Antonia pressed her lips together and said nothing. She had learned long ago that harsh words aren’t stopped with explanations. They’re stopped with actions. Or they don’t stop at all.
The next day, Mr. Victor came closer. He raised his voice so the whole market could hear.
“Where do you get the money to feed street kids? Isn’t what you earn enough?”
Antonia straightened the basin and kept her gaze forward.
“From my work, Victor. The same work you earn your bread from.”
The people around fell silent. Someone coughed. Someone bought potatoes. Life moved on.
The boys kept coming. Summer, fall, winter. Antonia packed them cornmeal, boiled eggs, sometimes a slice of meat.
Not much, but warm. She told them to wash their hands, not to skip school. She didn’t even know where they studied, but she knew they did. You could tell by the way they spoke.
One spring, they stopped coming. Days passed. A week. Two.
Antonia kept looking toward the end of the market, a knot in her throat. She told herself that’s how life works. Children grow up, leave, disappear. But something hurt inside her.
After about a month, she found out. A vendor told her the basement on Factory Street had been shut down. The boys had been taken by Child Services.
Antonia cried at home, in the dark. Then she wiped her eyes and went back to the market the next day. Life had to go on.
Years passed.
Antonia grew old. She left the market, selling less and less. She lived on a small pension and whatever she could still sell from her garden.
Sometimes, when she boiled potatoes, she thought of two thin boys in oversized clothes.
One autumn morning, she sat on the bench in front of her house. The leaves were yellow. The air smelled like smoke.
Two sleek black cars pulled up in front of the gate. Two tall, well-dressed men stepped out. Their suits were simple but expensive. Their shoes clean. Their gaze calm.
Antonia stood up, startled.
“You’ve got the wrong address,” she said softly.
One of the men smiled. He reached into his pocket and pulled out two worn copper coins.
“I don’t think so.”
Antonia leaned against the gate. Her heart pounded like it used to when she carried the water barrel.
“John… Michael…”
“It’s us, Aunt Antonia.”
They hugged her gently, as if she were something fragile. They didn’t say much at first. They went into the yard, sat at the table, and ate boiled potatoes with salt, just like before.
Later, they told her everything. They had grown up in a center. They studied. They worked. They opened a bakery. Then another. Now they had several. Simple bread. Good bread, like in the old days.
“We never forgot,” Michael said. “Not a single day.”
They left a bag on the table. Antonia didn’t want to open it.
“I didn’t help you for this.”
John nodded.
“We know. That’s why we came.”
Inside the bag was a contract. Her house was going to be renovated. Her bills paid. A monthly amount—enough for her to live peacefully.
On the gate, they placed a small wooden sign.
“Bread is meant to be shared. That’s where kindness begins.”
Antonia stayed on the bench long after they left. She held a copper coin in her palm. She was smiling and crying at the same time. And for the first time in many years, she knew for certain that nothing good she had ever done in her life had been in vain.
This work is inspired by real events and individuals but has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to real persons, living or deceased, or to actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
The author and publisher assume no responsibility for the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretations. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed belong to the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.