З життя
Suddenly, the sharp thud of a silver-tipped walking stick echoed through the silent room
Suddenly, the sharp thud of a silver-tipped walking stick echoed through the silent room. Mr. Sterling, an imposing, wealthy gentleman in a tailored charcoal suit, rose from his leather booth. His voice was quiet, yet it carried a terrifying authority. “Pick that up and throw it away. Then bag every hot meal in your kitchen for these children. Put it on my tab,” he commanded. The manager stammered, his face pale, and rushed to obey. Mr. Sterling knelt in front of the siblings. He reached out to comfort them, but stopped dead. Daisy had tilted her head, revealing a unique silver hairpin shaped like a Scottish thistle holding back her tangled curls. The old man’s breath hitched. He had commissioned that exact piece for his daughter, Eleanor, before he disowned her twelve years ago for marrying a penniless dockworker. “What is your mother’s name, boy?” he rasped, his hands trembling visibly. Arthur stepped in front of Daisy, fiercely protective. “Eleanor. But she’s gone. The fever took her in April.”
The impeccably dressed gentleman looked as though the ground had been pulled from under him. His daughter was dead. Seeing the old man’s devastation, Arthur reached into the lining of his damp coat and pulled out a battered, faded photograph. “Mum said… if a man with a silver cane ever recognized Daisy’s hairpin, I should show him this.” Mr. Sterling took it with shaking fingers and turned the photo over. On the back, in Eleanor’s elegant handwriting, were the words: “Dad, my pride is gone, but my children are innocent. If you have any love left for me, please feed them. Save them, before it’s too late.”
The stern, untouchable Mr. Sterling broke down completely. Right there, in the middle of the luxurious deli, he dropped to his knees and wept, pulling both children into a desperate, crushing embrace. Daisy tentatively patted his tear-stained cheek, and Arthur, who had fought so hard to be the adult, finally let his guard down and buried his face in his grandfather’s shoulder. Standing up, Mr. Sterling draped his own heavy cashmere coat over Arthur. He shot a lethal glare at the manager. “If I ever hear of a hungry child being turned away from this establishment again, I will buy this building just to fire you.” Then, lifting Daisy effortlessly and taking Arthur’s hand, the old man whispered through his tears, “No more rain, my brave boy. We are going home.”
