**The Girl Who Forgot Her Lunch**
When I was eight, there was a girl in my class named Crystal. She was small, quiet, always sitting in the same corner with the same faded sweater. Every day at lunchtime, she’d pat her empty backpack and sigh dramatically,
**“Oh, Mom forgot my lunch again!”**
Most kids rolled their eyes. A few snickered. Our teacher pretended not to hear. But I noticed the way Crystal’s eyes darted around—hopeful, embarrassed, hungry.
One day, I told my mom.
The next morning, she handed me not one lunch bag but two.
“One for you,” she said, “and one for your friend.”
And so it began. Day after day, year after year, my mom packed two lunches—sometimes simple sandwiches, sometimes leftover pasta, sometimes her famous chocolate chip cookies Crystal always lit up at. Crystal never asked questions; she just accepted the lunches gratefully.
Then middle school came. Then high school. Our paths drifted. Eventually, Crystal’s family moved away. I never heard from her again.
—
### **12 Years Later**
I was twenty, sitting in my tiny apartment studying for finals, when my phone rang.
Unknown number.
Normally, I wouldn’t answer, but something nudged me.
“Hello?”
A woman’s voice—older, shaky but urgent—said:
**“Today, you will save a life.”**
Before I could react, she hung up.
My heart thudded. A prank? A wrong number?
But the voice… it felt familiar somehow.
I grabbed my jacket and went out, mind racing, not even sure where I was going until I stopped at the old pedestrian overpass near my college. Something felt wrong—heavy.
Then I saw her.
A young woman was standing on the edge, shoulders shaking, eyes red from crying.
People passed by without noticing. But I walked straight toward her.
“Hey,” I said softly. “Are you okay?”
She startled, wiping her face. “Please… don’t.”
I stayed a few feet away. “You’re not alone. Talk to me.”
For a long moment, she said nothing. Then she whispered her name.
**“Crystal.”**
My breath caught.
She looked older, worn by life, but I recognized her instantly—the girl with the faded sweater and the empty backpack.
“You… you don’t remember me, do you?” I asked gently.
She squinted through her tears. “No, I don’t think—”
“I used to sit next to you in second grade,” I said. “You always forgot your lunch.”
Her face changed completely. Shock. Recognition. A tiny, broken laugh.
“You’re *that* kid?” she whispered. “The one with the lunches?”
I nodded.
Crystal’s legs buckled, and I caught her just as she collapsed into sobs. She clung to me like someone drowning.
“You’re the reason I even made it through some days,” she cried. “My mom… she was sick, addicted. We barely had food. Your lunches were sometimes the only meal I had.”
I held her tighter.
“It’s okay. I’m here. You’re not going anywhere.”
—
### **The Satisfying Ending**
Later, at a café, Crystal told me something else.
“The woman who called you,” she said, “that was my social worker back then. She passed away last year. But she always told me you were my guardian angel.”
I froze.
“But… she called me today.”
Crystal’s eyes widened slowly, tears forming again.
“I’ve had the same number since I was a kid,” she said quietly. “That number is in her old case files. She must have written it down somewhere.”
So maybe it *was* just paperwork being shuffled.
Or maybe it wasn’t.
Either way, when Crystal squeezed my hand and said, “You saved me twice,” I felt something warm burst open in my chest.
We hugged before parting ways, promising to keep in touch—and we did.
She got help. A job. A small apartment. A cat named Muffin.
And every year, on the anniversary of that day, we meet for lunch.
**Two lunches.
Just like old times.**