The Boy Under The Pine Tree And The Letter His Father Feared-tantan

The first thing people noticed about Noah was how still he could be.

Not quiet.

Not shy.

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Still.

At seven years old, he could stand beneath the pine tree behind the boarding school with his hands pressed to his sides, his chin level, and his eyes fixed on the brick wall in front of him until the bell rang him back inside.

Children are not made for that kind of stillness.

They bounce on their toes, drag sticks through dirt, complain about lunch, chase balls they do not care about just because somebody else is running.

Noah did none of it.

Every morning recess, every lunch recess, and every short break before evening study hall, he walked to the same tree as if someone had drawn a line on the ground only he could see.

He stopped where the roots cracked the dirt.

He faced the wall.

He became part of the yard.

The other kids got used to him faster than the adults did.

At first, a few boys tried to make him laugh.

One tossed a pinecone near his shoe.

One whispered, “Statue boy.”

One asked if he was in trouble.

Noah did not answer.

After a while, children moved around him the way they moved around a bench, a trash can, or a wet patch of grass.

He was there.

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