My breath caught.
“Take another look inside.”
I looked up at Carter, thinking there had to be some mistake.
“This… this isn’t—”
“It is,” he said gently. “Every dollar he saved.”
I shook my head, my hands trembling as I picked it up.
“No… I don’t understand.”
The lawyer pulled out a folded document and set it beside the check.
“Arthur left instructions. He wanted this to go to you. No conditions.”
I swallowed hard. “Why?”
Carter didn’t hesitate.
“He said it was never his money. Arthur believed it belonged to the moment that changed his life.”
“No… I don’t understand.”
I burst into tears and couldn’t stop crying!
Not because of the amount, but because of its implications.
That $10, the one I thought I couldn’t afford to give, hadn’t disappeared.
It had stayed with Arthur for almost three decades.
I sat there, holding the check in one hand and the notebook in the other, trying to make sense of it.
“I only spoke to him for less than a minute,” I said quietly.
The lawyer gave a small nod. “Sometimes that’s enough.”
I burst into tears!
***
After Carter left, I stayed in my cubicle for a long time.
Colleagues checked on me, but I told them I was fine, that I had just received some touching news.
I sat there, flipping through the notebook again.
Reading every line he’d written about me.
About my twins and his hope for our safety.
It felt impossible that someone I barely knew had carried that moment for so long.
Colleagues checked on me.
***
That night, I went home and sat on my bed with the check in front of me.
Mae was on the living room couch, wrapped in a blanket, resting after another long day.