“A Promise I Never Wanted to Keep”
For most of my life, I believed my mother had chosen a homeless man over me.
Even after her death, I continued bringing meals to him only because I had promised her I would. I didn’t understand why she cared so much about Victor, the man who lived behind our house in a makeshift shelter built from scrap wood and tarps.
Then, the day after her funeral, everything I thought I knew fell apart.
When I arrived carrying a container of beef stew, Victor wasn’t sitting beside his weathered shelter.
Instead, he was standing beside a black SUV.
He was clean-shaven, dressed in a dark coat, and holding something that made my heart stop.
My mother’s silver locket.
The very one she had claimed to lose when I was eight years old.
“I thought you couldn’t come, Fiona,” he said quietly.
I nearly dropped the container.
“Victor?” I stared at him. “What’s going on?”
His tired eyes met mine.
Before answering, he looked down at the locket in his hand.
“Before she died,” he said softly, “your mother begged me to stay silent.”
A chill ran through me.
“Silent about what?”
Victor glanced toward the kitchen window where my mother used to stand and watch him whenever she thought I wasn’t paying attention.
Then he looked back at me.
“About who I am.”
The Man I Resented
Growing up, my mother packed three lunches every day.
Two stayed on our kitchen table s.
The third always went to Victor.
I hated it.
We weren’t rich. Far from it.
There were winters when our electricity got shut off. Times when my shoes were held together with tape.
Yet somehow Victor always got a hot meal.
When I was eleven, I finally said what I had been thinking for years.
“He eats better than I do, Mom.”
My mother froze at the stove.
“Fiona, please don’t start.”
“But it’s true,” I argued. “The lights have been shut off twice this winter, and Victor gets lunch every day like he’s family.”
The spoon slipped from her hand.
Her face turned pale.
“Don’t say his name like that.”
“Why not?” I demanded. “He’s just some man behind our house.”
My mother’s expression changed instantly.
“No,” she said firmly. “He isn’t just some man.”
I stared at her.
“Then who is he?”
For a moment, I thought she would finally tell me.
Instead, she handed me the food container.