I Kept Coming Home to a Toothpick in the Lock Instead of Calling the Police I Took Revenge on My Own Terms

After a long shift one evening, I came home and couldn’t unlock my front door. Someone had jammed a toothpick deep into the keyhole. My brother came over with tools, fixed it, and we laughed it off—until it happened again the next night.

That’s when he set up a hidden camera in a tree facing my porch. When the lock was sabotaged a third time, we checked the footage. I was stunned to see not a vandal, but a little girl in a bright yellow raincoat.

She tiptoed up to my door, nervously looked around, pushed something into the keyhole, and ran. Confused more than angry, I decided to wait for her the following afternoon. I sat on my porch with a book, pretending not to notice when she approached again.

When I gently called out, she froze. After reassuring her I wasn’t mad, I asked why she kept doing it. Her answer broke my heart.

Her dad had been a handyman who fixed locks and broken things, but he had gotten sick and “went away.” She didn’t believe he was coming back. Breaking my lock, she said, was her way of creating jobs for him—pretending he was still out there fixing things. Instead of scolding her, I offered her something different.