Connect with us

З життя

Lonely Groundskeeper Found a Phone in the Park. When She Turned It On, She Couldn’t Believe Her Eyes

Published

on

**Diary Entry**

This morning, I woke before dawn, as I always do. The streets of Birmingham were quiet, the air crisp with an early autumn chill. At sixty-five, Ive spent nearly two decades as a cleaner, sweeping the same park paths where leaves and litter gather overnight. Its not glamorous, but its honest work. And today, of all days, I found something that turned my world upside down.

I thought about my son, Oliver. My sweet boymy only child. Id had him at thirty-eight, after years of hoping for a family that never came. He was clever, kind, with big dreams. Mum, one day Ill make you proud, hed say. And he did. But he hated our neighbourhood, always talking of moving away. At sixteen, he left for a college dorm in Manchester, promising to visit often.

At first, he did. Then came Sophie, his girlfriend, and the visits dwindled. Then the newsthe illness. Cancer. I sold our flat to pay for treatment in London, but it wasnt enough. One night, the call came. Im sorry, Mrs. Bennett. Olivers gone.

For years, I moved through life like a ghost. Until this morning.

As I swept near the bench by the fountain, I spotted a phone. No one around. I turned it on, and there he wasOliver, smiling back at me from the screen. My hands shook. How?

Then it rang. A womans voice. Hello? Thats my phone! Can I collect it?

I gave her my address, numb. When she arrived, a young man stood behind her.

Where did you get these photos of my son? I whispered.

Olivers? The girlEmilylooked stunned. The boy stepped forward.

Oliver! I collapsed.

When I came to, Emily explained. Theyd dated years ago. Shed been pregnant when he vanished. He left me, she said bitterly.

No, I choked out. He was dying. He didnt want you to suffer.

Her face crumpled. Then she turned to the boy. Ethan, this is your grandmother.

My grandson. Seventeen, with the same bright eyes. I hugged him, weeping.

Later, as we talked, a knock came. Mr. Thompson from down the street stood there, holding daffodils. Fancy a walk, Martha?

Emily grinned. Can we come?

Two months on, Im Mrs. Thompson now. Ethan visits every weekend, and Mr. Thompsons old Labrador, Duke, follows him everywhere. Life isnt what I plannedbut its good. Better than good. Its a second chance.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Ваша e-mail адреса не оприлюднюватиметься. Обов’язкові поля позначені *

сім − три =

Також цікаво:

З життя10 години ago

I just realized we might be a somewhat misfit, dysfunctional familyYet, despite the chaos, we all gathered around the kitchen table, laughing at the absurdity of our tangled lives.

25June2026 Dear Diary, How lucky I feel that I have you, Alex, I thought, pulling my husband into a warm...

З життя11 години ago

You know, Yuri, she’s your sister and I’m your wife, and I can no longer watch you take from our children and give everything to Olivia; Yuri understands I’m right but can’t act otherwise—always the first to lend a hand to his sister since childhood—‘Yuri, I don’t mind you helping Olivia, but when you constantly siphon from our family budget it’s no longer support, it’s a loss for us.’ ‘I understand, but I can’t help it.’

Listen, Harry, shed say, shes your sister and Im your wife. I cant keep watching you take everything from our...

З життя12 години ago

Another Man? If Gillian had any inkling of what the villagers would mutter – the nosy neighbours who spotted a stranger by the widow’s gate. In that English hamlet where everyone knows each other’s godfather, who last turned the soil for potatoes, and how many times they’ve split up, nothing can stay hidden. So when Gillian, two years after her husband’s death, welcomed a new husband into her home, the whole village whispered in unison: “There she goes, couldn’t hold out.” Yet no one said it aloud – for Gillian was a diligent, respectable woman, raising two children on her own.

Is she already seeing someone? People will be gossiping, the neighbours mutter as they spot a man standing in widowed...

З життя13 години ago

The Other Mother‑in‑Law…

The second motherinlaw When Sarah stepped into the flat, the pair of her motherinlaws shoes were propped in the hallway,...

З життя14 години ago

— Get out, you filthy old man! — they shouted after him, tossing him out of the inn. Only later did they learn who he really was — but it was already too late.

Dear Diary, I arrived in York on a crisp Saturday, hoping for a quiet weekend of fishing by the River...

З життя15 години ago

Tanya, don’t be mad at me—I’m not going to live with you.

Dont be mad at me, Poppy, Im not going to marry you, Sam said. Maybe we should give it a...

ES15 години ago

Miró el viejo tenedor una vez más. Aquel pequeño cubierto gastado. Aquel que una niña había escondido en el bolsillo de su enorme suéter años atrás.

—He vuelto por usted —susurró la mujer. La camarera sintió que las piernas le fallaban. Miró el viejo tenedor una...

ES15 години ago

Miró el viejo tenedor envuelto en aquella servilleta amarillenta y, de pronto, el tiempo desapareció.

—Hay cosas que el corazón guarda durante años… hasta que un día ya no puede seguir callando. La camarera sintió...