The rusted chain jutting from the sand seemed worthless to everyone else, but to 13-year-old Adam, it promised an escape from poverty. He couldn’t have known that tugging on those corroded links would teach him something far more valuable than gold or silver. Adam had only been three years old when his parents’ car veered off the coastal highway during a storm.
Too young to understand the concept of death, he simply knew that Mommy and Daddy weren’t coming home. His grandfather, Richard, became his entire world. He was his mother, father, teacher, and friend all rolled into one weathered, kind-faced man.
“You’re all I’ve got left, kiddo,” Richard would say, ruffling Adam’s sandy brown hair. “And I’m all you’ve got. But that’s enough, isn’t it?”
And for many years, it was enough.
They lived in a small house near the beach, where Richard worked odd jobs to keep food on the table. But as Adam grew older, he noticed the worry lines deepening on his grandfather’s face, the way Richard would sit at the kitchen table late at night, head in his hands, bills scattered before him. When Adam turned ten, they lost the house.
The bank took it, along with most of their belongings. All that remained was an old trailer that Richard had managed to buy with his last savings. “We’ve got a roof over our heads and the ocean at our doorstep,” Richard told Adam as they moved their meager possessions into the trailer.
“Many people don’t even have that much.”
The trailer park wasn’t much, but it was positioned on a bluff overlooking a stretch of wild coastline. While other kids went to school, Adam learned from his grandfather and the world around him. Richard couldn’t afford school supplies or tuition, but he had a wealth of knowledge about nature, mechanics, and life.
One evening, as they sat outside their trailer watching the sunset over the water, Richard quizzed Adam on the constellation patterns appearing in the darkening sky. “Orion’s Belt,” Adam said promptly, pointing upward. “And there’s the Big Dipper.
The North Star is right there, which means we’re facing east right now.”
Richard smiled, impressed. “Good. Now, what would you do if you were lost at sea?”
Adam didn’t hesitate.
“I’d use the North Star to navigate. And I’d know that waves typically move toward shore, so I could follow them. Plus, I’d look for signs of land like clouds gathering or birds flying in specific patterns.”
“Where did you learn that last part?” Richard asked, surprised.
“From that book you got me from the library sale,” Adam replied. “The one about island survival.”
Richard chuckled and shook his head. “You’re smarter than most adults I know, Adam.
Don’t let anyone tell you different.”
“Do you think I’ll ever go to a real school?” Adam asked. Richard’s face grew serious. “I’m trying, kiddo.
But in the meantime, don’t underestimate what you’re learning right here. Some things can’t be taught in classrooms.”
Adam nodded, but his eyes drifted toward the lights of the town in the distance, where children his age lived normal lives with homework and friends and packed lunches. “Hey,” Richard said, noticing Adam’s expression.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