You’re already halfway down the steps when the boy finishes his sentence, and something in you pauses like a clock skipping a beat.
Food, not money. For a sister with a fever. The request is so specific it doesn’t sound rehearsed.
It sounds like hunger wearing a suit of bravery that’s two sizes too big.
You tighten your grip on the cane, annoyed at your own hesitation.
This is how people get in, you tell yourself, through pity, through stories.
You’ve built a life so sealed that even sympathy feels like a security risk.
But the little girl behind him coughs into her sleeve and your stomach turns, not with fear, with something closer to shame.
“Go away,” you say again, but your voice comes out less sharp this time.
The boy doesn’t flinch. He just swallows and stands straighter, like he’s decided your anger is easier than their reality.
“Please, sir,” he says. “We can work. We’re not thieves.”
He gestures at the yard. “We can pull the weeds, rake, whatever. We won’t touch the house.”
You look at their hands.
Small, cracked at the knuckles, nails with dirt embedded like proof they’ve done this before.
People who scam you usually come with clean palms and loud confidence.
These two come with trembling knees and an honesty that feels inconvenient.
The security guard, Nando, appears behind you, already moving toward the intercom panel.
You don’t even have to tell him. He’s been trained to solve problems by removing them.
He looks at you for permission.
You lift a hand.
“Wait,” you say, and the word surprises both of you.