…that the man never came anywhere near me. He sat quietly on the edge of the bed, his hands folded together, staring down at the floor.
The room was simple. Old furniture, a small cross hanging on the wall, and the smell of burning wood from the stove. I was trembling all over.
I kept waiting for the nightmare to begin.
But instead, he let out a deep sigh and said softly:
“You don’t have to be afraid of me, sweetheart.”
I looked at him, confused. His voice was gentle. Calm. Nothing like I had imagined.
“I know what you think about me,” he continued quietly. “And honestly… if I were in your place, I’d probably think the same.”
I said nothing.
My eyes were full of tears and my hands felt ice cold.
Then the old man slowly stood up and pulled a blanket from the closet.
He placed it on the small couch in the corner of the room.
“You sleep in the bed. I’ll sleep here.”
I stared at him in shock.
“What?”
He gave me a sad little smile.
“I didn’t bring you here for the reasons you think.”
That night, I barely slept at all.
I could hear him coughing softly in the darkness.
And my mind was filled with hundreds of questions.
The next morning, I woke up to the smell of tea and toasted bread.
He had prepared breakfast.
“Eat something so you don’t feel weak,” he told me gently.
There was also an envelope sitting on the table.
Inside were the papers to the house.
In my name.
I froze.
“Why are you doing this?”
The man slowly sat down in his chair.
“Because I don’t have much time left.”
My heart tightened instantly.
And then he told me everything.
His name was Walter.
Many years earlier, he had a daughter.
His only child.
She died in an accident when she was only nineteen years old.
His wife never recovered from the pain and passed away a few years later.
Since then, he had been alone.
Completely alone.
“The first time I saw you at the market… you reminded me of my daughter.”
A chill ran through my body.
“I didn’t want a wife,” he said softly. “I just wanted to help someone before I leave this world.”
I started crying immediately.
All the fear I had been carrying inside me shattered at once.
Over the following days, I slowly got to know who he really was.
He wasn’t a bad man.
Just a lonely one.
A very sick one.
He hid his medication so I wouldn’t worry.
He could barely walk up the stairs without becoming exhausted.
But every morning, he still tried to smile.
Whenever he went to the store, he always brought me back something small — pretzels, apples, chocolate.
Like a father.
Not a husband.
People in town talked badly about me.
Some said I had sold myself.
Others laughed behind my back.
But little by little, I stopped listening.
For the first time in years, my brothers were going to school wearing good clothes.
My mother finally had medicine.
Rain no longer leaked through the roof of our house.
And Walter seemed happiest simply seeing that.
One winter evening, I found him sitting on the porch staring up at the sky.
“What are you thinking about?” I asked quietly.
He smiled faintly.
“That maybe God gave me a little more time so I could fix at least one good thing before I leave.”
By spring, his condition became worse and worse.
The doctors said his heart was failing.
During his final days, I stayed beside him constantly.
I read the Bible to him.
Made him tea.
Held his hand.
One night, he called my name softly.
“Emily…”
“Yes?”
His eyes looked tired and full of tears.
“Never believe again that you were sold. You were my salvation.”
I burst into tears.
He smiled one last time.
And by morning, he passed away peacefully.
The entire town came to his funeral.
The same people who once mocked me now stood there in silence, ashamed.
After his death, I discovered that he had left everything to me — the house, the land, and all of his savings.
But the most important thing he left me wasn’t money.
It was the lesson that sometimes the people we judge the fastest are the ones carrying the purest souls.
Today, my mother, my brothers, and I still live in that house.
And every evening, when I light the candle beside Walter’s photograph, I whisper the same words in my heart:
“Thank you for not letting me lose myself.”
This story was inspired by real events and real people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or deceased, or to real events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
The author and publisher make no claims regarding the factual accuracy of the events portrayed and assume no responsibility for how the characters are interpreted. This story is presented “as is,” and any opinions expressed belong solely to the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.