Once, as we were leaving the hospital, she took my hand and said to me in a soft voice:

“Son… I don’t know why God put you in my path,” Doña Carmen whispered one afternoon, her voice so weak I had to lean closer to hear her. “But when I can no longer pay you… please don’t stop visiting me.” I promised without really thinking about it. At first I kept visiting because she had offered to pay me two hundred pesos to help around the house, but week after week passed and the money never came. Eventually I understood the truth—she simply had nothing left to give. Still, I kept returning. I cooked simple meals, brought her fruit when I could afford it, and listened to stories about her late husband and the children who, as she gently put it, “had their own lives now.”

As the months passed, her health worsened quickly. I took her to the clinic, read newspaper headlines to her so she could feel connected to the world, and sat beside her when the nights felt long. One afternoon the doctor quietly told me she didn’t have much time left. Not long after, she asked me to promise one more thing—that when she died, I would check the wardrobe before anyone threw away her belongings. Two days later, when I arrived at her house, a neighbor met me at the door with red eyes. Doña Carmen had passed away at dawn. The neighbor handed me a yellow envelope with my name written in her trembling handwriting.

Inside the envelope was a letter and a small key. In the letter, Doña Carmen confessed that decades earlier she had a son named Tomás who had worked and studied just like I did. When he became seriously ill, she used the money he had saved for university to try to help him, believing she would replace it later. She never could. Tomás died six months later, forgiving her, but she never forgave herself. Seeing me walk through her door each week reminded her of him. She wrote that the kindness I showed her felt like life giving her one last chance to repair something she had broken long ago.

The key opened a metal box hidden in her wardrobe. Inside were bundles of savings, the deed to her house, and an old photograph of Doña Carmen smiling beside her son. She had left everything to me—not because I cleaned her home, but because, in her words, I had returned her dignity when she felt like a burden. Her children arrived the next day expecting to sell the house, but the documents were already notarized months earlier. They left angry and empty-handed. With the money I paid my university debts and repaired the house, but I kept her radio, her photographs, and her kitchen exactly the same. Two years later, when I finally graduated, I returned to that kitchen and made chicken broth the way she liked it. I served two bowls—one for me, and one for the empty chair—and quietly told her I had finished my studies, just as she had hoped. READ MORE BELOW

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