Mark looked around and found no support.
He set the blue box down on the table.
He pulled the front door open and walked out without another word.
I listened to his footsteps cross the porch.
Then I turned around.
Victor was still standing in the hallway, holding the locket. He looked like a man who had been prepared for another outcome.
“Uncle Victor,” I said.
He looked at me when I said it — really looked at me, the way people look when they hear something they were not certain they would ever hear.
“Come sit down.”
I went to the kitchen and ladled the beef stew into two bowls, setting them on my mother’s chipped table with the mismatched chairs she had collected over the years from garage sales and neighbors moving away.
Victor stopped at the kitchen doorway.
“I can eat outside,” he said. It came out automatic, like something said so many times it had become reflex.
“No,” I said. “You don’t eat outside anymore.”
He stood there another moment.
“I haven’t sat at a table in a long time,” he said.
“Then sit,” I said. “Tonight you’re staying here. Tomorrow we’ll start figuring out the rest. Together.”
He came slowly into the kitchen and pulled out the chair across from mine.
He set the locket on the table between us.
I looked at the photograph inside it — those two children on the porch steps, her knees scraped and his lip split, both of them squinting into a sun that was clearly doing the best it could.
My safe place.
We ate the beef stew in the kitchen where my mother had stirred soup every afternoon for twenty years, packing two bowls for the table and one for the back door. We ate at the chipped table she had bought at a garage sale on Elm Street when I was seven. We ate while the winter settled into the neighborhood outside and the house was quiet in the particular way that houses are quiet after the people who filled them are gone.
For the first time in his life in this house, Victor’s meal didn’t go out the back door.
It stayed at the table.
Exactly where it always should have been.
What do you think about Fiona and Victor’s story? Drop your thoughts in the comments on the Facebook video — we’d love to hear from you. And if this one stayed with you, please share it with your friends and family. Some stories carry more than they appear to at first glance.
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