I woke up to quiet—no messages, no gifts, no phone calls. My home is a small room above an old hardware store, furnished with just a bed, a kettle, and a chair by the window.
That window is my favorite spot. I sit there and watch the buses go by.
At the bakery, the young woman behind the counter didn’t seem to recognize me, though I come in every week.
I told her it was my birthday. She gave me a polite smile.

I bought a small vanilla cake with strawberries and had them write, “Happy 97th, Mr. L.” on it.
Back at home, I lit a candle, cut a slice of cake, and waited. For what, I wasn’t sure.
I haven’t heard from my son, Eliot, in five years—not since I told him I didn’t like the way his wife spoke to me.
He ended the call, and we never spoke again.
I took a photo of the cake and sent it to his old number, with a simple message: “Happy birthday to me.” No reply came—not that day, not any day.

I must have dozed off in the chair by the window.
Then came a knock.
A young woman stood there, a little nervous, holding her phone.
“Are you Mr. L?” she asked. “I’m Nora. Eliot’s daughter.” I was stunned.
She had found my number on her father’s phone, saw the photo I’d sent, and decided to come meet me.
She brought a turkey and mustard sandwich—my favorite.
We sat together at my little crate-table and shared the cake.
She asked about Eliot’s childhood, about my old garden, and why things had fallen apart between us. I told her. “Pride builds walls,” I said. She nodded. She got it.

Before she left, she asked if she could visit again.
I said she’d better.
The room felt warmer after she left.
The next morning, I received a message from Eliot: Is she okay?
I wrote back: She’s wonderful.
A few days later, another knock at the door—it was Eliot. He looked uncertain.

“I didn’t know if you’d open the door,” he said. “Neither did I,” I told him. But I opened it. We didn’t solve everything that day, but it was a beginning.
If you’ve been waiting, maybe now is the time to reach out.
Love has a way of showing up unexpectedly—sometimes in a knock, a message, or a new face who remembers what’s important.