We waited for our mom to get home from the city, but she didn't come. The snow was falling, and the cold seeped through us as we watched the school bus driver try to keep the bus on the slippery road. She asked us if we'd be okay, and we assured her our mom would be here soon. My sister was just a couple of years older than me, and I looked to her to get us inside, away from the now-blizzard conditions. But the doors were locked, and we didn't have a key. I guessed that Mom knew she'd be home in time to meet the school bus, but we thought she'd been stranded in the city as the snow kept coming.
There was a corner store named Ben's Grocery just under the railroad bridge, and my sister said we should walk there and ask to use the phone to call our dad. She produced a small piece of paper with his work number, which she kept tucked into her boots as we trudged through what felt like an eternity before reaching the store.
The frozen bell on the door clanked rather than rang as we entered the store, as Ben got off his stool behind the counter and hurried over to us, grabbing a couple of blankets off the shelf, giving each of us some welcome warmth. Ben's wife came downstairs and, seeing us, sprang into action, climbing the steps to her kitchen and putting the kettle on to make us some hot cocoa. We told them that our mom hadn't come back from the city, and the school bus dropped us off in front of our house, leaving us stranded. My sister remembered the piece of paper and asked to use their phone to call our dad, but Ben told us the lines were down and the phone didn't work. He said we were better off to just wait there until the blizzard was over, and we could only hope our mom would turn up.
Then the bell clanked, and the door opened, and my sister and I stared at the tall man with a long coat covered in snow. He had to duck down to get inside and introduced himself as our uncle Larry. Our mom's brother, whom we'd heard about over the years but never met. He told us our mom called him from the city where the phones worked and asked him to go to our house and get us until she could get home. It seemed that Uncle Larry was just passing through for a couple of days, and she knew he'd be at the neighborhood bar he had always frequented when he was passing through. Thankfully, he was there.
Our parents had always told us to never go anywhere with a stranger, and he was just that, a stranger. Ben and his wife didn't know what to do or say to the tall stranger, except maybe that the kids could stay there and wait for their mom. Uncle Larry agreed and offered us some candy, but our parents always told us to never take candy from a stranger. He tried to make conversation, but we remained silent because our parents had taught us never to talk to strangers. Then, after what felt like a lifetime, our mom came through the door, hugging both of us so tightly we could barely breathe. She hugged Uncle Larry, and when he told her he had tried to get us to go with him, they refused because of everything they had been taught.
Later on, back in our warm home, Dad finally made it home, and we all had dinner together, including Uncle Larry, who, it was said, never grew tired of telling the story about my sister and me and a frigid day waiting for our mom.
Mike 2026