The older woman stared at the keys, then at the folded document, then back at the young woman’s face.
Her eyes widened slowly.
“No…” she whispered.
The young woman nodded, already crying now.
“Yes.”
The vendor’s weathered hands hovered over the counter, trembling. “You really came back.”
“I told you I would.”
The older woman covered her mouth, overwhelmed.
Traffic hummed in the distance. The grill sizzled softly. But between them, everything felt still.
The young woman took a shaky breath.
“You fed me on the worst day of my life,” she said. “I hadn’t eaten in two days. I thought nobody could see me anymore.”
The older woman’s eyes flooded.
“I remember your face,” she whispered. “I never forgot your eyes.”
The younger woman laughed through tears. “I never forgot your kindness.”
She pushed the folded document closer.
The older woman slowly opened it with shaking fingers.
Her eyes moved across the page.
Then she gasped.
The stand.
The permit.
The ownership papers.
Her lips parted, but no words came out.
The young woman reached for her hand again.
“This stand is yours,” she said softly. “Paid in full. No rent. No debt. No fear.”
The older woman broke.
A small sob escaped her as she looked around the little stand she had spent her life working in.
“You did this… for me?”
The young woman shook her head gently.
“You did it first. You fed a little girl nobody wanted to notice.”
The older woman stepped out from behind the counter and pulled her into a tight, trembling embrace.
They held onto each other on the busy sidewalk while people slowed down and stared.
The young woman closed her eyes and whispered into her shoulder, “You gave me food.”
Then her voice broke.
“But really… you gave me back my life.”