Girl Waited Two Hours With A Millionaire’s Wallet In The Snow-Teptep

Sophie Rivera was eight years old when she learnt that doing the right thing could be heavier than doing the easy thing.

For two hours, she stood outside the tallest glass office tower on the avenue with snow gathering on her shoulders and a plastic carrier bag clutched tight against her chest.

Inside the bag was a stranger’s wallet.

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Not just any wallet.

A black leather one, damp from slush, heavy with bank cards, business cards, a building access pass, a driving licence, and more folded banknotes than Sophie had ever seen in one place.

The name on the cards was Robert Sterling.

The same name, in silver lettering, sat above the entrance to the tower in front of her.

Sterling Commercial Group.

Adults kept walking past.

Some glanced down at her and then away again, as if a child in the snow was easier to ignore if they treated her like part of the weather.

A man in a dark coat stepped around her without slowing.

A woman with a phone pressed to her ear frowned at Sophie’s wet shoes, then carried on through the revolving doors.

A delivery rider stamped his feet near the kerb and asked if she was lost.

Sophie shook her head.

She was not lost.

She was waiting.

Her mum had always said that important things needed to be put back into the right hands.

Maria Rivera said it about school jumpers, borrowed library books, someone else’s change at the corner shop, and once, very seriously, about a neighbour’s front-door key that had been dropped in the hallway.

“You don’t just hand it to whoever’s nearest,” Maria had told her, folding a tea towel over the back of a chair. “You make sure it gets home.”

So Sophie had decided the wallet had to get home.

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