The old man stared at his foot.
It moved again.
Just a little.
But enough.
The whole café fell silent around him. A woman at the next table covered her mouth. A waiter froze with a tray in his hands.
The boy still held the baby close, tears slipping down his dirty cheeks.
The old man looked up slowly. His voice was no longer mocking.
“Who are you?”
The boy swallowed hard. “My name is Eli.”
The old man’s face tightened. “And the baby?”
“Grace.”
The name hit him like pain.
His hand shook against the marble table. “Who told you to come here?”
The silent little girl behind Eli reached into her torn coat and pulled out a folded piece of paper. She gave it to him without speaking.
The old man opened it with trembling fingers.
The handwriting made his whole body go still.
Dad, if you’re reading this, I’m gone. Please don’t punish them for my choices. They are your grandchildren.
The old man stopped breathing.
Eli watched his face, scared of the answer. “Mom said you hated her.”
The old man closed his eyes.
A tear slipped down his wrinkled cheek.
“I was angry,” he whispered. “I was proud. I thought she would come back.”
Eli’s lips trembled. “She waited.”
That broke him.
The old man looked at the baby in Eli’s arms, then at the two hungry children standing behind him. His grandchildren. Standing in front of him like beggars while he sat beside a half-finished meal.
“Oh God,” he breathed.
He reached for them with shaking hands.
Eli stepped back at first, unsure.
The old man’s voice cracked. “Please. Let me hold her.”
Slowly, Eli placed the baby into his arms.
The moment Grace settled against his chest, the old man started crying. Not quiet tears. Deep, broken sobs that bent his whole body forward.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry.”
The little girl behind Eli began to cry too.
Then Eli looked at the wheelchair and asked softly, “Can you really walk now?”
The old man looked down.
His foot moved again.
He gripped the table, shaking, and tried to rise.
This time, he didn’t laugh.
He stood.