You don’t plan miracles when you’re surviving. You plan routes—where the security guard looks away, which dumpster has bread that’s still soft, which alley stays dry when the sky decides to punish the city. The rain has been falling all day, the kind that doesn’t splash, just soaks and stays, turning sidewalks into slick mirrors. You walk tight to the wall on Avenida del Puerto with a black trash bag in one hand and your shoulders curled inward like you can shrink your life smaller. Your jacket is too thin, your shoes are worse, and your pride is the last thing you refuse to drop. Behind the restaurant, if the manager is in a decent mood, they leave a bag of day-old rolls near the bin. You tell yourself that’s enough for tonight. You tell yourself you can do this one more day.
Then the bus appears around the curve like a heavy, confident mistake. The pavement shines, the tires hiss, and the whole street seems to tighten with it. People at the stop take a step back, the way crowds do when danger looks like someone else’s problem. And that’s when you see her—tiny, fast, wearing a pink coat like a bright warning sign. A red balloon slips from her hand and floats up, cheerful and careless, and she bolts after it without thinking. The screams come a half-second late. You don’t scream. You move.
You drop the trash bag and your foot skids on the water. Your knee tears against the curb, pain flashing hot and immediate, but your body keeps going anyway. You hit the road hard, grab the child, and wrap her small body into your chest like you’re shielding a flame from wind. You roll with her toward the curb as the bus roars past close enough to steal your breath. There’s a sharp squeal of brakes, a smell of burning rubber, and then—nothing. Three seconds of silence swallow the street. The little girl shakes in your arms like she doesn’t know she’s still alive.
She looks up at you with eyes too old for her face. Rain sticks her bangs to her forehead, and her lips tremble before the word escapes like it’s been locked inside her for months. “Mom,” she whispers, clinging to your neck with a desperate force that doesn’t match a stranger. Your throat tightens so suddenly you almost choke. You try to correct her gently—No, sweetheart, I’m not—except she’s already crying against you like she found the only safe place left. And that’s when you hear a man shout her name from across the street.
He runs out of a hotel entrance glowing with warm gold lights, as if the building itself is allergic to weather. He’s dressed in a navy suit that still looks perfect in the rain, shoes that cost more than your last year of meals, a tie that sits straight like his life always does. He doesn’t look like a man who loses things. He looks like a man who replaces them. But the moment he sees you holding the child, his face drains of color. His eyes flick over your features with a sharp, terrified focus, like he’s seeing someone else through you. “God,” he breathes, and the word sounds like regret. For a second, he looks like he might fall.
The girl squeezes your waist harder. “That’s not my dad,” she says, voice breaking, and you feel her sob shudder through you. “That’s Uncle Mateo.” She turns her wet face toward him and speaks with a strange, brutal clarity. “She looks like my mom. I want her to come with us.” You feel the child’s plea land in your chest like a stone. The man—Mateo—closes his eyes, exhausted, like he’s been carrying grief in his pockets. He opens them again and tries to find the right words, but all he can manage is a shaky, polite line. “Miss… I don’t know how to thank you. I can pay you—”
“I don’t need your money,” you snap, too fast, too proud, because the shame burns your knee like salt. You hate that he can tell you’re homeless. You hate that he can offer money like it’s a bandage for the way the world looks at you. You stand carefully, still holding the child until Mateo reaches for her, and even then she resists. She keeps her arms around you like leaving you means losing something again. When Mateo finally convinces her to step back, she looks at you like you’re a promise. “Don’t go,” she whispers—not just to Mateo, but to the universe.
You do what you’ve trained yourself to do: you leave before your heart makes you stay. You limp away with rain dripping down your chin, refusing to look back at the pink coat and those pleading eyes. If you look back, you’ll break. And you can’t afford broken—not when you’re already living so close to the ground. That night you crawl into the underground garage where you sleep, tucked between concrete pillars like a secret no one wants to admit exists. The rain pounds the plastic sheet overhead and makes the whole place smell like damp metal. You clutch your backpack like it’s a heartbeat you borrowed. Inside it is your entire remaining life: a wrinkled ID, a photo of your mother, and a university degree in Architecture that has stopped opening doors.

