The Little Girl On The Road And The Friend I Never Got To Say Goodbye To

I was riding out past the edge of town, just looking to clear my head. The road was mostly empty, the kind of stretch where the trees start to thin and the signs for the next town are still twenty miles off. Just me, the wind, and the steady growl of my bike underneath me.

Then I saw her.

A little girl, couldn’t have been older than seven, standing on the gravel shoulder of the road. No adults in sight. She had this small pink backpack and was staring straight ahead like she had somewhere to be. Not crying, not lost-looking. Just… determined.

I slowed down, pulled over, killed the engine. “Hey, sweetheart,” I said, easing off my bike and taking off my helmet, “everything okay?”

She looked up at me. Big brown eyes, scuffed shoes, hair in a messy braid. “I’m fine,” she said, polite but firm. “I’m just walking.”

“Walking where?” I asked, glancing around. “You’re a little far from anywhere, aren’t you?”

She clutched her backpack tighter. “I’m going to see my Grandpa.”

“Where’s he live?”

“In the cemetery,” she said, so matter-of-factly it made my chest tighten.

I crouched a little, so I wasn’t towering over her. “You mean… your grandpa passed away?”

She nodded. “Last week. Mommy says he’s still with me in my heart, but I wanted to see him for real. I don’t think hearts are enough.”

That one hit hard.

I looked down the road. The town cemetery was still another two or three miles up the hill, no sidewalks, and barely a shoulder. Not safe for a grown-up to walk, let alone a little girl.

“You skipped school?” I asked gently.

She hesitated. “I told the bus driver I forgot my lunch and ran home. Then I walked.”

“How far did you come?”

She shrugged. “From the big brick house on Willow Lane.”

That was at least four miles behind us.

“Do your parents know where you are?”

“No. But I’ll be back before dinner. Grandpa used to say, ‘Always be back before dinner or Grandma will worry.’”

I rubbed my jaw and let out a slow breath. I wasn’t about to leave a kid alone on the road, but I also wasn’t exactly used to handling delicate things. My whole life was leather, grease, and road rash. Still, I held out my hand.

“How about I walk with you the rest of the way? Make sure you get there safe?”

She studied me for a second, like kids do. Somehow, she trusted me. Maybe it was the way I spoke. Or maybe she just needed someone.

“Okay,” she said, slipping her hand into mine.

We walked the last couple miles together. She told me all about her grandpa. His name was Walter. He used to pick her up from school, let her eat dessert first, and always called her “Sunbeam.” She missed him more than she knew how to say.

When we got to the cemetery gates, she let go of my hand and walked straight in like she knew exactly where to go.

I followed quietly behind.

She knelt at a fresh grave marked with a simple wooden cross. No stone yet. Just flowers and a small framed photo tucked into the grass.

And then I froze.

Walter Jennings.

I hadn’t seen that name in years.

My throat closed up. That man… he was my old mechanic. The one who taught me everything about engines when I was seventeen and too hot-headed to learn from anyone else. He took me under his wing, gave me my first real shot at riding with pride.

We’d lost touch over the years, like people do. Life happened. But I always thought I’d swing by his place again someday.

Say thank you. Buy him a beer. Let him know he mattered.

Now I was too late.

The girl sat cross-legged in front of the grave and pulled something from her backpack—a small drawing, done in crayon. It was of her and an older man with glasses, both smiling under a big sun.

She set it gently against the flowers. “I made this for him. I didn’t get to give it before he went to heaven.”

I swallowed the lump in my throat. “He would’ve loved that,” I said.

She looked up. “Did you know my grandpa?”

I nodded. “Yeah. A long time ago. He helped me out when I was young. Taught me a lot.”

“He helped everyone,” she said. “Even Mr. Hawkins, who yells a lot.”

That made me chuckle. “Sounds like the same Walter.”

We sat there in silence for a while. She talked to her grandpa like he was still there, telling him about school and how Mommy cried when she made pancakes because they were his favorite.

I stayed quiet. Just listened.

After a while, I stood up. “Come on, Sunbeam,” I said, using her grandpa’s nickname for her, “les’ get you back before dinner, yeah?”

She smiled like I’d said something sacred. Took my hand again.

We walked back to my bike, and I told her we could call her mom first before I gave her a ride home. She agreed, and I pulled out my phone.

Her mom’s voice on the other end was frantic, then relieved, then angry. But when I explained everything, she softened. Said her name was Diane and that she’d meet us at the grocery store parking lot off Route 4.

I helped the little girl with a helmet—way too big for her, but it would do for a slow ride—and we cruised down the road under the orange-tinted sky.

When we pulled up to the lot, Diane was already there, pacing. She ran up the second we stopped, scooping her daughter into her arms.

She looked at me, eyes red. “Thank you. I was going crazy.”

“She’s a brave one,” I said.

Diane hugged her daughter tight, then looked back at me. “She mentioned your name. Mark, right? My dad talked about you sometimes. Said you had good hands and a wild heart.”

I rubbed the back of my neck, suddenly feeling seventeen again. “He saved me from ruining my first bike. And probably myself, too.”

Diane smiled. “He said the same thing about you.”

I nodded, trying to blink away the sting in my eyes. “I never got to say goodbye.”

She reached into her purse and pulled out a folded note. “He wrote this before he passed. Said if anyone came looking for him after he was gone, to give them this.”

I took it carefully. It was old paper, folded twice, my name written in faded ink.

Later, when I was back home, I sat on the porch with a beer and opened the letter.

“Mark,

If you’re reading this, it means you still ride. I hope you’ve learned more from the road than you did from the books. I never told you, but I always saw something good in you. Don’t let regret eat you up. Make peace with the past by showing up for someone now.

Be kind to lost souls. Ride safe. And remember, Sunbeam watches the sky for shooting stars. If you ever see one, make a wish. And maybe send her a postcard.

  • Walter”

I sat there long after the sun went down.

The next morning, I stopped by the stationery shop and bought a pack of postcards. The first one I sent had a photo of a desert highway on it.

“Dear Sunbeam,

Your Grandpa would be proud. Keep smiling.

From, Mark”

Every now and then, I send her one. From every state I pass through. From every quiet road Walter would’ve loved.

Sometimes, doing something small for someone else becomes the way you say goodbye.

It took a little girl walking down the highway to remind me that goodbyes aren’t about timing.

They’re about action.

You don’t have to say the perfect words if you live them instead.

And maybe that’s the lesson Walter was still teaching, even after he was gone.

If this story touched you, share it. You never know who needs a reminder to reach out before it’s too late.