The Cold November Afternoon
The November wind bit into the skin, carrying the damp chill from the river. Between the rows of crumbling concrete garages, a five-year-old boy played restlessly. His mother stood a short distance away, her phone pressed to her ear, laughing at her friend’s jokes without a care.
The boy drifted closer to the edge of the river while his mother remained distracted. The water that day was murky and restless — the heavy rains had made the current stronger. One wrong step — and the boy slipped, screaming as he plunged into the water, his heavy jacket dragging him down almost instantly.
A Cry No One Heard
The mother noticed nothing. She kept talking, only glancing around from time to time in absentminded fashion.
The boy struggled, his small hands splashing desperately, but the current tugged him farther from the bank. His cries turned into gasps as he fought to catch his breath.
The Outcast Who Acted
On the opposite side of the river, a man appeared — one whom locals usually mocked and avoided. Thin, unkempt, known to all simply as “Erlich,” he was a homeless wanderer who found shelter in an abandoned house nearby.
But when Erlich heard the child’s desperate cry, he didn’t hesitate for even a second. Without worrying about his dirty, torn clothes, he dove straight into the icy water. He fought against the freezing current until he reached the boy and seized him by the collar.
Pulled Back to Safety
The boy sobbed, pale and trembling, his small body stiff from the cold. Erlich wrapped him in his tattered cloak, holding him firmly against his chest. Step by step, he carried him back to shore.
It was only then that the mother finally noticed. Her eyes widened, and instead of rushing toward her son, she screamed.
— Did you touch my son? You filthy creep!
— He was drowning…
— Better he sink than end up in your dirty hands!
A Wounded Heart
Erlich froze, disbelief on his face. The words pierced him, but more than anything, he feared for the boy. The mother hadn’t even checked if her son was safe — she was too busy shouting.
In that instant, Erlich made a decision. He held the boy close once more and turned away.
— Hey! Give him back! — the woman screamed, but she didn’t dare step forward.
Finding Help Elsewhere
Erlich walked calmly to the house of an elderly neighbor, a kind woman who often looked after others in the area. He knocked firmly on her door.
— Please, help the boy, — he said, breathless. — Call the police. His mother almost let him be taken by the river.
The neighbor wasted no time. She dialed immediately. Within minutes, the police arrived. They listened, they saw, and they took the mother away, though she continued to hurl insults until the very end.
A New Beginning
After the investigation, the mother lost her parental rights. The boy first stayed with the elderly neighbor, who cared for him gently, and later he was placed with a foster family who could give him the warmth and protection he needed.
And though Erlich was still the same homeless man in torn clothes, for one brief moment, he had been the only one who truly saw the value of a child’s life.
