
Derrick nodded. “I’ve been studying about muscles and nerves. My mom used to be a nurse before she got sick. I read her books. I know exercises, stretches, and therapy methods. I can help you walk again — if you just give me a chance. And… maybe that food.”
For a long moment, Victoria said nothing. Martha rolled her eyes, ready to dismiss him, but Victoria felt something stir inside her — curiosity, the first spark of interest she’d felt in years.
Finally, she said quietly, “Alright, boy. Come by my house tomorrow morning. Let’s see if you’re as brave as you sound.”
Martha gasped, but Victoria smiled faintly. For the first time in years, her heart beat faster. She didn’t know why she believed him — maybe it wasn’t belief at all, but hope disguised as madness.
That night, Derrick couldn’t sleep. For him, tomorrow meant more than a meal — it was a chance to change both their lives.
The next morning, Derrick showed up at Victoria’s mansion wearing the same worn clothes, his face freshly washed. The guards looked uncertain but allowed him in after Victoria confirmed his visit. The mansion smelled of polished wood and lavender — a world far from his own.
Victoria greeted him from her wheelchair, dressed elegantly but with tired eyes. “So, Doctor Derrick,” she teased lightly, “what’s the plan?”
Derrick smiled shyly. “We start small. You’ve been sitting too long, so your muscles are weak. We’ll work on stretching and breathing first.”
To everyone’s surprise, Victoria agreed. The first few sessions were awkward. Derrick’s hands trembled as he adjusted her legs, helping her stretch. She winced from the pain. More than once, she nearly told him to stop. But Derrick’s calm determination made her continue.
Day by day, the exercises became part of her morning routine. Derrick explained how nerves could regenerate slowly, how mental focus mattered, how hope itself could be a kind of medicine. He didn’t speak like a child — he spoke like someone who had studied life through struggle.
One afternoon, after weeks of effort, Victoria managed to move her toes slightly. Her eyes filled with tears. “Did you see that?” she whispered.
Derrick grinned wide. “Yes, ma’am! You’re doing it!”
That small movement became their turning point. News of Victoria’s gradual recovery spread among her staff, and even her doctors were baffled. “It’s impossible,” one physician said. “No medical treatment can restore her legs.”
But Victoria didn’t care what science said. For the first time since her accident, she felt alive.
Then one day, as Derrick packed up his things after a session, a sharp knock echoed at the door. A man in a suit entered — Victoria’s estranged brother, Charles Lane.
He glared at Derrick. “Who’s this street kid doing in my sister’s house?”
“He’s helping me,” Victoria replied firmly.
Charles scoffed. “Helping you? He’s probably stealing from you! You’ve lost your mind, Victoria. Let me handle your finances before this charity case ruins you.”
The words stung Derrick, but he stayed silent. Victoria’s face hardened. “Leave, Charles,” she said coldly.
But before he could move, she tried to stand — to prove her strength — and collapsed forward, hitting the floor hard. Derrick rushed to her side as Charles shouted in panic.
Victoria’s body trembled. Her breathing quickened. Pain shot through her legs, and tears filled her eyes.
That moment — her collapse, his fear, her brother’s outrage — became the climax that would change everything.
Victoria was rushed to the hospital. Doctors ran tests, and the verdict came: her progress had strained her spine dangerously. She might never regain movement again — and this time, even small exercises could be risky.
Charles used the opportunity to try to dismiss Derrick permanently. “You’ve done enough damage,” he barked. “Go back to wherever you came from.”
But Victoria stopped him. “No,” she said, voice weak but resolute. “He stays.”
Derrick refused payment and left quietly for several days, feeling guilty for her pain. He thought she’d never want to see him again. Then, one morning, a car pulled up outside the shelter where he was staying. It was Victoria’s driver.
Inside the mansion, Victoria waited, her wheelchair beside a new physical therapy setup — the kind she once refused to use. “You didn’t hurt me, Derrick,” she said softly. “You reminded me to fight again. That’s something no doctor has done in five years.”
From then on, Derrick assisted professional therapists who now joined Victoria’s care team. With time and persistence, her condition stabilized, and small improvements returned. She began to feel her legs more clearly, her hands stronger on the wheels of her chair.
Months later, she sponsored Derrick’s education — enrolling him in a private school with a full scholarship. “I didn’t just gain a helper,” she told him. “I gained a reason to believe again.”
Years passed. Derrick graduated with honors in physiotherapy. On the day he received his diploma, Victoria attended in person — standing with a cane.
When the ceremony ended, she smiled through tears. “Looks like the boy who asked for my leftovers gave me back my life.”
Derrick laughed, eyes shining. “And you gave me mine, ma’am.”
They hugged — two people from different worlds, bound not by charity or chance, but by the courage to hope.
It had all begun with hunger… and a single, impossible question.