My Mom Cooked Meals for a Homeless Man Who Lived Behind Our House for 20 Years – The Day After Her Passing, He Took My Hands in His and Said Something That Changed My Life

My mother cooked meals for a homeless man who lived behind our house for 20 years — the day after her funeral, he took my hands in his and said, “”Before she d:ied, she BEGGED ME TO STAY SILENT.””
At lunch every day, Mom would pack three meals.
Ours stayed on the chipped kitchen table.
Victor’s went into whatever takeout container we could spare. He lived in a makeshift shelter behind our rental house, and I despised him for it.
Not because he was homeless. We were poor too — my sneakers had tape over the holes, and our electricity got cut off twice that winter. But Mom treated his hunger like it mattered more than mine.
Once, I snapped, “”Maybe if you stopped feeding strangers, we wouldn’t live like this.””
Mom exploded.
“”Don’t you ever DARE say that again.””
Years passed. I moved out. Mom and I fought less, mostly because I stopped asking questions. But Victor kept living behind our house.
Then she got sick.
Cancer made her small. Quiet.
Two weeks before she died, she grabbed my wrist and whispered, “”Promise you’ll keep feeding Victor.””
I wanted to say no. But I couldn’t lie to her.
So the day after her funeral, I made Victor the best meal I could and drove to my mother’s house.
But Victor wasn’t there.
Instead, a black SUV sat by the curb.
Beside it stood a man in an expensive coat, clean-shaven, holding my mother’s old silver locket. The one she claimed she’d lost when I was eight.
“”I thought you wouldn’t come,”” he said, his eyes filling with tears.
“”Victor?”” I asked, shocked.
He smiled, but it was unsteady.
“”I brought dinner,”” I said, my heart hammering in my chest. “”But Victor, what’s going on?””
His eyes met mine.
“”Your mom hid something from you,”” he said. “”Before she d:ied, she BEGGED ME TO STAY SILENT.””
My bl:ood went cold.
“”What did she hide?”” I whispered.

Next »

Leave a Comment