“I hope Nora and her kids are safe.”
I couldn’t speak.
Carter finally said, “Arthur kept that notebook for over 30 years. He didn’t track money; he tracked people, moments that mattered.”
I looked back down at the pages.
My name appeared more often.
“Arthur wasn’t always on the street,” Carter continued. “He used to run a small machining business. When it failed, he lost everything. He had no family to fall back on. He drifted for a long time after that.”
That explained something I couldn’t name before.
The look in that homeless man‘s eyes that night when he said my name.
“Arthur told me meeting you changed him. He said it was the first time in years someone treated him as if he mattered.”
“He lost everything.”
Carter explained how Arthur didn’t rebuild his life all at once.
He started small.
Maintenance jobs, cleaning work, anything steady.
He lived simply and saved what he could. Over time, he qualified for housing, then a small apartment.
He never married nor had children. But he stayed consistent.
Every year, on the same date, he wrote the same line.
“Still looking for Nora.”
I confirmed that through the notebook.
My throat tightened.
He stayed consistent.
“But how did you find me?” I asked.
“Two years ago, you posted on a community board.”
My heart skipped.
The fundraiser.
“I sadly didn’t get much from it. Just a couple of dollars.”
Carter nodded. “But Arthur saw it. He recognized your name and your daughters from the photo you shared. He wanted to reach out, but his health was already failing.”
Everything in me stilled.
“How did you find me?”
“So he did what he could,” the lawyer continued. “He made a will.”
Carter nodded toward the box.
“Take another look inside.”
I looked down at it again. My hands shook.
A cashier’s check.
I stared at it, not fully understanding what I was looking at.
Then my eyes locked onto the number.
$62,000.