Boy Brings Coin Jar To Bank Before The Bad Men Come Back-heuh

The entire lobby fell silent when a seven-year-old boy walked into Ridge Community Bank carrying a pickle jar full of coins and asked to open a savings account “before the bad men came back.”

At first, Laura Bennett noticed the jar before she noticed the terror.

It was glass, old and wide-mouthed, the sort of jar people keep under a sink or on a high kitchen shelf because it might be useful one day.

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For Caleb, it looked almost as large as his chest.

He carried it with both arms wrapped round it, elbows locked, shoulders bunched, his small trainers squeaking faintly on the polished floor.

Coins knocked against one another inside with a nervous little clink.

It was the kind of sound that should have belonged to pocket money, sweet shops, bus fares, a child saving up for something ordinary.

In Caleb’s hands, it sounded like an alarm.

The branch had been having an ordinary afternoon until that moment.

Rain streaked the front windows.

Customers stood in a patient queue near the counter, damp collars turned down, umbrellas dripping into the stand by the door.

One man was complaining about a fee on his debit card.

An elderly couple were discussing a cheque in the quiet, clipped tone of two people trying not to argue in public.

Behind the counter, Sarah was entering figures into a terminal while another teller counted notes with practised fingers.

Laura had seen so many afternoons like it that she could almost feel the rhythm of the place without looking up.

Then the boy came in alone.

No adult followed.

No one hurried after him calling his name.

He did not wander or hesitate as lost children usually do.

He walked straight across the lobby, past the waiting customers and the leaflet stands and the wet black mats by the entrance, and stopped at Laura’s desk.

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