A Homeless Man Brought $100,000 to the Hospital the Same Day I Learned I Had a Serious Illness
“I thought she was private.”
Walter gave a sad smile.
“No.” He paused. “She was hiding something.”
An hour later, Walter took me to a law office across town, where a lawyer was already waiting. He introduced himself as Mr. Reeves, then led us into a conference room.
I expected legal documents. Instead, he placed a photograph on the table, a young woman smiling at the camera. I recognized her immediately.
“My mother.”
Then I noticed something else on the back. The lawyer turned the photograph over, and it was my mother’s writing, beside a name I’d never seen before.
Michael.
Mr. Reeves nodded. Beside her in the picture stood a teenage boy I’d never seen before.
“Who is that?”
The lawyer folded his hands. “Your uncle.”
I laughed. “I don’t have an uncle.”
“Actually, you do.”
I stopped laughing.
The lawyer slid one photograph across the table, then another, then another. Every picture showed the same boy growing older, first a young man, then he was middle-aged, then older still.
Every photograph carried the same name. “Your mother’s brother,” the lawyer said.
“If he existed, why didn’t my mother ever mention him?”
The lawyer didn’t answer right away. Instead, he slid a newspaper clipping across the table. “Because of this.”
I looked at Walter, then back at the lawyer. “This isn’t possible.”
“It is.”
“No.”
“My records say otherwise.”
I stared at the photographs, then at the lawyer. “Why didn’t she tell me?”
Mr. Reeves sighed. “Because she left home when she was 17.”
“Lots of people leave home.”
“She took something with her.”
I frowned. “What?”
The lawyer opened a folder and pulled out a newspaper article. My eyes moved across the page and stopped. It described a missing inheritance from nearly 40 years earlier: money, property, investments, all of it vanished.
The primary suspect was my grandfather’s daughter. I looked at the article again, and then I saw the name.
My mother.
“No.” I looked up. “This can’t be right.”
Mr. Reeves nodded slowly. “Your mother took the inheritance and disappeared.”
I stared at him. “Why?”
“Nobody knows.”
I thought about my mother, the woman who worked double shifts, who clipped coupons, who worried over every dollar. None of this made any sense.
“If she stole millions, where did it go?”
“That’s the mystery.”
Mr. Reeves pointed toward a photograph of Michael standing beside a mailbox, waiting, looking older and tired. “Your uncle spent decades trying to find her.”
“He never wanted the money back.”
“What did he want?”
The lawyer’s expression softened. “His sister.”
I didn’t know what to say. Then another question surfaced. “If he spent decades looking for her, what happened when he finally found her?”
Mr. Reeves looked away.
“That’s a story Michael should tell himself.”
For a moment, nobody spoke.
Then I remembered something. “Where is he now?”
Walter and the lawyer exchanged a look, and neither answered.
I noticed.
“Where is my uncle?”
Mr. Reeves finally pushed a document across the table. I looked down at the hospital records, and my eyes found the name. Michael. Then the diagnosis.
My blood ran cold: cancer, in the same hospital, on the same floor, the same disease as mine.
“He knew about me?”
Mr. Reeves nodded. “He found out about you six months ago.”
“And?”
“He wanted to meet you.”
I stood up. “Take me to him.”
Ten minutes later, I stepped into a hospital room where an older man sat by the window. The moment he saw me, he stood, then froze.
For several seconds, he didn’t move, and neither did I, because I finally understood something. He wasn’t looking at me. He was looking at my mother, or someone who looked exactly like her.
His eyes filled with tears. “Dahla.”
I shook my head. “Dahlia.”
He laughed softly. “Sorry.” Then he sat back down, looking exhausted, older than the photographs, and sicker too.
I pulled up a chair, and neither of us knew what to say. Finally, he smiled. “You have her eyes.”
I looked away. “My mother never mentioned you.”
“I know.”
“Did she really take the inheritance?”
Michael surprised me. He laughed. “No.”
I blinked. “What?”
“No.” He shook his head. “That’s the story everyone believed.”
I looked at the lawyer. He nodded. “Everyone except Michael.”
Now I was confused again. “Then what happened?”
Michael leaned back. “The money disappeared.”
“I know.”
“But my father disappeared too.”
I frowned. “What?”
“My father took everything.” That detail had never made it into the newspaper. “Then he blamed my sister.”
The pieces started shifting. “He framed her?”
“Yes.”
I sat there quietly while my mother suddenly made more sense, the silence, the secrecy, the fear, all of it falling into place.