It began with something ordinary — a leaking washing machine. The repairman arrived, fixed it quickly, and I thanked him, ready to move on. But before leaving, he slipped me a folded note. His hands trembled. “Please call me. It’s about someone you know,” it read. I almost threw it away — until I saw the fear in his eyes.
The next day, I called. “Do you know Felix Deren?” he asked. My breath caught. Felix was my ex-husband — the man I hadn’t heard from in seven years. The caller, Ruben, explained softly that Felix had passed away months earlier. He was Felix’s son, a son my ex never knew until near the end. Before he died, Felix left behind letters — some for Ruben, some for me.
We met in a café, where Ruben handed me an envelope in Felix’s unmistakable handwriting. Inside was an apology, memories only we shared, and words about the boy sitting across from me — his dreams, his gentleness, his need for family. Tears came freely. Over the weeks that followed, Ruben and I stayed in touch, and a quiet bond grew between us.
Now he visits often — to fix a loose hinge, to bake cookies, or just to talk. One Christmas, he gave me a painting of my house in winter, with a small figure at the door holding a wrench and a pie. Beneath it, he’d written: Home Is Who Stays. What began as a simple repair became something sacred — proof that sometimes love doesn’t end; it just finds another door to walk through.