Poor boy promised, ‘I’ll marry you when I’m rich,’ to the Black girl who fed him

Poor boy promised, ‘I’ll marry you when I’m rich,’ to the Black girl who fed him

Poor Boy Promised, “I’ll Marry You When I’m Rich,” to the Black Girl Who Fed Him

The summer sun beat down on the dusty streets of Willow Creek, a small town where everybody knew everybody else’s business.

For most children, summer meant freedom.

For twelve-year-old Ethan Parker, it meant hunger.

His father had passed away when he was eight, and his mother worked two cleaning jobs just to keep a roof over their heads. Some weeks they managed. Other weeks they didn’t.

By the end of every month, their refrigerator looked almost empty.

Ethan learned early how to ignore the pain in his stomach.

He learned to drink water when he was hungry.

He learned to smile when classmates talked about restaurants he could never afford.

Most importantly, he learned not to ask for help.

Pride was often the only thing poor people believed they still owned.

But one afternoon changed everything.

The Girl With the Lunchbox

It was the first week of July.

Ethan sat alone behind the community center, pretending to read an old comic book he had found in a trash bin.

In reality, he was trying to distract himself from hunger.

That morning, all he had eaten was a slice of stale bread.

As he sat there, he noticed a girl approaching.

She couldn’t have been much older than him.

She carried a colorful lunchbox decorated with flowers.

Her name was Maya Johnson.

Everyone in town knew Maya.

She was cheerful, confident, and kind to almost everyone she met.

Unlike Ethan, she never seemed afraid to talk to strangers.

She sat beside him without asking permission.

“You look hungry,” she said.

Ethan immediately shook his head.

“I’m fine.”

She raised an eyebrow.

“You’re terrible at lying.”

Before he could respond, she opened her lunchbox.

Inside were sandwiches, fruit, cookies, and a small bottle of juice.

She handed him half of her sandwich.

He hesitated.

“I can’t take your food.”

“Sure you can.”

“No.”

“Then I’ll just sit here until you do.”

For nearly a minute, neither moved.

Finally, Ethan accepted the sandwich.

It was the best thing he had eaten in weeks.

Maya pretended not to notice how quickly he finished it.

But she smiled.

And from that day forward, everything changed.

An Unlikely Friendship

Over the next several weeks, Maya and Ethan became inseparable.

Every afternoon, they met near the community center.

Sometimes they talked.

Sometimes they played basketball.

Sometimes they simply sat beneath an old oak tree and watched clouds drift across the sky.

And almost every day, Maya brought extra food.

She never made Ethan feel embarrassed.

She never acted as though she was doing charity.

Instead, she treated sharing food as the most natural thing in the world.

One day, Ethan finally asked why.

“Why are you always helping me?”