It was a grey, drizzly morning, and the schoolyard puddles shone like little mirrors. Ahmed hurried under the eaves, shaking raindrops off a bright umbrella. Near the gate, a new boy named Sami stood alone, hugging his backpack. His shoes were soaked and his face was turned down, the way faces look when a day has started badly.
Just then Sami's backpack slipped, and everything tumbled out — pencils, a lunchbox, a drawing curling in the wet. The other children rushed past, late for the bell. But Ahmed stopped. Without a word, Ahmed crouched and began gathering the pencils one by one, sheltering the soggy drawing under the bright umbrella before the rain could ruin it.
Thanks, mumbled Sami, surprised. I thought nobody would. Ahmed smiled and handed back the rescued drawing — a careful sketch of a castle with too many towers. This is really good, said Ahmed. You should sit with me. I can never get the towers right. For the first time that morning, Sami's face lifted, like a window opening.
All day they stuck together. Ahmed showed Sami where the library hid its best dragon books, and Sami taught Ahmed how to draw a tower that didn't lean. At lunch they traded halves of their sandwiches. The classroom that had felt so big and cold to Sami in the morning felt, by afternoon, a little like a place he belonged.
When the bell rang, the rain had finally stopped, and the puddles caught the gold of a clearing sky. See you tomorrow? asked Sami, hopeful. Of course, said Ahmed. Walking home, Ahmed thought about how a spilled bag and one bright umbrella had turned a stranger into a friend — and how the smallest kindness can fill a whole day with light.
When Ahmed got home, there was a folded paper tucked into the backpack — Sami had slipped it in without a word. Ahmed opened it carefully. It was the castle drawing, finished now, with neat towers that stood straight and tall. In the corner Sami had added two small figures holding a bright umbrella, and underneath, in careful letters, he had written: For my first friend. Ahmed felt warm all the way down to the toes. That evening the drawing went up on the fridge with a round magnet, where everyone could see it. And every morning after, Ahmed and Sami walked to school together, splashing through the puddles on purpose, two friends under one bright umbrella. Some friendships take years to grow; this one had taken a single rainy morning and one small, kind choice.
A small kindness, freely given, can turn a stranger into a friend.