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The building stood on a quiet side street, tucked between newer apartments with glass balconies and bright lights. It was older, worn around the edges, its paint peeling in places, its stairs creaking with every step. To most people, it was easy to overlook. To Victor Hale, it was just another property on a long listโ€”one that hadnโ€™t paid rent in nearly three months.

Victor adjusted his coat as he stepped out of his car. He was a successful landlord, known for his efficiency and firm rules. Late payments annoyed him, not because he needed the moneyโ€”he didnโ€™tโ€”but because they disrupted order. And Victor valued order above all else.

He checked the address again, sighed, and walked toward the entrance.

โ€œLetโ€™s get this over with,โ€ he muttered.

Inside, the hallway smelled faintly of cleaning solution and something elseโ€”old wood, perhaps. His polished shoes echoed against the tiled floor as he climbed the stairs to the third floor. Apartment 3B. The file in his briefcase was thin: single tenant, recently widowed, inconsistent payments, no formal complaints. Still, rules were rules.

He stopped in front of the door and knockedโ€”firmly, the way people do when they expect answers.

No response.

He knocked again, louder this time. From inside, he heard movement. A chair scraped against the floor. Soft footsteps approached.

The door opened slowly.

A woman stood there, small and pale, her dark hair pulled back loosely. She looked exhausted. Behind her, the apartment was dim, the curtains drawn even though it was midday.

โ€œYes?โ€ she asked cautiously.

โ€œGood afternoon,โ€ Victor said, slipping into his practiced tone. โ€œIโ€™m Victor Hale. The landlord. We need to talk about your rent.โ€

Her shoulders tensed immediately.

โ€œI know,โ€ she said quietly. โ€œI was going to call.โ€

Victor nodded, already preparing his response. โ€œYouโ€™re three months behind. Iโ€™ll need payment today, or weโ€™ll have to discuss next steps.โ€

She lowered her eyes. โ€œCould youโ€ฆ could you come in for a moment?โ€

Victor hesitated. He usually didnโ€™t enter tenantsโ€™ apartments. It blurred lines. But something in her voiceโ€”tired, not defensiveโ€”made him pause.

โ€œAlright,โ€ he said curtly.

She stepped aside, and he walked in.

The apartment was small but tidy. No clutter. No mess. Just sparsely furnished, as if only the essentials remained. A small table. Two chairs. A couch with a folded blanket. But what caught his attention immediately was the back room.

The bedroom door was open.

Inside, a little boy lay on a bed, no older than six or seven. His skin was pale, his cheeks hollow. A soft hum filled the roomโ€”the sound of a small oxygen machine beside the bed. Tubes ran gently beneath his nose. His eyes were closed, chest rising and falling unevenly.

Victor stopped walking.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ the woman said quickly, noticing his gaze. โ€œThatโ€™s my son. Daniel.โ€

Victor felt something tighten in his chest.

โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong with him?โ€ he asked before he could stop himself.

She hesitated, then spoke softly, as if afraid the words themselves might hurt him. โ€œA congenital lung condition. He gets infections easily. Heโ€™s been in and out of the hospital since he was a baby.โ€

Victor glanced around the room again. The medications lined neatly on a small shelf. The worn childrenโ€™s books stacked beside the bed. A drawing taped to the wallโ€”crayon stick figures holding hands under a bright sun.

โ€œHeโ€™s sleeping,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s one of his better days.โ€

Victor cleared his throat. โ€œAndโ€ฆ his father?โ€

Her eyes dropped to the floor. โ€œMy husband passed away last year. Sudden heart failure.โ€

Silence filled the apartment.

Victor shifted uncomfortably. This wasnโ€™t part of the script. He was supposed to collect rent, issue a warning, move on. Instead, he was standing in a quiet room with a sick child and a grieving mother.

โ€œI work nights,โ€ she continued, almost apologetically. โ€œCleaning offices. During the day, I stay with him. The hospital billsโ€ฆ they take everything.โ€

Victor opened his briefcase instinctively, then stopped. The rent notice suddenly felt absurdly heavy in his hands.

โ€œIโ€™m not asking for sympathy,โ€ she said quickly. โ€œI just needed a little more time. I promise Iโ€™ll catch up.โ€

Victor looked at the boy again. Daniel stirred slightly, coughing weakly before settling back into sleep. The sound cut through Victor in a way he hadnโ€™t expected.

For a moment, his mind driftedโ€”uninvitedโ€”to a memory he hadnโ€™t visited in years. A hospital room. A small bed. The steady beep of machines. His own younger brother, gone before adulthood. Victor had buried that part of his life under contracts and numbers and rules.

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