Woman experiences act of kindness on worst day of her life

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Tuesday, February 26, 2019
Wake County woman experiences act of kindness on worst day of her life
A Wake County mother says on the worst day of her life she experienced the best acts of kindness.

WAKE COUNTY, North Carolina -- A mother says on the worst day of her life, she experienced the best acts of kindness.

Emoni Hardy, of Garner, North Carolina, experienced every parent's nightmare on Monday when she got the news that her only son had been shot.

The 19-year-old had gone to Raleigh after work to visit his big sister when he encountered an argument and the next thing he knew, he had been shot in the shoulder.

"I'm just like hysterical, don't know what to do, didn't know what to grab, and I just ran out the door," his mother told Eyewitness News.

But when she got to the hospital, she couldn't see him immediately.

"Finally they let me back and he was laying on the bed with the thing on his neck, but he was talking, he was moving, so I was kind of at ease, a little, but still was scared... didn't know if he was going to be paralyzed or anything but, thank God he's fine," she said.

Soon, her son was allowed to go home and nurse the shoulder wound.

On the way, Hardy stopped at an ATM and got $60 in cash to pay for her son's prescriptions.

After getting him settled, she went to the Walgreens near her home.

While she waited for the prescriptions to be filled, she became emotional and the staff tried to console her. "They heard me crying, sitting there crying, and then they knew that my son had got shot," she said.

A few minutes later the prescriptions were ready.

"When I got ready to pay the money was gone. I don't know if I dropped it in the process of leaving out of here, going to the Walgreens. I don't know what happened," Hardy said, adding that she started crying again.

She called her brother to come to pay the bill but before he arrived, the manager approached her.

"She said, 'It doesn't matter. Go take care of your son.' You know she was like, 'We have kids. I have a son, and I understand. I feel your pain.'"

She said she started crying all over again. This time, they were tears of gratitude.

"I mean like a baby. Just so many different emotions you know, and God placed those people at that moment, at that time," Hardy said.

Hardy thinks the staff may have been especially sympathetic since two of their colleagues at another Walgreens had been shot by an angry customer the week before.

Now she and her family said they can't wait to do something good for someone else. "Yeah, you've got to pay it forward. Got to."

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