The Lost Boy in Central Park Had a Father No One Wanted to Cross-thuyhien

The little boy could not have been more than five years old when I found him standing alone in the middle of Central Park.

He was too small for the crowd around him.

That was the first thing I noticed.

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Not the suit.

Not the polished shoes.

Not the fact that his tiny jacket probably cost more than my rent.

I noticed how little he looked while adults moved around him like he was a dropped glove nobody wanted to pick up.

The afternoon air smelled like roasted nuts, damp grass, hot coffee, and car exhaust drifting in from Columbus Circle.

Bike bells rang behind me.

A runner cursed under his breath when a tourist stopped too suddenly.

A dog barked somewhere near the path.

And in the middle of all that normal New York noise, the boy stood crying with both fists pressed to his chest.

People saw him.

I know they did.

They glanced, slowed half a step, then kept walking.

New York has a special way of making fear look like inconvenience.

I was supposed to be on a twenty-five-minute lunch break from the café.

At 1:17 PM, I checked my phone because Rachel had already covered for me twice that week, and I hated making her do extra work during the rush.

I had twenty-three minutes left.

I should have kept walking.

Instead, I crouched on the path in front of him and kept my hands open where he could see them.

“Hey, sweetheart,” I said softly. “Are you lost?”

He looked at me with huge dark eyes, his face blotchy and wet, and answered in a rush of words I did not understand.

It was not English.

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