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Already Someone New? The Neighbours Whispered, ‘Galina Should Have Thought What People Might Say,’ When They Spotted a Man in the Widow’s Garden.

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Already another one? *What will people say?* the neighbors whispered when they spotted a man in the widows yard.

In the village where everyone knew each otherwho was whose godparent, who dug potatoes when, and who divorced how many timesnothing stayed hidden for long. So when the widow Evelyn brought a new man into her home, the silent murmurs spread: *She couldnt stay alone.* But no one dared say it aloudEvelyn was hardworking, decent, and had raised two children on her own.

Thomas arrived in their cottage in autumn. Quiet, with hands rough from spades and hammers, and calm eyes that watched the children not with distance, but with a quiet certainty that things would mend. Though Lucy was nine and William twelve, they barely remembered their fatherhe had passed when they were just starting school.

For weeks, Lucy watched her stepfather from under her brow.

“Mum, how longs he staying?” she asked once.

“As long as heaven allows, love. Hes a good man,” Evelyn answered, then added softly, *”Im tired of doing it all alone.”*

“We helped you,” William huffed.

“You did. But youre children. And life shouldnt be all choresthere should be warmth too.”

Thomas never forced words. He waited for them to adjust. Each morning, he chopped firewood, mended the fence, and one evening, brought home chicks in a crate.

“Farms worth rebuilding. Fresh eggs for the kids,” he said.

“Why dyou do all this?” Lucy eyed him warily, though she liked the chicks.

“Cause Im with you now. Not blood, but if we live together, we share work *and* kindness.”

“Did my dad keep chickens?”

Thomas hesitated, then said, “Your dad was a good man. Knew him from the mill. Spoke of you often. Youve got his look.”

Lucy sat silent on the steps, watching him water the chicks. For the first time, she thought, *He doesnt want to replace Dad. He just wants to stay.*

Come winter, Thomas taught William carpentry.

“This is a plane. Not like tapping a screenhands need to know what theyre doing.”

“I dont *just* play games!” William muttered.

“Not scolding. Hands make a man. So does his head.”

“How come you never shout?”

Thomas smiled.

“Cause shouting fixes nothing. Better to explain once than yell a hundred times.”

Spring came, and the village gathered to clear the woods spring. William and Lucy didnt want to go.

“Let the young ones do it!” William grumbled.

“What, are we old men?” Thomas laughed. “Go onwaiting for others to do it means nothing gets done. Strengths in picking up the shovel *before* youre told.”

At the clearing, the children heard men ask Thomas, “These yoursthe lad and girl?” He just nodded. “Mine. Ours now.”

Lucy nudged William.

“You hear that?”

“Yeah.”

“Well?”

“Feels warm. Like its nothing, but”

One evening, William came home upset. When Evelyn pressed him, he admitted hed argued with boys at school.

“Why?” she asked, fighting tears.

“Cause I said Thomas was like a father. They said, *Youre just a stepson raised by a stranger.* I told em better a kind stranger than a blood father whos gone.”

Thomas stayed quiet. Then he sat across from William.

“I wont ask you to call me *Dad*. But know this, son: I wont leave you. No matter what they say.”

“I dont mind. Its just hard to say *Dad* when youre not used to it.”

“No rush. Father is like breadnot eaten lightly. Takes time to rise.”

Two years passed. William finished Year 11, and the village said hed go to trade school for mechanics. One evening, under stars, frogs croaking, thyme in the air

“Thomas,” William said suddenly. “Got a speech to give. Bout someone who well, sets an example. Wanted to talk about you. That alright?”

Thomas coughed, nodded.

“Just dont overdo it.”

“Cant overdo the truth.”

At graduation, William spoke of *”a man not there from my first breath, but who became family all the same.”* Evelyn wept. And in the crowd, a village woman whispered,

*”Say stepfathers cant be kin? When hearts are close, blood dont matter.”*

For Thomass fiftieth, Lucy gave him an embroidered shirt and a letter:

*Dad, thank you for the firewood, the chicks, the patience, and teaching us not to wait for kindnessbut to make it ourselves.
Youre our father not because you had to be. But because you chose to be. And thats why we love you more.*

Thomas sat with the letter a long time. Silent. Then he said to Evelyn,

“They grew up. Never strangers.”

She smiled.

“Cause you never treated them like they were.”

To be a father, you neednt share blood. Sometimes love, kindness, and daily deeds weigh heavier than biology.
Because family is what we make it.

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