On a cold afternoon, a woman arrived at the narrator’s door with a boy named Daniel, claiming he was the son of the narrator’s late husband, Michael, and demanding his share of the estate. Shocked, the narrator explained there was nothing left — “only debts and an old truck.” The woman left, threatening legal action, but never returned.
Over time, guilt grew. The narrator remembered Daniel’s quiet eyes and learned online that he shared the name Michael once wanted for a son. Soon, Daniel’s mother, Claire, wrote, saying he had questions about his father.
They met in a coffee shop, where the narrator brought photo albums and stories — Michael’s laugh, quirks, and their life together. Daniel listened intently, and a bond slowly formed. Though criticized, she reminded herself, “None of this was the boy’s fault.”
When Claire moved for work, the narrator promised to keep in touch. Daniel later chose her for a school project about someone who inspires him.
Years later, a delayed will revealed Michael trusted her to “do the right thing” if a child appeared. She kept that promise — not from duty, but love. Daniel, now ten, still writes, and she smiles every time.