On Mother’s Day, a little girl showed up with my son’s backpack — and a shocking secret
I lost my eight-year-old son, Randy, at school only one week before Mother’s Day.
I heard people saying that it was an unfortunate tragedy, and no one could have prevented it from happening. I tried accepting that since I knew it would be hard for me to move on if I had other thoughts in my mind.
There was one thing I could not understand.
That day Randy passed away, his bright red Spider-Man backpack was gone.
This may seem insignificant after losing your son, but you have to understand how important that backpack was to him. He took it wherever he went. He placed it near his bed before going on a field trip because he was scared that he might forget it the following morning.
And suddenly it was gone.
Ms. Bell, his teacher, stated that she never saw it once the ambulance left. “We made sure to look through all the classrooms and hallways,” the principal assured me.
The officer who had come to our home had always seemed awkward whenever I brought up this topic.
“Sometimes things can be misplaced when it comes to such incidents,” he had told me softly.
I recall looking at him from across the kitchen table.
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“My son is gone because of what happened there, but the only item he had on him that day disappeared immediately after.”
He could not give me any response.
No one could.
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And then Mother’s Day came, just like a sudden storm I wasn’t prepared for.Luggage
Each year, Randy would make me breakfast himself. He would usually make dry cereal, leave milk everywhere, and get flowers from outside with soil still clinging to the roots.
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On that day, I was alone in the living room with Randy’s dinosaur blanket in my lap, while an empty cereal bowl sat unused on the coffee table.
It was too quiet inside the house.
It was around nine when the doorbell sounded.
I did not answer it because I did not want a condolence card or anyone to look at me with pity.
There were more rings, followed by loud banging a few seconds later.
It took all I had to finally make my way to the door, prepared to deal with anyone who needed something.
But when I opened it, a little girl stood holding onto Randy’s backpack as tight as she could.
She was no more than eight or nine years old, with dirty hair and tear-filled eyes.
As soon as I laid my eyes on that backpack, I was sure my heart had skipped a beat.
“Are you Randy’s mom?”
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I nodded, unable to say anything more.
“I know that you were looking for this, right?”
My eyes locked on the familiar Spider-Man fabric.
“What do you mean by that?”
She hugged it even tighter.
“Randy told me to hold onto it; he was my best friend.”
“What is your name, darling?”
“Sarah.”
I asked her softly to come in, and she took a moment but finally came into the kitchen with the bag, as if it were something precious that she carried.Luggage
“I haven’t stolen it,” she said hastily.
“I believe you.”
“I was protecting it.”
It felt like my heart was being shattered by those words.
Sarah put the bag on the kitchen table with both hands.
“Open it,” she said.
My fingers shook as I slowly unzipped it.
Inside were balls of lavender and white yarn, knitting needles, and folds of tissue paper enclosing something soft.
I delicately removed the object from inside.
It was a handmade unicorn.
At least that’s what it was intended to be; one leg was still missing, its body had a strange tilt, and the horn appeared lopsided.
“It was Randy’s gift for you,” said Sarah hastily. “From craft class.”Gifts
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I stared at the awkward-looking unicorn in shock.
“Why would he make a unicorn?” I whispered. “Randy adored dinosaurs.”
Sarah dabbed her nose with her sleeve.
“He said that you liked them,” she answered.
The pain in my chest came immediately.
Several months ago, I had made a joke about loving unicorns and sipping coffee from an ancient unicorn cup.
That he had remembered such a thing stunned me.
Underneath the yarn was a folded Mother’s Day card written in my son’s messy handwriting.
Mom,
It’s not done yet. Don’t laugh.
Sarah says the horn is the hardest part.
I love you more than cereal breakfasts.
Love, Randy.
A noise slipped out from me before I could suppress it.
Sarah began crying as well.
Then, in a hushed voice, she said, “There’s something else.”
At the very bottom of the bag lay another piece of paper, wadded up tightly as if someone had been trying to conceal it.Luggage
I unfolded it slowly.
