🎧 Audio Story September 8, 2025 👁 30 views

Pockets and the Milkman

← All Stories

In the good old days, when Pockets was growing up in a quiet suburban neighborhood, everyone knew each other by name and what they did for a living. Mr. Kurt Miller was the neighborhood social service agent. He made sure the streets stayed clean and the park stayed tidy, and he always had a friendly wave for everyone who passed by.

Mr. Jackson was the milkman. Every Saturday, like clockwork, he came rolling down the street with wooden crates clinking softly—milk, eggs, and sometimes bottles of juice. He knocked on doors, delivered with a smile, and trusted his neighbors. Some paid him later, some tipped a little extra, and everyone knew he’d be there next week, rain or shine.

One sunny Saturday, Pockets was staring out the window when he saw Mr. Jackson’s truck pull up. He raced outside and offered to help carry something.

Mr. Jackson chuckled. “Son, I have been doing this before you were born.”

Pockets grinned. Everyone called him Pockets because he always had something tucked away—marbles, rubber bands, a pencil, sometimes even a little list of ways to help. “Yes, sir,” he said, “but my hands are new and my feet are quick. Let me try.”

Mr. Jackson’s eyes crinkled at the corners. “Quick feet are fine,” he said. “But this job takes careful hands and an honest heart.” He tapped the wooden crate of glass bottles. “These are promises in a bottle. If you carry one promise for me, you carry it for the whole neighborhood.”

Pockets stood a little taller. “I can carry a promise.”

“Alright,” Mr. Jackson said, passing him a smaller crate. “Start with Mukur at the blue house. One bottle of milk, half a dozen eggs. Knock twice, say good morning, and bring back the envelope on the hook. No running. Hold the crate steady. And remember—if anything goes wrong, you tell me right away.”

Pockets nodded so hard his cap wobbled. He lifted the crate with both hands, elbows tucked like Mr. Jackson showed him, and stepped carefully down the sidewalk.

The neighborhood hummed with Saturday sounds: lawn mowers whirring, sparrows chit-chit-chitting, a screen door clapping shut. Mr. Kurt Miller was out with his grabber tool and bright orange bucket, plucking stray wrappers from the curb.

“Morning, Pockets!” Mr. Kurt called. “On a mission?”

🔒

Continue Reading

You\'re reading a preview. Subscribe for full access to every story and audio.