As usual, after work, Bai Min slowly walked home along the sidewalk of the road, feeling bad.
Already 27 years old, she is very alive and has gone through many blind dates. Her brother's son will chase her and call her aunt, and her sister has added a beautiful mixed-race niece like a yellow-haired, black-eyed cartoon doll on the other side of the ocean, but she is still not married.
Fortunately, her parents took care of her sister in the United States, otherwise, she would not have such a quiet life.
My elder brother does business all year round, and I spend most of my time with my nephew at her own family. Bai Min walked into the small restaurant that she used to frequent, sat down in the vacant seat, ordered a side dish she loved, asked for a bowl of rice, and ate it quietly.
The wind blew outside the window, blowing up a few leaves, and the autumn rain fell quietly.
Pack the uneaten meals and spread the umbrella out. Fifty meters forward, there is an elderly beggar, more than half a year, almost nowhere to move.
I walked to the beggar, lowered the food gently, and smiled slightly.
"Send you." The old beggar was very old, with gray hair and loose shoulders, but it was clean and not bad enough to be annoying. In his rough hands, he held a bracelet made of small black stones. The stones were not large, the size of corn kernels was extremely irregular, and they were clustered on a thin, old-fashioned red line.
Bai Min froze slightly, looking at the old beggar with her eyes open, only for a moment, she reached for the bracelet and smiled and said, "Thank you, it's beautiful."
"It's cheap." The old beggar said with joy and cracked his mouth, several teeth had been lost, and his speech was leaking. "It wasn't picked, it was bought. Someone set up a stall here yesterday and bought it for a gift you."
Bai Min smiled again, and it was indeed worthless to wear it on his left wrist. There are often stalls here, all of which are bought in the wholesale market for a lot of bargains, but the old beggar has no money, and this heart moved her. She cherishes this sincerity.