A boy gave a strange box to his teacher, and his classmates laughed at him, but when she opened the box, everyone froze in shock.
At the end of the school year, the seventh-grade students decided to wish their teacher happy holidays. Almost everyone brought flowers, gift boxes, and greeting cards. A joyful applause broke out, and the children eagerly debated the value of each present. Then a quiet, reserved boy approached the teacher’s desk — most had even forgotten his name. He was an ordinary student but very talented. His mother, however, had been ill throughout the previous year and could not help him with homework; she had recently passed away.

A shy smile appeared on the boy’s face; he held in his hands a small box wrapped in brown paper and sealed with old tape. Some students burst out laughing. Someone whispered,
“The little beggar brought something again…”
The teacher, out of habit, took the box to thank him and put it aside with the other gifts. But something in the boy’s eyes — a mixture of fear and hope — prompted her to open it immediately. When she removed the paper and lifted the lid, the excitement in the classroom turned to silence. Everyone fell quiet, and the teacher looked at him, surprised.

Inside the box was an old, slightly worn bracelet, decorated with small mechanisms, and a nearly empty bottle of cheap perfume.
“It’s… it belonged to my mother,” the boy murmured carefully. “I thought… maybe you’d like it…”
The students at the back of the room laughed again. Someone muttered, “How horrible!”
But immediately the teacher’s face grew serious. She slowly took out the bracelet and fastened it on her wrist. Then she took the bottle, sprayed a little on her clothes, and said softly,
“It smelled just like your mother…”

A deep silence settled. Some students nodded shyly. The laughter had died away.
From that day on, everything changed: the teacher watched over the boy more carefully, took time after school to help him, explaining she had not yet had the chance to review his exercises. She learned that he had grown up with his grandmother, that his mother had died a month earlier, and that his father had left them long ago. Gradually, the boy gained confidence, his grades improved, and, above all, he began to believe in himself again.