
Every morning, I fed a lonely boy—secretly, so the leadership wouldn’t find out. But one day, he didn’t show up: instead, black cars pulled up outside the café, and the letter the soldiers handed me knocked the wind out from under my feet.
Every morning, I set out cups, wiped down tables, and pretended everything was fine. The world around me seemed stuck on repeat—the same faces, the smell of coffee, the ringing of the bell above the door.
One day, I noticed a boy. Small, about ten years old, with a backpack that seemed heavier than he was. He always arrived at precisely 7:15, sat in the farthest corner, and ordered only a glass of water.
On the fifteenth day, I placed a plate of pancakes in front of him.
“We accidentally made extra,” I said, pretending it was just a mistake.
He looked at me for a long moment, then quietly said,
“Thank you.”
From then on, I brought him breakfast every day. He never told me who he was or why he was alone, without his parents. He simply ate and always thanked me.
And then one day he didn’t come. I waited, staring at the door, until I heard the sound of engines outside. Four black SUVs stopped at the entrance. Men in uniform entered and silently handed me a letter.

When I read the first words, the plate fell from my hands. A deathly silence fell over the cafe.

I still remember that day. 9:17 AM. The air outside seemed to thicken—four black SUVs stopped at the entrance. Men in uniform entered the room, step by step, as if they were carrying not just papers, but someone’s fate.
One of them approached me, took off his cap, and said he was looking for the woman who fed the boy in the mornings. My mouth went dry. “It’s me,” I replied.
He pulled out a folded letter. His voice trembled slightly.
The boy’s name was Adam. His father was a soldier. He died in the line of duty.
Before he died, he wrote: “Thank the woman from the cafe who fed my son. She gave him what the world had deprived him of—the feeling that he was still remembered.”
When I finished reading the letter, my hands trembled treacherously. Everything around me froze—even the spoons stopped clanking. The soldiers saluted. And I simply stood there, unable to utter a word.
For a long time, I couldn’t recover from that day. I reread the letter over and over, as if afraid the letters would disappear if I let go of it. Sometimes I thought he would still come—with the same backpack, with the same timid smile.
A few weeks later, I received another letter. From that same officer. Inside was a short note and a photograph: the boy, the same one, sitting on the grass next to a man in uniform.
It turned out he had been adopted by his father’s friend, a soldier whose life he had once saved.
“Now he has a home. And he often thinks of the woman who fed him in the mornings,” it read.
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