Our new neighbor kept a bowl of marbles in his front yard, and my mother and I couldn’t stop wondering why. We were too shy to ask at first. His name was Dorian Weller, a quiet older man who often stood beside the bowl as if it held his entire world. One evening, curiosity finally won, and I asked him about it. He smiled gently and invited me closer.
Each marble, he explained, represented a happy memory he refused to let time steal—his wedding day, his daughter’s first steps, small moments that once filled his life with meaning. His wife had passed years earlier, and his daughter lived far away. The marbles reminded him that he had been deeply loved, even if his days were quieter now.
I began visiting often, and together we added marbles for new, simple joys. One day, I brought marbles meant not for the past, but for future happiness. The idea moved him to tears. Soon, my mother crossed the street too, and a gentle friendship formed.
As they talked, my mom realized how much she missed her own father. She reached out, and they reunited in tears, sharing stories that felt tied to those marbles. Slowly, Dorian’s once-lonely yard filled with laughter again—visits, shared meals, grandchildren, and new memories.
Over time, my mother and Dorian fell in love. He proposed beside the marble bowl, saying he’d learned he wasn’t alone anymore. They married under the same tree, guests adding marbles of their own. All because we dared to ask about a bowl of marbles.