Eight months ago you had a studio, a small apartment, and a fiancé with a smile that could sell lies as love. Víctor Sanz knew exactly how to sound sincere while doing damage behind your back. He used your signature on “technical reports” that were anything but technical—false certificates, manipulated permits, and approvals you never wrote. When the police came, he was already out of the country. You stayed, holding the legal fallout like a burning pan you couldn’t drop. Your license was suspended, your accounts froze, and your name turned into a warning label. You lost friends who didn’t want to be associated with “trouble,” and you learned how quickly “smart woman” becomes “reckless woman” in people’s mouths. The street didn’t happen overnight, but it happened fast enough to feel like a trapdoor.
You think the day can’t get worse until you see him again. Mateo stands across the street from the garage entrance without an umbrella, rain soaking his expensive suit into something human. He looks like he’s been searching for hours, hair damp, jaw tight, eyes cracked with exhaustion. You step out before you even decide to, anger pulling you forward like a rope. You dart between cars, forcing a taxi to brake and a motorbike to curse at you. Mateo watches you cross like he’s afraid you’ll vanish. “What do you want now?” you demand, clutching your backpack to your chest. Your voice tries to sound tough. Your knee throbs like it doesn’t believe you.
“I’ve been looking for you for four hours,” Mateo says, and his voice is rough in a way money can’t polish. He swallows hard as if the next sentence costs him pride. “Alma—my niece—hasn’t spoken since her mother died seven months ago.” You freeze, because grief recognizes grief even when it wears a different coat. Mateo’s eyes glisten, and he looks almost ashamed to be desperate. “Not one word,” he says. “Two hundred thirteen days.” He exhales like he’s been holding the number in his ribs. “Today, she spoke. She said ‘Mom’… to you.”
The air in the garage entrance feels heavier. You don’t know what to do with a child’s pain that just got attached to you. You don’t know what to do with the way Mateo says those words like you’re both guilty of wanting something impossible. You open your mouth to refuse whatever he’s about to ask, because you can see it coming. Rich people don’t chase you in the rain for nothing. But before you can speak, Mateo does something that knocks the breath out of you. He lowers himself to his knees right there on the wet pavement, suit soaking through, hands open like he’s surrendering.
“I know this sounds insane,” he says, eyes locked on yours. “I know you have no reason to trust me.” He pauses as if he’s bracing for you to laugh in his face. “But I need to ask you something.” Your spine stiffens. “Say it,” you answer, cold, because softness is how you get hurt. Mateo’s voice drops to a whisper like the words might break him. “Pretend to be my wife for seven days.”
You stare at him like he’s lost his mind, because maybe he has. He rushes on before you can reject him. There’s a custody hearing, he explains, and Alma’s maternal relatives are circling like sharks. The judge might see a single man with a demanding career and decide a “traditional” household is safer. Mateo’s family name carries weight, but not enough to silence the court’s obsession with appearances. “They don’t want her,” he says, bitterness sharpening his mouth. “They want her inheritance.” Your stomach twists at the word. A child used as a bank account is a special kind of evil. Mateo swallows and looks at you like he hates needing this. “If I lose her,” he says, “she’ll disappear into people who already treat her like money.”
You let out a short laugh with no humor and gesture at yourself. “Look at me,” you say, voice sharp. “I don’t look like any man with a watch that expensive has a wife.” Mateo’s gaze doesn’t drop to your torn jacket. It stays on your face. “You look like the woman who threw herself in front of a bus for a child,” he says. “Everything else can be fixed.” Then he names a number that makes your heart stutter. “One hundred twenty thousand euros,” he says. “And an apartment in your name. No hidden conditions. Seven days. You stand beside me in court, at one family dinner, and at one event. Then you walk away.”
Your instincts scream trap. Money like that is never offered without a hook. “Where’s the catch?” you whisper, because the number is already turning into possibilities in your mind: a real lawyer, reopened investigations, your license restored, your name cleared. Mateo shakes his head, and his eyes tremble like he hates his own honesty. “No catch,” he says. “One condition: don’t leave halfway through. And if you ever feel I’m using you beyond what we agreed… you walk. And I still pay.” That’s when you realize he isn’t bargaining like a predator. He’s bargaining like a man who’s terrified.
