After his wife’s funeral, the millionaire was heading toward his car when, right by the gates of the cemetery, he noticed a poor elderly woman. He stopped, took a few banknotes from his wallet, and silently handed them to her
The old woman took the money, looked at him carefully, and suddenly asked in a quiet voice, “And what will you say to your daughter?” The millionaire froze, because he had never had a daughter
The millionaire had buried his wife and was slowly walking toward the exit of the cemetery. Outside, heavy snow was falling, as if nature itself were mourning the woman he had loved more than life.
The coffin had just been lowered into the ground, and he was still standing beside it, feeling neither the cold nor noticing his wet clothes. It seemed as though, together with her, his entire life had been left in that earth.
There were people around him. Business partners, distant relatives, acquaintances he saw once a year. They approached him, shook his hand, spoke rehearsed words, but he hardly heard anyone. He understood that many had come not only to say goodbye, but also to look at him — rich, influential, and now alone.
When there were fewer people left, the driver quietly reminded him that the car was waiting at the gates. The man nodded and moved on. His feet sank into the wet snow, his thoughts were tangled, and inside there was only emptiness.
He and his wife had never had children. Now there was not a single familiar voice left in his home.
Right by the gates, under an old shelter, sat an elderly woman. Hunched over, wearing a dark headscarf, on a small wooden stool. Such women are often seen near cemeteries. The widower stopped for a moment, took some loose change from his pocket, almost without looking.
“Please remember my wife,” he asked softly.
The woman took the money without counting it, raised her eyes, and studied his face closely. Her eyes were light and unsettling, as if she knew more than she was saying. After a brief pause, she suddenly asked:
“And what will you say to your daughter?”
The man froze. Those words struck harder than the cold. For he had never had a daughter Continued in the first comment
The man slowly exhaled and looked at the old woman, as if hoping he had misheard. He wanted to say that she was mistaken, that it couldn’t be true, but the words stuck in his throat. The woman looked at him calmly, without pity and without judgment.
She said that many years ago she had worked as a nurse in a maternity ward. She remembered his wife very well. She had arrived at night, almost without belongings, frightened and very alone.
She had immediately asked that her husband not be told anything. She said he lived for his work, had no time, and that a child would ruin his familiar life.
The girl was born healthy. Small, quiet, with dark hair. The mother held her in her arms for only a few hours, then cried for a long time and kept repeating that she was doing this for everyone’s good. A few days later, the child was put up for adoption.
The old woman said that she later saw his wife many times. She would come, ask whether the girl was alive, how she was doing, whether she had found a family.
She never asked to take the child back; she only wanted to know that she was well. And every time she left in silence.
The man stood motionless. His head was buzzing. He remembered how his wife sometimes looked at children in the street, how she abruptly changed the subject when the conversation turned to family, how she lay awake for a long time at night. Back then, he had paid no attention to it.
He asked quietly whether the girl was still alive.
The old woman nodded and said yes. The girl had been adopted by an ordinary family. She had grown up, received an education, and lived a simple life. She did not know who her real parents were and had never looked for them. But she existed. And she was alive.


