At two in the morning, I opened the door to an unknown elderly woman with a crutch and a huge bag, even though I was alone in the house with four children — and in the morning, a real horror was waiting for me 😢😨
After my husband’s death, I was left alone with four children. He was the only one who brought money into the house, and with him it felt as if the ground had disappeared from beneath my feet. I’m not complaining — I’m simply living and holding on.
In the summer, the garden helps us: potatoes, jars of pickled cucumbers and tomatoes. But winter tests us every single time. In winter, everything becomes especially difficult.
That December was brutal. The temperature dropped to minus thirty, maybe even lower. The wind slammed against the walls as if it wanted to tear our old wooden house apart log by log. There wasn’t much firewood left, and I saved the last logs for the hours before dawn — the cold is always worse toward morning. In the room, huddled close together under one big blanket, my four children were sleeping. I watched their faces for a long time and couldn’t fall asleep.
I lay there counting money in my head. I had only a few coins left. A ridiculous amount when you have to feed, clothe, and shoe four children. That night, there was only one piece of stale bread in the refrigerator, which I had saved for the children in the morning. I thought about how I would divide it into four parts and say that we would have a “late lunch” that day, so they wouldn’t ask about breakfast.
And suddenly, through the howling blizzard, I heard a knock. Soft, uncertain. Not at the gate — right at the door. The clock read 2:00 a.m.
I went to the window and carefully pulled the curtain aside. Beyond the glass — only white haze, swirling snow, and darkness. No headlights, no silhouettes. The knocking came again — even weaker, as if the one knocking was running out of strength.
“Who’s there?” I asked quietly, trying to keep my voice from shaking.
From the darkness came a hoarse, elderly voice:
“My dear… Let me stay the night… I’m freezing…”
My mind screamed not to open the door. Terrible stories, warnings, fear for my children flashed through my head. But there was something in that voice that couldn’t be faked — utter exhaustion and a genuine plea. I opened the door.
On the doorstep stood a small, hunched old woman. Covered in snow, as if she had just been shaped from a snowdrift. Her scarf was frozen to her gray strands of hair, her padded coat crusted with ice. Her lips were blue from the cold, and she could barely breathe. In one hand she held a stick, in the other a large worn-out bag.
“Come in, Grandma,” I said, stepping aside. “Just quietly — the children are sleeping.”
She crossed the threshold, and icy air rushed into the house. I helped her take off her frozen coat and led her to the stove. I spread my old blanket on the bench for her. And suddenly, I remembered the bread.
I brought it and handed it to her.
“Eat. We have nothing else.”
She looked at me for a long time with a strange expression, as if trying to memorize my face, and quietly said:
“God will repay you.”
She ate a little, then lay down, tightly clutching her bag. I sat by the stove for a long time, listening to her breathing and the wind outside the window. Eventually, exhaustion overtook me.
But in the morning, in my own house, a real horror was waiting for me 😲😱 The continuation of the story can be found in the first comment 👇👇
In the morning, I was awakened by silence.
I walked over to the bench and understood everything at once. The old woman was lying peacefully with her eyes closed, as if she were simply asleep. But her chest no longer rose and fell. She had passed away quietly in her sleep.
But the strangest thing was something else.
Even after death, her hands were tightly clutching the worn-out bag. Carefully, I loosened her fingers and opened it.
Inside was money. A lot of money, bound with a rubber band. And a note.
“Kindness returns. Thank you for your act.”
I sat on the floor, unable to believe my eyes.