My Neighbors’ Son Was Flashing SOS in Morse Code Every Night — but One Night He Sent a Message That Made My Blood Run Cold
David looked around the room at the overturned table, at me, and finally at his son. He looked at the boy as if he were seeing him without the filter of his own expectations for the first time in years.
“I’m not trying to crush you, Leo,” David said finally. “I’m really not. I’m just trying to shield you from the struggle.”
“I’d rather struggle for something that matters to me.”
The air in the room changed then.
That was the final straw.
I moved toward the door. “Pressure can build strength, David, but if you don’t know when to let off the gas, it just makes dust. You’ve got a good man standing right in front of you. Don’t break him.”
***
A week later, Leo knocked on my door. He looked different — less guarded, his shoulders level.
“Dad said I could ask you about first aid,” he said, shifting his weight. “Since you’ve seen the real thing. He said… he said you might have some insights.”
I invited him in.
A week later, Leo knocked on my door.
We didn’t talk about being heroes. We talked about the basics: how to keep your hands steady when someone else is losing their mind, and how to breathe through the adrenaline.
Sometimes, I’d see David waving from across the street while he worked in the yard.
He wasn’t disapproving anymore; he just looked like a man who was finally learning to listen to the silence.
One night, before I turned in, I glanced out my window.
The light in Leo’s room flickered.
I glanced out my window.
I sat down and watched.
THANK. YOU.
I reached over and flicked my lamp once.
Message received.
I climbed under the covers and fell asleep with a smile on my face. It felt good to know I was making a difference again.
I reached over and flicked my lamp once.
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