My 13-year-old daughter brought a starving classmate home for dinner — then something fell out of her backpack that I wasn’t prepared for. “She’s eating with us.” My daughter, Sam, said it like it wasn’t a request. I stood over the stove, trying to make dinner last for four. Groceries had gone up again. Now there were five. The girl behind her looked like she wanted to disappear. Oversized hoodie in the heat. Worn-out shoes. Eyes on the floor. “This is Lizie,” my daughter said. I forced a smile. “Hey. Grab a plate.” I did the math. Less meat. More rice. Maybe no one would notice. Dinner was quiet. My husband tried to talk. Lizie answered softly, barely a whisper. But she ate. Slow. Careful. Steady. Like she hadn’t had a real meal in a while. She drank glass after glass of water. Every sudden move made her tense. When she left, I turned to my daughter. “You can’t just bring people home like that. We’re barely managing.” “She didn’t eat all day.” “That doesn’t—” “She almost fainted again,” my daughter cut in. “Her dad’s working nonstop trying to cover hospital bills. The power was out last week.” I stopped. “She passed out at school today. They told her to eat better. But she only eats lunch. That’s it.” I sat down. I’d been worried about making dinner stretch. She was just trying to get through the day. “Bring her back,” I said quietly. “Tomorrow?” “Yeah.” She came the next day. And the next. It became routine. Homework at the counter. Dinner. Then she’d leave. She didn’t ask for more. She didn’t say much. She just ate what was there. One evening, her backpack slipped off her shoulder and hit the floor. Something fell out. Not books. Not papers. I bent to pick it up. And the moment I saw what she’d been carrying… my blood ran cold. I looked up at her. She froze. “Lizie… what is this?!”
“Dad!”
Sam intercepted her, waving a banana. “You forgot dessert, Liz.”
Lizie blinked at her. “Really? Are you sure?”
Sam pushed it into her hand. “House rule. Nobody leaves here hungry. Ask my Mom.”
Lizie gripped the banana, clutching her backpack tighter. “Thank you,” she whispered, like she wasn’t sure she deserved it. She lingered at the door, glancing back.
Dan nodded at her. “Come back any time, hon.”
“Really? Are you sure?”
Her cheeks flushed pink. “Okay. If it’s not too much trouble.”
“Never,” Dan said. “We always have room at our table.”
As soon as the door shut, my tone sharpened. “Sam, you can’t just bring people home. We’re barely managing.”
Sam didn’t move. “She didn’t eat all day, Mom. How could I ignore that?”
I stared at my daughter. “That doesn’t —”
“She almost fainted, Mom!” Sam shot back. “Her dad’s working nonstop. Their power was shut off last week. Yes, we’re not rich, but we can afford to eat.”
“She didn’t eat all day, Mom. How could I ignore that?”
Dan leaned in, his hand on Sam’s shoulder.
“Are you serious, Sammie?”
She nodded. “It’s bad, Dad. Today at school, she passed out in the gym for a few minutes. The teachers told her to eat better. But she only eats lunch — and that’s not even every day.”
My anger wilted. I sat at the kitchen table, feeling the room tilt. “I… I was worried about dinner stretching. And this sweet girl is just trying to get through the day… I’m sorry, Sam, I shouldn’t have shouted.”
“She only eats lunch — and that’s not even every day.”
Sam met my eyes, stubborn and soft. “I told her to come back tomorrow.”
I exhaled, defeated but proud. “Okay. Bring her back for some food.”
***
The next day, I cooked extra pasta, nerves prickling as I seasoned the mince.
Lizie returned, hugging her bag.
At dinner, she cleaned her plate, then carefully wiped her spot at the table.
Dan asked, “You doing okay, Lizie?”
She nodded, not meeting his gaze.
“You doing okay, Lizie?”
***
By Friday, Lizie was a fixture at our home — homework, dinner, and goodbye. She washed dishes with Sam, humming softly. One evening, she dozed at the counter, jolted awake, then apologized three times.
Dan caught my arm. “Should we call someone? She needs… help, right?”
“And say what?” I whispered. “That her dad’s broke and she’s tired? That’s not exactly… I don’t know how to tackle this, Dan. Let’s just try our best.”
“She looks exhausted.”
I nodded. “I’ll talk to her. Gently this time, I promise.”
“Should we call someone? She needs… help, right?”
***
Over the weekend, I tried to find out more information.
Sam shrugged. “She doesn’t talk about home, Mom. She just says that her dad’s working a lot. And sometimes the power gets cut for a few days at a time. She pretends it’s fine, but she’s always hungry… and tired.”
That Monday, Lizie arrived looking even paler. As she pulled out her homework, her backpack tumbled from the chair and burst open.
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