
“You’ve made a career of helping people who take and take. Doesn’t it ever occur to you that kindness is just how people get manipulated? Don’t you want to actually make money?”
Her voice was so sharp it felt like she was cutting me open one question at a time.
I was trapped with someone who apparently thought compassion was a character flaw.
It felt like she was cutting me
open one question at a time.
I clenched my jaw as anger flooded through me.
“Look, if you think you can shame me for caring about people, then you’ve already made up your mind. But I’m not going to apologize for helping someone who needed it. And you,” I pointed to the scarf around her neck, “shouldn’t be this young and already convinced kindness is a flaw.”
For the first time since I’d sat down, she went completely still.
“I’m not going to apologize for
helping someone who needed it.”
Then she shut the folder with a soft snap. “Good.”
I blinked. “Good?”
Her entire demeanor softened.
“This was all an act. I needed to see if you’d defend your values. Most people fold the second they’re challenged, or worse — admit their only interest in charity is for tax purposes. You actually mean what you say.”
“That was a test?”
“The only one that matters.” She touched the wool scarf lightly. “You helped me before you knew who I was. That matters more than any presentation or pitch deck. The foundation will fund your project.”
I stared at her, completely stunned. My brain felt like it had been through a blender.
She extended her hand across the narrow space between our seats.
“Let’s build something good together.”
“Let’s build something
good together.”
I took her hand, still processing everything.
I looked down at my hands, still trembling slightly. Then I looked back at the strange young woman who’d just turned my entire day upside down.
“Thank you,” I said quietly. “But next time, maybe just email?”
She laughed. “Where’s the fun in that? Besides, I can’t test people this thoroughly via email.”
I looked back at the strange
young woman who’d just turned
my entire day upside down.
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