vThe daughter who had married far away suddenly sent her father a pair of size 41 leather shoes, even though he wore a size 44. The father, who loved his daughter too much to upset her over something so small, lovingly put the shoes away in the closet. But exactly five months later, when he accidentally opened the box, he was so shocked that his hands began to tremble…

vThe daughter who had married far away suddenly sent her father a pair of size 41 leather shoes, even though he wore a size 44. The father, who loved his daughter too much to upset her over something so small, lovingly put the shoes away in the closet. But exactly five months later, when he accidentally opened the box, he was so shocked that his hands began to tremble…

I am sixty-two years old.

My whole life, I’ve worked with my hands—carving wood, shaping furniture—in a quiet riverside town near Austin, Texas. Nothing about my life ever felt remarkable.

Except for one thing.

I have a daughter.

Her name is Emily.

My wife passed away when Emily was just ten. Illness took her quickly—three short months—and the woman who had built our little home beside me was gone. From that moment on, it was just the two of us.

I became everything she had left.

By day, I worked in my workshop behind the house. At night, I learned things I never thought I’d need—how to cook proper meals, wash clothes, and braid a young girl’s hair. I remember one braid so crooked that Emily looked in the mirror and laughed.

“Dad… it looks like a broom.”

I laughed too, embarrassed. But the next morning, I tried again. I had to. She only had me.

Emily grew into a kind, thoughtful girl. She never caused trouble, always studied hard, and eventually earned a place at a university in Chicago.

The day her acceptance letter came, she ran into my arms.

“Dad, I did it!”

I felt pride… and fear. Chicago was far from our small town. But I knew holding her back would only dim her future.

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