Every Monday at exactly 7:15 a.m., Walter Harmon walked into our diner, sat at booth three, and ordered the same breakfast.
Two eggs, wheat toast, black coffee, and a twenty-dollar tip.
For fourteen years, he barely said more than “good morning” and “thank you,” but those extra tips helped me survive some of my hardest moments.
They helped pay for my son Nathan’s braces, car repairs, and bills when money was tight.
I never knew much about Walter.
I only knew he came alone, read his newspaper quietly, and always treated me with respect.
Then one Monday, he never arrived.
The next week, the same thing happened.
By the third empty Monday, I placed a reserved sign on booth three because something inside me feared he was never coming back.
Then, at 7:15 on another Monday morning, two attorneys walked into the diner asking for me.
They carried a sealed envelope with Walter’s handwriting on it.
Inside was a letter explaining that Walter had passed away two weeks earlier.
But the letter revealed something I never expected.
Years before, Walter had been struggling after losing his wife.
He said the small kindness I showed him when he first entered the diner gave him a reason to keep leaving his house.
I had forgotten that moment completely.
But Walter had remembered it for fourteen years.
Then the attorneys placed several documents on the table.
And what they revealed left me speechless.
Walter had not only remembered every small kindness I gave him, but he had spent years preparing a final gift that would completely change the future of my family and the diner I loved.
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