🎬 PART 2: «The Daughter He Buried in Silence»

“Father,” the boy finished.

The garden went dead silent.

Even the distant chatter from the other tables seemed to disappear.

The old man stared at the photo with trembling hands.

It was a hospital picture of a young woman lying weak in bed, smiling faintly, one hand resting on the same wooden flute.

The elegant woman beside him looked from the photo to the boy, suddenly uneasy.

The old man’s lips parted, but no sound came out.

The boy held the photo tighter.

“Mom said if I ever found you,” he whispered, “I should play the song you taught her.”

The old man shut his eyes like the words hurt.

Years ago, his daughter had fallen in love with a poor musician. He had called her a disgrace, cut her off, and told the family never to speak her name again.

Now her son was standing barefoot beside his table, hungry, shaking, begging for help.

“She’s dying,” the boy said, tears filling his eyes. “She told me not to hate you.”

A soft gasp came from the woman in black.

The old man looked at the carved symbol on the flute.

He had carved it himself when his daughter was twelve.

His hand began to shake so badly he had to set down his glass.

“She kept it,” he whispered.

The boy nodded, trying not to cry harder.

“She kept everything.”

For one long second, the old man just stared at him—the same eyes, the same trembling mouth, the same quiet dignity his daughter had when she was hurt.

Then his face broke.

He stood up so suddenly his chair scraped the stone.

The guests froze as he stepped toward the boy.

His voice cracked in front of everyone.

“Bring the car,” he said. “Now.”

The boy looked up, stunned.

The old man knelt in his tuxedo on the garden path, took the boy’s muddy face in both hands, and whispered through tears,

“Take me to my daughter.”

Добавить комментарий

Ваш адрес email не будет опубликован. Обязательные поля помечены *