They asked for only one thing and left much more in return.
"Are you Melissa?" they wondered.
Melissa Wickstrom-Sirek didn't recognize the two women who approached her as she was presiding over outgrown toys, out-of-style clothes and used furniture for the yard sale at her Eden Prairie home.
Unassuming, dressed in shorts and T-shirts, one wearing a baseball cap, the women looked like they were out for an afternoon stroll. Wickstrom-Sirek gave the response they were looking for — "yes" — and one of them handed her a gift basket.
Then they turned and walked away.
It was last August, and the kids' school year loomed ahead. Most of her yard sale customers were neighbors who knew her story: a single mother of four children, three of whom are on the Autism spectrum.
Wickstrom-Sirek had organized the sale with a neighbor to help to cover what her one full-time and three part-time jobs couldn't: tuition for a school offering specialized training needed by one of her kids. One shopper paid with a $50 check — insisting she wanted no change — for boys' toys valued at a few dollars.
Confused by the arrival of the gift basket, Wiskstrom-Sirek took it into the house before looking inside.