I Kept Coming Home to a Toothpick in the Lock—Instead of Calling the Police, I Took Revenge on My Own Terms

After a long shift one evening, I came home and couldn’t unlock my front door. Someone had jammed a toothpick deep into the keyhole. My brother came over with tools, fixed it, and we laughed it off—until it happened again the next night. That’s when he set up a hidden camera in a tree facing my porch. When the lock was sabotaged a third time, we checked the footage. I was stunned to see not a vandal, but a little girl in a bright yellow raincoat. She tiptoed up to my door, nervously looked around, pushed something into the keyhole, and ran.

Confused more than angry, I decided to wait for her the following afternoon. I sat on my porch with a book, pretending not to notice when she approached again. When I gently called out, she froze. After reassuring her I wasn’t mad, I asked why she kept doing it. Her answer broke my heart. Her dad had been a handyman who fixed locks and broken things, but he had gotten sick and “went away.” She didn’t believe he was coming back. Breaking my lock, she said, was her way of creating jobs for him—pretending he was still out there fixing things.

Instead of scolding her, I offered her something different. “What if you help me fix things instead?” I suggested. Her face lit up. From then on, the toothpicks stopped. Every few days she’d come by in her yellow coat for “fix-it time.” We tightened hinges, repaired loose boards, and eventually fixed a broken toy car her dad had promised to mend. When it rolled again, she hugged me and whispered that it felt like her dad had helped one more time. Slowly, she began talking about him—his jokes, his lessons, how much she missed him.

Months later, I found an old toolbox left behind in my garage by the previous homeowner. Inside were handwritten labels on each tool with encouraging notes. It turned out the box had belonged to her father, who had once worked on the house. When I returned it to her, she cried and called it “his hands.” Soon she started helping neighbors with small repairs under a handmade sign: Little Tomas Fix-It Services. What began as a broken lock became a bridge between grief and healing. Sometimes, what looks like trouble is really someone quietly asking to remember—and to be remembered.

Related Posts

My Mother Kicked Me Out When I Was Homeless

At twenty-four, I lost my job and, with it, everything that felt stable. With two little kids depending on me, I had nowhere left to turn, so…

Split-Second Instinct: Hunter or Hero?

In the wild, every second tells a story… but this one isn’t what you expect.A fearless cat locks onto a deadly snake—but what happens next will leave…

A Whispered Warning From a Stranger in the Movie Theater

We met outside the theater just before sunset, and everything felt effortless from the start. When he saw me, he smiled warmly, handed me my ticket, and…

My Daughter Bought Her Dream Machine—Then Her Stepmother Did the Unthinkable..

A sudden splash shattered the quiet afternoon, and moments later I saw my daughter Harper’s sewing machine—something she had worked six months to afford—sinking to the bottom…

The Dentist Secretly Slipped Me a Note… I Went Straight to the Police

When my ten-year-old daughter Ava first complained about a toothache, it seemed like nothing serious. But when the pain persisted, I scheduled a dental appointment. Unexpectedly, my…

“You’re Not Pregnant,” She Said—What Happened Next Changed Everything

We had recently celebrated my sister-in-law’s pregnancy, and the evening was filled with joy, laughter, and conversations about the future. Not long after, I discovered I was…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *