For twenty years, I believed my mother had chosen a homeless man over her own daughter. Even after she died, I kept bringing Viktor food simply because I had given her my word. But the moment he pressed her missing locket into my hand, I discovered that Mom hadn’t been hiding an act of charity from me. She had been hiding family.
The day after my mother’s funeral, the homeless man who had lived behind our house disappeared.
For most of my childhood, Viktor had lived behind our modest rental house in a makeshift shelter made of tarps and scrap wood. My mother brought him food every single day. When I returned with the meal she had begged me to deliver, Viktor was standing next to a black SUV, neatly dressed in a coat, holding my mother’s silver locket. It was the very same locket she had adamantly claimed was lost when I was eight years old.
“I thought you might not come, Fiona,” he said. I nearly dropped the food container.
“Viktor? How…?” Without his beard, he looked older. His eyes were weary and rimmed with red. “I brought dinner,” I said. “But what is actually going on here?” His hand tightened around the locket. “Before she died,” he said, “your mother begged me to keep quiet.” A shiver ran down my spine. “About what?” Viktor glanced toward the kitchen window—the one Mom used to watch him from whenever she thought I wasn’t paying attention. “About who I am.”
Every afternoon, my mother packed three meals. Two stayed on our worn kitchen table. The third went into the plastic container she had just washed out and set aside for Viktor. I hated it. I hated watching tape cover the holes in my sneakers while Viktor got the biggest piece of chicken. We were struggling enough ourselves. I was eleven when I finally voiced what had been building up inside me. “He eats better than I do, Mama.” Mama kept stirring at the stove without looking up. “Fiona, don’t start. Please.” “Mama, our power was cut off twice this winter,” I said. “But Viktor gets a lunch every day, like he’s part of the family.” The spoon slipped from her fingers and clattered into the sink. “Don’t say his name like that, Fiona. He needs help.” I crossed my arms. I was cold, hungry, and cruel—the way hurt children sometimes are. “Why? He’s just some man behind our house.” Mama turned to face me; her face had gone chalk-white. “No,” she said. “He isn’t just some man.” “Then who is he?” For a moment, I thought she would finally answer me. Instead, she pressed the warm container into my hands. “Take him his food, sweetheart.” I stared at her. “Maybe we wouldn’t be living like this if you stopped feeding strangers.” Mama slammed her palm onto the counter so hard that I flinched. “Don’t you EVER dare say something like that again. Do you hear me? You have no idea what that man gave up.” “Gave up for whom? For you?” Her body trembled. Then she turned away. “Take him his food, Fiona. This conversation is over.” So I did it. Viktor sat near the fence, rubbing his hands to warm them. “Did your mom make soup today?” he asked. “Yes. Chicken soup.” A gentle smile appeared on his face. “That’s her best.” “You don’t even know her.” The smile vanished completely. “I know her soup.” For some reason, that only made me resent him more.
The years went by, and eventually I moved out. Mom and I argued less because I stopped asking questions. But Viktor never left. Sometimes I’d notice him fixing a loose porch step or stacking firewood after a storm. One year in high school, when my boots were falling apart, a pair of worn-but-decent shoes mysteriously appeared next to my backpack. “Where did these come from?” I asked. “A clothing donation from the church,” Mom answered too quickly. I looked out the kitchen window. Outside, Viktor was sweeping snow off the steps. None of it made sense to me.
Then came the cancer, slowly wasting my mother away. Stefanie used to carry bags of groceries in both hands and open doors with her elbows. Toward the end, the bones of her wrists stood out sharply beneath her skin. Two weeks before she died, I sat by her hospital bed while she nervously fiddled with the blanket. “Fiona.” “I’m here.” “You have to promise me something.” I leaned closer. “Mom, get some rest.” “No.” Her fingers closed around my wrist. “Viktor.” My stomach knotted instantly. “Not that again.” “Promise me you’ll feed him.” “Why?” I whispered. “Why him? Why always him?” Her eyes filled with tears. “I never put him before you.” “But it felt like it.” “I know.” Her voice broke. “And I’m sorry.” “Then tell me why.” She glanced toward the door. “When Markus comes here, after I’m gone… don’t let him get to the blue box.” I blinked. “Uncle Markus?” “Promise me.” “What does Markus have to do with Viktor?” Her grip tightened. “He’ll wipe him out completely.” “Wipe out who?” “Just promise me, Fiona.” I wanted answers. I wanted them all. But she looked so frightened, and no matter how old I was, I was still her daughter. “I promise,” I said. A tear rolled down her cheek. “He was my safe place,” she whispered. A few days later, she was dead.