You think of Alma’s arms around your neck. You think of that “Mom” that came out of her like it was stitched into her throat. You think of how it felt—how it hurt—in a way you didn’t expect. You’ve been invisible for months, treated like a stain people step around. And for one minute in the rain, a child looked at you like you were safety. Your pride fights you, but your hunger for justice fights harder. You nod once, firm. “I accept,” you say. “On that condition.” Mateo’s shoulders drop as if he’s been holding up a collapsing ceiling. “Mateo Arriaga,” he says, offering his hand. “Lucía Ibarra,” you answer, and your fingers clasp in the rain like a contract written in nerve and need.
The next morning is whiplash. A driver picks you up like you belong somewhere, and the car smells like leather and quiet money. You arrive at a glass-and-stone penthouse overlooking a gray sea, the kind of place built to pretend storms don’t exist. Three women are waiting—hair, makeup, styling—like your body is a project they’ve been assigned. No one asks why your knee is bleeding or why your hands shake when you touch hot water. They wash the street off you without looking you in the eye too long. Four hours later you face a mirror and almost step back. The woman staring at you has clean hair, steady eyeliner, and a navy dress that makes you look like you’ve never begged a restaurant manager for bread. She looks like someone who can walk into a room without apologizing for taking space. And you don’t know whether that makes you angry or hopeful.
Mateo appears in the doorway and goes still. For a second he forgets to speak. He looks at you like he’s realizing the plan might actually work—and like that scares him too. “This will work,” he murmurs, more to himself than to you. You cut in immediately, because you refuse to become a doll he dresses for court. “Where’s Alma?” you demand. Mateo blinks, then nods toward the elevator. “In the car,” he says. “She thinks you’re… my girlfriend.” He hesitates, jaw tight. “She doesn’t know about contracts or judges. She just says you look like her mother.” His voice drops. “Can you handle that?” You feel something twist in your chest. “I can handle kids,” you say quietly. “It’s adults who destroy things.”
When you step outside, Alma spots you and bolts like you’re a magnet. She throws her arms around your waist and laughs with a sound so relieved it stings. “The lady from the street!” she shouts, then frowns as if correcting herself matters. “I mean—Aunt Lu.” Mateo watches her cling to you with a mix of relief and panic, like he’s afraid happiness is a fragile lie. The driver clears his throat politely like this isn’t the most emotionally complicated thing he’s seen in a week. You lift Alma and she presses her cheek to yours as if she’s checking you’re real. In that moment, you realize the hardest part of the deal isn’t fooling a judge. It’s not falling for the way a child can make you feel needed. Because being needed is dangerous when you’ve been abandoned by everything.
The first two days are rehearsal—how to look like a family, how to smile at the right moments, how to answer questions without choking. You eat breakfast together at a kitchen island that looks like it’s never seen a spilled cereal bowl. Alma draws pictures and tapes them on the fridge as if claiming the space with color. Mateo, who lives inside emails and board meetings, learns how to pour milk without making it a corporate event. You take Alma to the seaside walk when the rain softens, and she tells you about her mom’s scent like she’s afraid forgetting will kill her. “Lavender soap,” she says, thoughtful. “And cookies.” Your throat tightens because grief has smells, and kids don’t hide it the way adults do. Later, when Alma wakes from a nightmare, she calls for you—not Mateo—and you sit on the edge of her bed humming the same tune Marta used in another story, the kind of lullaby that doesn’t promise perfect endings, just warmth.
On day three, Mateo catches you in the kitchen after Alma finally sleeps. He stands there with a mug he hasn’t tasted, staring at you like he’s trying to solve a puzzle that isn’t business. “You don’t have to do more than we agreed,” he says carefully. You snort softly. “You mean I don’t have to care,” you reply, and the words come out sharper than you intend. Mateo flinches, then nods like he deserves it. “I mean… I don’t want you to feel trapped,” he says. You grip the mug in both hands and force your voice steady. “I’ve been trapped before,” you say. “Just not in a penthouse.” Mateo’s expression darkens. “Who did that to you?” he asks, and the concern in his voice makes you want to either confess everything or run.
The charity dinner is your first public test. You arrive on Mateo’s arm in a green dress that feels like a borrowed life, and the room turns its gaze on you like a spotlight. The crowd is polished smiles and expensive perfume, the kind of people who ask questions like they’re checking a résumé. “How did you two meet?” one woman purrs. “So sudden,” another adds, eyes measuring your shoes. You answer like you’ve done it a thousand times: calm, charming, unbothered. “A conference on heritage restoration,” you lie smoothly. “He complained about a ruined façade. I told him it could still be saved.” People laugh like you just told a cute love story. Mateo looks at you with something that isn’t just gratitude—something like awe. And for a second, you feel powerful again.