Dear Mom,
I’m sorry I ruined the Mother’s Day wall.
I know you’re tired of problems.
But I promise I’m not bad.
Love, Randy.
I stared at the note in confusion.
“What is this?”
Sarah looked down at her shoes.
“Ms. Bell made him write it.”
A cold feeling spread through my chest.
“When?”
“Before he fell.”
There was suddenly an awkward silence in the kitchen.
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Sarah told me that yet another student, Tyler, had splattered some paint on the display for Mother’s Day, and some decorations were destroyed. Randy got blamed for it since he was holding glue to help Sarah work on her assignment.
“He kept saying he didn’t do it,” Sarah murmured. “He said you knew he wasn’t a liar.”
I looked back down at Randy’s apology letter, noting how hard he must have pressed his pencil against the page.
“He was afraid you would be disappointed in him,” Sarah continued softly.
It tore at my heart, imagining my son’s last minutes being consumed with worry over disappointing me.
“Did anything else happen after that?” I questioned.
She placed her hand on the center of her chest.
“He told me his chest was feeling squished again.”
“Again?”
She nodded slowly while crying.
“Yes, but he told me earlier and said not to tell you because you were ill.”
I couldn’t breathe.
It seemed that Randy had been hiding his chest pains from me because he did not want to worry me.
Sarah wiped her tears.
“I told him to drink water,” she whispered. “My grandpa always says water helps when something hurts.”
I knelt carefully in front of her.
“You were trying to help him.”
“But it didn’t help.”
“No,” I answered softly. “But you were kind to him. That matters.”
Sarah told me that Randy tried putting the unicorn back into his backpack because he did not want me to see the apology note before his Mother’s Day gift.Luggage
Then Randy collapsed.
Teachers shouted. Paramedics rushed into the room. Students were hurried out of the classroom.
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Through all the chaos, Randy’s backpack remained untouched beneath the table.Gifts
“Before everything happened, he told me to protect it until Mother’s Day,” Sarah said quietly. “That’s why I took it home.”
She appeared frightened when she confessed this.
“I thought adults would throw it away.”
Rather than responding to her, I hugged her tight as she sobbed into my chest.
That bag contained everything left of my child’s soul.
It wasn’t just the unicorn he never finished; it was the evidence that proved what he was like during those last few hours – compassionate, considerate, and concerned about others.
After Sarah regained her composure, I asked her who raised her.
“Grandpa,” she responded softly.
I phoned him, and an hour later, he appeared, tired and anxious.
He apologized several times for Sarah appearing unexpectedly, but I shook my head.
“She gave me something very special,” I replied.
The following morning, I came back to school with Randy’s backpack.
In it were the letter of apology, the half-made unicorn, and his Mother’s Day card.
Ms. Bell greeted me in the hallway, and as soon as she saw the backpack, she seemed shocked.
I gave her Randy’s letter of apology.
“This is what my son wrote before he died,” I told her softly.
She clutched her hands to her mouth.
I asked her directly whether Randy had actually ruined the display.
There was a long pause before she finally admitted what happened.
“No,” she whispered again. “He didn’t.”
Sarah held my hand as we stood together.
I looked into the eyes of Ms. Bell, but there was just one thing that I had to tell her.
“I don’t blame you for what happened to my son. However, the last thing you made him feel was shame for something he never did.”
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Three days passed, and the school had its Mother’s Day celebration.
Before the event started, Ms. Bell publicly admitted that Randy had been wrongly blamed.
It couldn’t take away my pain.
Nothing could.
Next, Sarah walked up to the front of the room, clutching a little gift bag in her hands.Gifts
In it sat the completed unicorn.
It was still a little off-kilter – the horn was lopsided and one ear seemed a little larger than the other.
But it was perfect.
“I finished it for him,” Sarah murmured quietly. “Almost.”
That Mother’s Day, I thought I had lost the last pieces of my son forever.
Instead, a little girl arrived at my door carrying his backpack — and inside it, Randy left behind proof that even after loss, love still finds ways to stay.