After the funeral, mourners filled Mom’s small house with sandwiches and quiet sympathy. She had bought the house years earlier, after saving every penny she could spare. Uncle Markus was standing in the hallway, already going through boxes. I walked toward him. “What are you doing?” He gave me that calm smile he always used when he wanted me to doubt myself. “Helping.” “By rummaging through her things?” “Your mother kept too much, Fiona. Old papers. Broken dishes. Things that only reminded her of sadness.” “I decide what stays.” His smile narrowed. “You’re grieving. Now isn’t the time for emotional decisions.” I looked past him toward the back window. Viktor’s shelter was behind the fence, half-hidden by weeds. “Funny,” I said. “Mom told me the exact same thing about you.” Markus’s hand froze on a cardboard box. “What did Stefanie say?” “That I shouldn’t let you near the blue box if you came over.” For a split second, something shifted in his expression. Then he laughed. “She was sick.” “She was afraid.” “Of me?” “You tell me.” He glanced briefly at the relatives gathered in the living room before lowering his voice. “Let old pain stay buried, Fiona.”
The next morning, I made beef stew, because it was the only dish I knew how to prepare without ruining it. I packed it into one of Mom’s plastic containers and drove back to her house. The first thing I noticed was that Viktor’s shelter was empty. The blanket had been folded up. The coffee tins were gone. Even the firewood was neatly stacked. “Viktor?” I called out. “Fiona.” I turned around. Viktor was standing by the back steps, wearing a clean, dark coat. Beside him stood a black SUV I had never seen before. My heart sank. “Whose car is that?” Before he could answer, Frau Becker stepped out of the driver’s side. “Borrowed from my nephew,” she said. “Viktor wanted to say goodbye to your mother without Markus causing trouble. We’ve been to her grave.” I glanced at Viktor’s coat. He touched the sleeve self-consciously. “Borrowed, too.” Then I noticed the locket in his hand. “Where did you get my mother’s locket? I recognize it from photos.” His thumb traced the dented silver rim. “Stefanie gave it to me.” “That locket was lost.” “No,” Viktor said. “She just told you that.” My chest tightened. “Why would my mother give you her locket?” “Because I gave it to her in the first place.” I stared at him. “When?” “When she was about ten—maybe younger,” he said. “She’d had a terrible day. I told her that if she wore it, she could pretend I was walking right beside her.” Frau Becker lowered her gaze. Viktor opened the locket. Inside was a faded photo of two children sitting on the porch steps, his arm draped around her shoulders. Scratched onto the back in a child’s handwriting were three words: “My safe place.” My throat tightened. “That’s Mom?” Viktor nodded. “And the boy is you?” “Yes.” I took a step back. “No. Mom only had one brother.” “Markus was the youngest.” “You’re lying.” “I wish I were.” “If you were her brother,” I said, my voice rising, “then why did she let you live outside?” Viktor flinched. Before he could answer, Frau Becker spoke up. “Because Markus scared her.” I turned to her. “Scared her? How?” “He convinced Stefanie that people would deem her unfit to raise her child if she let Viktor near you. She was poor, raising a child on her own, and terrified.” Viktor closed the locket. “She kept me close by. That was all she felt she could risk. It wasn’t easy to help me, Fiona. But your mother never stopped trying.” My thoughts immediately flew back to Mom’s hospital room. “The blue box,” I whispered. Viktor looked up. “She told you about it?” “She said I shouldn’t let Markus get to it.” Frau Becker pointed toward the house. “Then stop standing around here.”



















































