I once defended a single mom caught stealing a blue pen. She’d promised it for her son’s birthday but couldn’t afford it. I convinced the judge to let her go. Twenty-five years later, I was running my own law firm when a young man walked in for an interview. Something about his eyes felt familiar. His name was Milan Roque. Sharp resume. Calm confidence. Strong values. When I asked why he didn’t choose a high-paying corporate firm, he said, “My mom taught me to do the right thing. A lawyer once changed her life with one small act.”
My heart stopped.
“The blue pen?” I asked.
His face shifted. “She told me that story every year.”
His mother, Adina, had passed away from cancer, but she’d kept that pen for decades. She said it reminded her she mattered.
I hired Milan on the spot.
Months later, he brought me a pro-bono eviction case. As I read the name, my chest tightened — it was my niece. Estranged for years, struggling in silence. Milan fought for her with quiet fire. He won. And because of that case, my family healed.
Weeks later, Milan handed me a small box.
Inside was the blue pen.
I placed it in a glass case in our lobby.
The plaque reads: “This pen changed two lives. Maybe it can change more.”
One small kindness. Thirty years of echoes.
And a reminder I’ll never forget:
Always look up. You never know whose life you’re changing.