The mother froze with her hand already on the door handle.
The man in the navy suit walked past the silent tables, past the employees, and stopped in front of the little boy. For a moment, he said nothing. He only stared at the child’s tired eyes like he was seeing a ghost from another life.
Then he turned to the employee.
“Pack every cake in this display.”
The employee blinked. “Sir, I don’t think—”
The man’s voice dropped.
“I own this bakery.”
The female employee went pale.
The mother covered her mouth, shaking her head as if kindness itself had become too heavy to accept. The child looked from the cakes to the man, still confused.
The man crouched in front of him and gently asked, “What’s your name?”
The boy whispered, “Daniel.”
The man stopped breathing.
His hand trembled as he pulled an old photo from his wallet. A younger woman smiled in it, holding a baby wrapped in the same faded blue blanket now hanging from the mother’s bag.
The man looked up at the mother, broken.
“Where did you get that blanket?”
The mother’s tears froze.
“It was left with him… at the shelter.”
The man looked at the child again, his voice almost gone.
“That’s my grandson.”