Later, in the hotel garden under warm lights, Mateo asks the question that cracks your mask. “Why did you leave architecture?” he says, quieter now. The answer tastes bitter. “Because my fiancé used my signature on fraud,” you admit. “When it exploded, he disappeared. I stayed and got crushed.” Mateo’s jaw tightens as if anger is a language he’s fluent in. “Name,” he says, simple. You hesitate. “Why?” He leans closer, eyes hard. “Because my lawyers get bored,” he says. “And the truth deserves a microphone.” You almost laugh at how casually he says it, like justice is something you can purchase. Then you remember the court system didn’t care about your innocence when your bank account was empty. The rage in your chest burns hotter than the garden lights.
By day five, you’ve almost started to believe you can make it through without disaster. Then Mateo’s attorney, Irene Rojas, asks you to lunch. She’s immaculate—cream suit, red lipstick, eyes sharp enough to cut glass. She asks questions politely, but each one feels like a needle: your childhood, your parents, your last address. You answer with half-truths and careful pauses, building a story that won’t collapse under pressure. Irene watches you the way judges watch defendants—measuring what you hide. Then she slides a folder onto the table. Inside are photos of you sleeping under an awning, curled in cardboard, your hair matted, your face hollow. Your stomach drops like an elevator cable snapped. Irene doesn’t smile. “My investigator is very good,” she says calmly. “The judge will love this.”
She leans in, voice low and poisonous. “Leave before the hearing,” she murmurs. “Write a dramatic note. Mateo will stumble, and I’ll be there to ‘help’ him. If you don’t… these photos go to the court.” You feel your hands go cold. You want to throw the folder at her, but you’ve learned rage can be used against you. You force your breathing to stay steady. “Why would you do that?” you ask, voice quiet. Irene’s eyes flicker with something like contempt. “Because people like you are liabilities,” she says. “And Mateo’s life cannot afford liabilities.” The words hit like a slap because you’ve heard versions of them all your life.
At the next table, a man laughs too loud and says something disgusting about you—about your face, your body, your worth. His friend chuckles like cruelty is entertainment. Irene doesn’t react, but you do. You stand so fast your chair scrapes the floor, and every head turns. You walk to the man and look him dead in the eyes. “Apologize,” you say, voice sharp enough to silence the room. He blinks, startled, then smirks like he’s used to women shrinking. You don’t shrink. “She’s a professional,” you add, nodding toward Irene, even though you hate her in that moment. “And she deserves more respect than you’ve earned in your entire life.” The man’s smile dies. People stare. He mutters an apology and looks away, humiliated. When you return to your seat, Irene looks shaken—like she didn’t expect backbone from someone she labeled disposable.
“You’re threatening me,” you say quietly, leaning in. “And I still defended you.” Irene’s lips part slightly, confused. “Why?” she asks, as if kindness is a foreign language. You hold her gaze. “Because nobody deserves to be humiliated,” you answer. “Not even someone who’s trying to ruin me.” Something changes in Irene’s eyes—small, but real. Not guilt. Not yet. But awareness. And you realize the room is full of people who’ve never been forced to choose decency when it costs them something.
That night you tell Mateo everything—about the photos, the threat, the ultimatum. You expect him to go cold, to turn into the powerful man who protects his image at all costs. Instead, he goes dangerously still. “You’re leaving,” he says, not a question. You nod, swallowing the ache. “I won’t be the reason you lose Alma,” you say. Mateo steps close enough that you can feel the heat of him. “Without you,” he says softly, “I don’t want to win anything.” You freeze because rich men don’t say that unless they mean it—or unless they’re manipulating you. Mateo’s eyes shine with something too raw to be strategy. “This started as a deal,” he admits, voice breaking, “but you’re not ‘the lady from the street’ anymore. You’re the person who gave Alma her voice back.” His hand lifts toward your cheek, hesitates like he’s asking permission. “And somehow,” he whispers, “you gave mine back too.”
He kisses you, and the kiss doesn’t feel like a performance. It feels like relief. It feels like two broken people stopping the bleeding for one second. You pull back, breathing hard, heart racing, terrified of how quickly you could want this. “We have a hearing,” you remind him, because reality is safer than hope. Mateo nods, forehead touching yours briefly. “Then we fight,” he says. “Not with lies. With truth.” And for the first time in months, you believe truth might actually be strong enough.
