One night after work, I came home to find a toothpick jammed into my door lock. My brother helped fix it, but the same thing happened the next evening. We set up a hidden camera—and what I saw shocked me. It wasn’t a vandal. It was a little girl in a bright yellow raincoat, nervously sticking toothpicks into the lock before running away.
The next day, I waited outside. When she appeared, I gently asked why. She whispered, “My dad used to fix locks. He got sick and went away. Sometimes I pretend he still has jobs to do.” My heart sank. She wasn’t causing trouble—she was trying to keep her dad’s memory alive.
I invited her to help me with small repairs instead. Soon, she was showing up regularly, tightening hinges, fixing toys, and telling me stories about her father. When I found an old toolbox in my garage—labeled in her dad’s handwriting—I gave it to her.
Tears filled her eyes: “This is his.”
From then on, she called herself “Little Tomas,” honoring her father by helping neighbors with repairs. The girl who once left toothpicks in my door found healing through fixing, and she reminded me that even small acts of kindness can grow into something much bigger.
