I Gave My Last $10 to A Homeless Man in 1998, and Today a Lawyer Walked Into My Office With A Box – I Burst Into Tears the Moment I Opened It

The next few years weren't easy.

I worked afternoons at a diner and nights at the library. I slept whenever the girls did, which wasn't much.

There was a woman in my building, Mrs. Greene, who changed everything.

"You leave those babies with me when you've got a shift," she told me one afternoon.

I had made a mistake.

I tried to pay her.

Mrs. Greene shook her head. "You finish school. That's enough."

So I did, slowly, one class at a time.

Lily and Mae grew up in that small, raggedy apartment, then another, then something a little better after I got steady work doing administrative support for a small firm.

It wasn't easy.

But for a while, that felt like enough.

I tried to pay her.

Twenty-seven years passed. I am 44 now. My girls have grown.

Two years ago, somehow, life found a way to pull me under.

***

Mae got seriously ill when she was 25. It started small. Then it wasn't.

Doctor visits turned into procedures. Procedures turned into bills that didn't stop.

I worked longer hours, picked up extra jobs, and cut back on everything.

But it still wasn't enough.

I was drowning again.

Life found a way to pull me under.

***

That morning, I sat at my desk, staring at another overdue notice, trying to figure out what I could delay.