The courthouse smells like old wood and anxious sweat. You sit beside Mateo with your spine straight, while Alma fidgets next to a social worker in a blue dress that makes her look like a little ocean. Across the aisle sit Silvia and Esteban—the maternal relatives—wearing sympathetic smiles like masks. Their lawyer stands confidently, holding a brown envelope like it contains your execution. When he speaks, his voice is smooth. “Your Honor, this marriage is a fabrication,” he announces. “Mr. Arriaga hired a homeless woman to impersonate stability.” He pulls out the photos. He presents the lack of a legal certificate. He offers witness statements from people who saw you sleeping outside. The judge’s expression hardens as he looks at Mateo, disappointment carved into his face.

Before Mateo can stand, you rise. The room tilts with attention. Your palms sweat, but your voice stays steady because you’ve learned fear can’t be allowed to show. “It’s true,” you say clearly. “When I met Mateo, I was homeless. I agreed to pretend for seven days for money.” Silvia’s lips curl slightly, victory almost visible. You pause, then continue, letting the silence sharpen your next words. “But nobody paid me to care about Alma.” Your throat tightens but you push through. “Nobody paid me to sit beside her bed when she had nightmares, to make her breakfast, to listen to her talk about her mother like she’s afraid forgetting will kill her.”
You look at the judge, forcing him to see you as human instead of a headline. “I lost my mother young,” you say, voice softer but firm. “I know what it feels like when people keep leaving.” You glance at Alma, and she stares back with eyes that have survived too much. “When she called me ‘mom,’ she didn’t see my clothes,” you say. “She saw someone who didn’t run.” The courtroom holds its breath. Then the door opens behind you, and the sound makes everyone turn.
Irene walks in. Dark suit. No expression. A folder thick enough to be a weapon. She meets Mateo’s eyes for one second—something unspoken passes between them—then she faces the judge. “Your Honor,” she says, loud and precise, “I request permission to submit evidence of financial misconduct by Silvia and Esteban regarding the minor’s trust.” The relatives jerk upright, faces snapping from smug to furious. Irene doesn’t flinch. “Additionally,” she continues, “there is an active investigation connected to negligence involving another minor under their supervision.” Gasps ripple. Silvia stands, shouting “Lies!” Esteban’s face turns the color of raw meat. The judge orders silence, and for the first time, the predators look uncertain.
Then Alma speaks—small voice, big impact. “I want to stay with my uncle,” she says, loud enough to cut through adult noise. The judge looks down at her, surprised. Alma points at you and adds the sentence that breaks the room open. “And with Aunt Lu.” The social worker’s eyes widen. Mateo’s breath catches. You feel something crack inside you—not pain this time, but something like a door unlocking. The judge’s gaze shifts from paperwork to people, from appearances to a child’s certainty. And you realize Silvia and Esteban aren’t scared of losing a niece. They’re scared of losing access.
A week later, the ruling is issued: custody to Mateo, restrictions placed on the relatives pending investigation. You don’t celebrate. You just exhale like you’ve been underwater for months. Outside the courthouse, Silvia hisses at you like a snake. “You’ll never be one of us,” she spits. You look at her calmly, and the calm shocks her more than anger ever could. “I don’t want to be,” you reply. Mateo walks out holding Alma’s hand, and the girl beams like she’s finally allowed to breathe. Cameras click in the distance, but Mateo shields Alma’s face and keeps moving. For once, the rich man isn’t performing for the world. He’s protecting his child.
That evening, you pack your backpack again, because that’s what you do when life gets dangerous. The deal is over. The money will help you rebuild, but you refuse to become another story people use for inspiration and then discard. You shoulder the bag and head toward the penthouse door, ready to vanish before feelings turn into chains. You get to the hallway before you hear Mateo’s footsteps running. “Where are you going?” he asks, breathless, as if the idea of you leaving is a punch. You don’t turn around immediately. “The contract ended,” you say, voice tight. “You won. You don’t need me.” Silence stretches behind you like a wire. Then Mateo speaks, quiet but fierce. “I needed you before the contract,” he says. “I just didn’t know it.”
