Richard Patterson stood in the doorway

of his son’s room, watching the physical

therapist pack up her equipment with

that same apologetic look he’d seen too

many times before.

“I’m sorry, Mr. Patterson,” she said

softly. Tommy just won’t engage with me.

“Perhaps in a few more weeks.” Richard

nodded, though they both knew she

wouldn’t be returning. She was the

seventh therapist in 4 months. The

finest specialists from Boston to San

Francisco had examined his 8-year-old

son. After the accident that damaged

Tommy’s spine, leaving him unable to

walk, the doctors had done everything

medically possible. The rest, they said,

required physical therapy and the

child’s willingness to try. But Tommy

had given up. Richard watched his son

sitting in his wheelchair by the window,

staring out at nothing. The boy who once

ran through these halls laughing, who

climbed trees and played soccer, now

seemed like a shadow of himself. His

light brown hair needed cutting, and his

small frame seemed even smaller somehow,

folded into that chair. “I’ve failed

him,” Richard whispered to himself. That

evening, Richard sat in his study, the

weight of his wealth feeling hollow. He

could buy anything in the world except

the one thing that mattered, his son’s

recovery. His wife had passed when Tommy

was just four. Now it was just the two

of them in this big house, and Richard

felt helpless. The next morning, Maria

Santos arrived for her first day of

work. She was in her late 40s with kind

eyes and a warm smile. She wore her

housekeeping uniform, a bright orange

shirt under a green apron, her hair

neatly tied back with a white headband.

Richard barely noticed her as she

quietly went about her duties. His

household manager had hired her, and

Richard had simply approved it. He had

more important things to worry about,

but Maria noticed Tommy right away. On

her second day, as she was cleaning the

hallway near Tommy’s room, she heard the

sound of something falling. She gently

knocked and opened the door to find

Tommy in his wheelchair, a book on the

floor just beyond his reach. He was

staring at it with tears in his eyes.

“May I help you?” Maria asked softly,

picking up the book. Tommy didn’t

answer, just looked away toward the

window. Maria placed the book on his

lap, then did something unexpected. She

pulled up a chair and sat down beside

him, not hovering over him, not treating

him like a patient, just sitting with

him like a friend might. You know, she

said after a moment, “My name is Maria.

I have a nephew about your age. His name