“I can’t accept this,” I said, my voice barely steady. “This is far too much.”
James shook his head gently. “It isn’t. You gave me something when I had nothing. You didn’t ask questions. You didn’t judge. You just opened your door.”
“That one act changed the way I saw the world,” he continued. “I realized that if one person could care that much, then maybe life was still worth fighting for.”
I pressed my hand to my chest, overwhelmed.
“But I didn’t save you,” I said. “You did all of this yourself.”
He smiled softly. “Maybe. But you reminded me that saving myself was possible.”
More Than a House
As if the deed weren’t enough, James slid another document toward me.
“This one matters just as much,” he said.
It outlined a scholarship fund. One created to help people who had experienced homelessness gain training, education, and a fresh start. And there, printed clearly on the page, was my name.
“I named it after you,” James said, his voice thick with emotion. “Because you showed me what dignity looks like.”
“I didn’t do anything special,” I whispered.
“You did,” he replied. “You treated me like a human being.”