When you turn, Mateo is already lowering himself—again—onto his knees. Not on wet pavement this time, but on polished floor that reflects the ceiling lights. He pulls out a velvet box with hands that tremble, and for a second he looks like he’s terrified you’ll laugh. “You were supposed to be my wife for a judge,” he says, swallowing hard. “But you became family before anyone signed anything.” He opens the box, and the ring catches the light like a dare. “Marry me for real,” he says. “No timeline. No performance. No deal.” Your heart slams against your ribs. Behind him, Alma appears, sprinting into the hall like she knows exactly what’s happening. She wraps her arms around your leg and looks up at you with fierce hope. “Say yes, Mom—Aunt Lu,” she blurts, then squeezes harder. “Please. Don’t go.”
You stare at them both and feel your old life—your old fear—trying to drag you backward. You think of cardboard and rain and sleeping with one eye open. You think of how easily love can become leverage. You think of Víctor’s smile right before he destroyed you. Then you look at Mateo’s face, and you see a man who’s learned the hard way that power doesn’t keep you warm at night. You look at Alma, and you see a child who’s choosing you without conditions. You swallow, and your voice breaks anyway. “Yes,” you whisper. Mateo’s eyes fill instantly, relief and disbelief crashing together. You lift a finger. “But I have one condition,” you add, and Alma gasps like it’s drama. Mateo nods quickly. “Anything.” You let yourself smile—small, real. “Pancakes every Sunday,” you say. “And you’re going to learn to make them right.” Mateo laughs, wet-eyed, and Alma cheers so loudly someone knocks on a neighbor’s wall.
Six months later, you stand under an arch of white flowers in a garden that smells like salt air and fresh vows. Your dress is simple and elegant—nothing loud, nothing borrowed, just you. Alma wears a little blue dress and throws petals like she’s casting spells. Mateo waits at the end of the aisle with a look that makes your knees wobble: not ownership, not pride, but gratitude. In the first row, Irene sits with her hands folded, expression softened in a way you never expected. After the hearing, Irene did something you still can’t fully explain—she helped you. She used her connections to reopen your case, pulled records, traced Víctor’s forged documents, and handed your name back to you piece by piece. One night she told you quietly, “Sometimes people choose the wrong side for too long… until the cost finally feels personal.”
When you speak your vows, you don’t pretend your past didn’t happen. You make it part of the truth. “You offered me a seven-day contract,” you tell Mateo, voice steady. “Today I choose a lifetime—with honesty, with boundaries, and with love that doesn’t require me to disappear.” Mateo’s throat tightens visibly. “You saved Alma,” he says, voice cracking. “But you also saved me from becoming the kind of man who confuses control with safety.” Alma wipes her eyes dramatically like she’s the one getting married. People laugh through tears. And when you kiss Mateo, you don’t feel like a woman rescued. You feel like a woman who survived long enough to decide what she deserves.
A few months after the wedding, your name appears on a glass door downtown: LUCÍA ARRIAGA — Architecture, Restoration, Rebuild. The studio is small but bright, filled with sketches, models, and the sound of your own confidence returning. You start taking projects no one wants: old buildings with cracked bones, homes that need careful hands. You restore things for a living because you learned what it means to be torn apart. At night, you help Alma with homework and listen to her talk about her mom without shattering. You tell her it’s okay to love her mother and love you too—that love isn’t a replacement, it’s an expansion. Mateo learns pancakes slowly, tragically, and you tease him until he finally gets them golden.
And sometimes, when the rain falls the way it did that day on Avenida del Puerto, you drive past the curve where it all started. The street looks ordinary now—just asphalt, buses, umbrellas, people rushing. No one would guess your life broke open there. You remember the balloon rising, the child running, your body moving before your fear could vote. You remember how close death sounded, how loud the silence was afterward. You remember the word “Mom” and how it hurt like truth. The miracle, you realize, wasn’t the money or the penthouse or even the courtroom win. The miracle was that you were invisible… and still chose to save someone anyway.
Because here’s the part that still leaves people speechless when they hear your story: the seven days were never what changed him. The performance wasn’t the twist. You were. You—the woman the world stepped around—walked into a rich man’s life and taught him what protection actually looks like. You didn’t just help him keep a child. You forced him to become the kind of man worthy of one. And while everyone expected the homeless woman to be the grateful one, the truth was the opposite. In the end, he wasn’t the one rescuing you. He was the one who finally learned how to be rescued by love.
