Minutes passed.
Matthew slowly opened his eyes.
The first thing he saw was the little girl beside him.
For a long moment, he said nothing. He just looked at her. Really looked, not as a stranger, not as a servant’s child, but as someone who had just saved his life.
Ada helped him sit up, still shaken, but alive.
“Sir, are you okay?” she asked carefully.
Matthew nodded slowly. His voice was weak.
“Yes, I am.”
His eyes moved back to Nancy.
“You helped me,” he said quietly.
Nancy did not say much. She just gave a small nod.
Matthew looked down at the inhaler in his hand, then back at her.
Something inside him shifted.
For the first time in a long while, his face softened.
That same evening, everything began to change.
Matthew called Ada to the living room. She stood nervously, unsure of what to expect.
“I heard your daughter is sick,” he said.
Ada lowered her head. “Yes, sir.”
“She will see a doctor. A good one,” he continued. “I will take care of it.”
Ada looked up, surprised.
“And you,” he added gently, “you are no longer just a maid in this house.”
Tears filled her eyes. “Thank you, sir.”
Matthew shook his head slowly.
“No,” he said. “Thank her.”
He looked toward Nancy, who was resting quietly nearby.
From that day on, the mansion was no longer the same. It was still big, still beautiful. But now, it had something it had lost a long time ago.
Life.
And for the first time since the tragedy, Matthew did not feel alone.
Because a small child had done what money never could.
She gave him another chance to live.
The days that followed felt different.
For the first time in years, the mansion was not silent in a painful way. There was movement. There was care. There was attention.
True to his word, Matthew arranged for Nancy to see a specialist at a good hospital. Not just quick treatment, but proper care. Tests were done. Medicines were given. Within days, her fever broke completely.
Ada could hardly believe it.
She sat by Nancy’s hospital bed one evening, holding her small hand, tears quietly rolling down her face. Not tears of fear this time, but relief.
“You’re okay,” she whispered.
Nancy smiled weakly. “I told God to help me too.”
Ada laughed softly through her tears.
Back at the mansion, things kept changing.
Matthew was no longer the man who stayed locked away in his room. He began to come out more. At first, it was just short walks through the house. Then he started sitting in the living room again.
One afternoon, he found Nancy sitting on the floor, playing quietly with a small toy. He stood there for a moment, watching her.
“You like this place, Nancy?” he asked.
Nancy looked up and nodded. “It’s big.”
Matthew gave a small smile. “Too big?”
Nancy tilted her head. “Why?”
He paused. Then, for the first time in a long while, he answered honestly.
“Because it had no one in it.”
Nancy did not fully understand, but she slowly stood up and walked closer to him.
“I’m here now,” she said simply.
Those words stayed with him.
Days later, Matthew called Ada again. This time, his voice was calm but firm.
“I’ve made a decision,” he said.
Ada stood quietly, listening.
“You and your daughter will not be working here anymore.”
Her heart dropped instantly. Fear rushed in.
“Sir, please, I—”
He raised his hand gently to stop her.
“You won’t be working here,” he continued, “because you will be living here.”
Ada froze.
“I don’t understand,” she whispered.
Matthew looked toward Nancy, who was standing nearby.
“This house is too big for one person,” he said. “And I think it has been empty for too long.”
Ada’s eyes filled with tears again.
“I want to take responsibility for Nancy’s future,” he added. “Her education, her health, everything. She deserves a chance.”
Nancy looked between them, confused but calm.
“And you,” he said to Ada, “you deserve rest, not just survival.”
Ada could no longer hold back her tears.
“Thank you, sir. Thank you so much.”
Matthew shook his head lightly.
“No,” he said again. “Thank her.”
He looked at Nancy with a softness that had not been there in years.
That evening, something new filled the mansion. Not just movement, not just voices, but warmth.
Real warmth.
Laughter slowly returned. Meals were shared. Conversations, small at first, began to grow.
And in quiet moments, Matthew would sit and watch Nancy play, a gentle reminder of the life he had lost, but also the life he had been given again.
He did not forget his past, but he was no longer trapped in it.
Because a small child with a weak body but a strong heart had done something powerful.
She did not just save his life.
She gave him a reason to live again.
And this time, he chose not to waste it.
Life in the mansion slowly found a new rhythm.
Mornings were no longer quiet and heavy. There was the soft sound of footsteps, the clink of plates, and sometimes laughter. Small at first, but real.
Nancy grew stronger each day. Her energy returned, and so did her smile. She would walk around the house freely now, no longer confined to a corner or a bed.
Matthew noticed everything.
The way she greeted him every morning. The way she said thank you even for the smallest things. The way she closed her eyes to pray before eating.
It touched something deep inside him.
One evening, as the sun set through the large windows, Matthew sat in the living room. Nancy sat on the floor nearby, drawing with colored pencils.
He watched her quietly.
“What are you drawing?” he asked.
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