I was twelve the first time I stole flowers.
My mother had died the year before, and every Sunday I walked to the small cemetery on the edge of town. At first I brought wildflowers from the roadside, but winter came and nothing grew anymore.
So I started taking roses from the flower shop on Main Street.
Just one or two stems at a time. I’d slip them into my jacket and run before anyone noticed.
One afternoon, I wasn’t fast enough.
I had just clipped three red roses when a voice behind me said calmly, “Those look nice.”
I froze.
The shop owner stood in the doorway, arms folded. She was an older woman with silver hair pulled into a bun.
I expected yelling. Maybe even the police.
Instead she walked toward me slowly and looked at the roses in my shaking hands.
“Who are they for?” she asked.
I couldn’t lie.
“My mom,” I whispered. “She’s buried at the cemetery.”
For a moment she didn’t say anything.
Then she sighed softly.
“If they’re for your mother,” she said gently, “then take them properly. She deserves better than stolen stems.”
She went inside the shop and came back with a small bouquet—roses, lilies, and baby’s breath tied with a ribbon.
“Flowers should be given with pride,” she said, placing them in my hands.
From that day on, every Sunday she let me choose a small bouquet.
I’d walk past the shop, and she’d already have a bucket of flowers waiting.
“Pick the ones your mother would like,” she’d say.
Ten years passed.
Life moved on. I went to college, got a job, and eventually met someone wonderful.
When my fiancée and I started planning our wedding, there was only one place I wanted to get the flowers.
The little shop on Main Street.
The bell above the door chimed as I walked in.
The same woman stood behind the counter, though her hair was whiter now.
She smiled politely. “How can I help you?”
“I’m getting married,” I said. “I’d like flowers for the ceremony.”
She nodded and started showing me arrangements.
But when I spoke again, she suddenly stopped.
“I used to come here every Sunday,” I said quietly. “You gave me flowers for my mother’s grave.”
Her eyes widened.
“You were the boy with the roses.”
I nodded.
She walked around the counter and hugged me.
“You grew up,” she said softly.
When I came to pick up the wedding flowers weeks later, she handed me the bouquets… and one extra arrangement.
“For your mother,” she said.
That morning, before the wedding, I stopped by the cemetery.
And for the first time in years, the flowers on her grave weren’t stolen.
They were given—with love.