“Please, buy this brooch, my grandmother is sick, we need medicine,” a little girl begged a millionaire on the street. But when the man saw the brooch, he almost lost consciousness from shock
The cold November day dragged on slowly. Snow mixed with rain settled on the pavement, people walked past with their eyes fixed on their phones or buried in their collars. Viktor stood in front of a jewelry store window, staring at his own reflection. The expensive coat fit him perfectly, the watch on his wrist was worth more than he had once earned in an entire year, and his face looked calm and tired at the same time. More than fifty years of life, a big business, a house, a car with a driver, and the feeling that nothing inside him had changed for a long time.
His phone vibrated briefly—the driver was informing him that the car was ready. Viktor turned to leave, but at that moment he heard a child’s voice, quiet and trembling.
The girl stood right by the entrance, about eight or nine years old. Her jacket was old and too big, and a red knitted hat covered almost her entire forehead. In her outstretched hand she held a small brooch and looked at him as if she no longer hoped that anyone would stop.
“Please… maybe you could buy it?”
He turned around. In front of him stood a girl of about eight, no more. Thin, in an old jacket clearly not her size. The red hat had slipped down over her forehead, strands of hair sticking out from underneath. In her hands she held something small and shiny.
“My grandmother is dying…” she said softly. “We need money. No one stops.”
People really did walk past. Some pretended not to hear, others quickened their pace. The city had long since learned not to notice other people’s pain.
He stopped without quite understanding why. Not out of pity. It was simply the girl’s gaze that touched something inside him.
“What do you have there?” he asked.
She carefully opened her palm. Lying there was a brooch.
Old. Tarnished silver. A blue forget-me-not. And a tiny stone in the center, like a drop of dew.
His breath caught. He recognized the brooch immediately. Viktor slowly raised his eyes to the girl and froze in shock Continued in the first comment
It was Emma’s brooch.
Emma wore it all the time, even when there was no money for anything unnecessary. He remembered giving it to her at the beginning of their relationship, when they were young and believed that everything was still ahead of them. Back then they broke up abruptly and foolishly, each going their own way, convinced that everything could be fixed later.
Later he learned that Emma had died in childbirth. She had discovered she was pregnant only after the separation and hadn’t had time to tell him anything. The child was raised by her grandmother, and it was this very woman who now lay ill, while her granddaughter stood out in the cold with the last valuable thing she had left.
Viktor looked at the girl more closely and saw familiar features he would not have wanted to notice before. He realized that standing in front of him was Emma’s daughter—and, as it turned out, his own daughter, whose existence he had never known about all these years.
He gently took the brooch in his hand and returned it to the girl, saying that she would still need it. Then he suggested they sit in the warm car and go to her grandmother, because a conversation on the street was not appropriate.
At that moment, Viktor understood that for the first time in many years he did not need to be a businessman, but simply a human being ready to take responsibility for what he had once walked away from.


