The rain that evening fell harder than Hannah had ever seen in years. Sheets of water blurred the streetlights, and thunder rolled across the small town like angry drums. Inside a modest wooden house on Maple Lane, Hannah Collins sat at the kitchen table, sewing a rip in her son’s school uniform.
Her four children—Ava, Jacob, Lily, and Ben—were gathered around a candle, finishing their homework. It had been two years since her husband, Matthew, died in a construction accident, leaving behind a mortgage she struggled to pay. The house was old, but it was all they had.
When a sudden knock echoed through the storm, Hannah froze. Few people ever came out this far at night—especially in weather like this. Another knock followed, louder this time, mixed with the sound of wind and rain.
“Stay here,” she told her children and went to the door, candle trembling in her hand. She opened it to find an old man, drenched from head to toe. His coat clung to his body, and water dripped from the brim of his hat.
His voice trembled as he said, “I’m sorry to bother you, ma’am. I just need shelter until the rain slows.”
Hannah hesitated, but something about his eyes—tired yet kind—made her step aside. “Come in,” she said.
He entered slowly, leaning on his walking stick. Hannah helped him to the small fire and handed him a towel. “You can rest here tonight.
The sofa’s not much, but it’s warm.”
He thanked her softly. “You’re the first to open the door tonight.”
As he sipped tea and ate bread, he asked about her children, about her husband, and about how long she’d lived there. Hannah, though cautious, found herself answering.
He listened closely, almost like he already knew her struggles. When the storm began to quiet, the old man stood. “You’re kind, Hannah.
That kindness may save your family someday,” he said quietly.Family games
She smiled wearily. “I just did what anyone would do.”
But his expression turned solemn. “Not everyone would.”
That night, after everyone went to sleep, Hannah checked on the stranger once more.
He was resting peacefully on the couch, his walking stick leaning by the fire. She didn’t know it yet—but by the next morning, the man she’d helped would make a request so strange, so impossible, it would shake her to her core. “Sell me your house,” he would say.
“For one dollar. And leave today.”
The storm had passed by morning. Sunlight streamed through the kitchen window, making the puddles on the floor glisten.
Hannah woke early, expecting the old man to still be asleep, but found him sitting at the kitchen table, neatly dressed, his hat resting beside him. “I hope you slept well,” she said as she poured two cups of coffee. He nodded, his hands wrapped around the warm mug.
“Better than I have in years,” he replied. Then, after a pause, he said something that made her stop mid-sip. “Before I go, I need to ask something unusual.”
Hannah smiled politely.
“All right, what is it?”
He took a folded document from his bag and placed it on the table. “Would you sell me this house—for one dollar?”
She stared at him, certain she’d misheard. “Excuse me?”
“One dollar,” he repeated calmly.