My Mom Cooked Meals for a Homeless Man Who Lived Behind Our House for 20 Years – The Day After Her Passing, He Took My Hands in His and Said Something That Changed My Life

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Mom didn’t look up from the stove. “Fiona, don’t start. Please.”

“Mom, the lights got cut off twice this winter,” I said. “But Victor gets lunch every day like he’s family.”

The spoon slipped from her hand and clattered into the sink.

“Don’t say his name like that, Fiona. He needs help.”

I folded my arms. I was hungry, cold, and mean in the way only a hurt child can be.

“Why? He’s just some man behind our house.”

Mom turned then, and her face had gone pale.

“No,” she said. “He isn’t just some man.”

“Then who is he?”

For a second, I thought she would tell me.

Instead, she shoved the warm container into my hands.

I stared at her. “Maybe if you stopped feeding strangers, we wouldn’t live like this.”

Mom’s hand hit the counter so hard I jumped.

“Don’t you ever say that again. Do you hear me? You have no idea what that man gave up.”

“Gave up for who? You?”

She trembled.

Then she turned away.

“Take him his food, Fiona. This conversation is over.”

So I did.

Victor sat near the fence, rubbing his hands against the cold.

“Your mom make soup today?” he asked.

He smiled softly. “That’s her best one.”

“You don’t even know her.”

The smile faded completely.

“I know her soup.”

I hated him more for saying that.

Years passed, and I moved out. Mom and I fought less because I stopped asking questions.

But Victor stayed.

Sometimes I saw him fixing the loose porch step or leaving firewood after storms.

Once, when my boots split open in high school, a secondhand pair appeared beside my backpack.

“Where did these come from?” I asked.

“Church donation,” Mom said too quickly.

I looked out the kitchen window.

Victor was brushing snow off the steps.

I just didn’t understand.

Then cancer came and made my mother small.

Stephanie had once carried grocery bags in both hands and opened doors with her elbows. By the end, I could see her wrist bones.

Two weeks before she died, I sat beside her hospital bed while she picked at the blanket.

“Fiona.”

“I’m here.”

“You have to promise me something.”

I leaned closer. “Mom, rest.”

“No.” Her fingers closed around my wrist. “Victor.”

My stomach tightened.

“Not this again.”

“Promise me you’ll feed him.”

“Why?” I whispered. “Why him? Why always him?”

Her eyes filled.

“I never put him before you.”