The maid gave a homeless boy a plate of hot food from the kitchen, ignoring the risks. She thought no one had seen her. But her boss returned early that day—and what he witnessed left him speechless.
It was one of those cold afternoons when gray clouds hung low and the city seemed to sigh under its own weight. Maria, the maid, had just finished sweeping the front steps of the grand Lancaster mansion. Her hands were cold, her apron stained from the day’s work, but her heart remained warm—always.
As she bent down to shake out the doormat, she saw movement out of the corner of her eye. A small figure stood by the wrought-iron gate. A boy.
Barefoot, shivering, and covered in dirt. His large, sunken eyes stared hungrily toward the front door. Maria walked toward the gate.
“Are you lost, darling?”
The boy didn’t respond. She stared at the bowl of rice and beans she’d been eating minutes before, now resting on the porch steps. She glanced toward the house.
Mr. Lancaster, her employer, was gone. He rarely returned before dark, and even then, he barely noticed what was happening beyond his grand staircase.
The butler was in town. All seemed clear. She opened the gate.
“Come. Just for a minute,” she whispered. The boy hesitated, but slowly followed her.
He didn’t say a word. His clothes were little more than rags, his hair matted and uncombed. Maria led him to the back kitchen and sat him at the small table by the pantry.
She placed the warm bowl in front of him. “Eat,” she said softly. The boy looked at her, then looked down at the food.
His eyes filled with tears. He began to eat as if he hadn’t eaten in days. Her small hands trembled with each bite, food staining her cheeks.
Maria stood by the stove, watching silently, clutching the crucifix on her necklace. She looked no more than six years old. What Maria didn’t know was that James Lancaster, the owner of the mansion, had returned early.
He had cut short his trip after a boring business meeting in the city. As she pulled into the driveway, she noticed the gate was open and frowned. Once inside, she walked silently, expecting the usual quiet of her empty house.
But then she heard something—the clinking of metal, the soft scrape of a spoon. She followed the sound into the kitchen. And there she saw it: her maid standing in the corner, watching a ragged, dirt-covered boy devour food from a porcelain bowl.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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