“Enough?”
“She told me about the wallet you returned. And how you never act entitled to anything.”
Then he smiled.
“People chasing money usually don’t behave like that.”
He offered me a job on the spot.
Steady work.
Weekends off.
Maybe slightly less money, but stability.
I accepted immediately.
Three days later, under cover of evening, I slipped through Mrs. Whitmore’s garden gate.
She sat among her roses waiting for me.
I handed her the brooch.
“You shouldn’t have had to do that for me,” I said.
She smiled sadly.
“Bradley needed to believe the story.”
Then she surprised me again.
“Keep the brooch if you want.”
I nearly laughed.
The thing was worth a fortune.
But I shook my head.
It belonged to her.
We sat together quietly for a while.
Finally she squeezed my hand.
“You gave me peace, Stan.”
I looked at her and smiled.
“No. You gave it to me.”
For the first time, she looked genuinely happy.
Before I left, she assured me she was finally fighting back.
A new lawyer.
New protections.
A plan to stop her children from treating her like a living inheritance.
That night I drove home with groceries in the trunk, Lily’s repaired glasses on the passenger seat, and enough money to pay the electric bill that had been haunting me for weeks.
The moment I walked through the front door, my children came running.
Their laughter filled the house.
And standing there, surrounded by the people who mattered most, I realized something important.