My name is Daniel Ruiz, though everyone calls me Danny. At twenty-one, I was a third-year college student in Illinois trying to balance classes, exams, and a collection of part-time jobs that barely covered rent, food, and textbooks.
Life had become a cycle of survival. I worked mornings at a coffee shop, tutored high school students in the evenings, and accepted almost any odd job I could find online. Some weeks I slept only a few hours each night because every dollar mattered.
One afternoon, while scrolling through a local Facebook community group, I noticed a simple advertisement.
*”Looking for someone to help an elderly woman with light house cleaning once a week. Downtown area. Payment provided.”*
It sounded straightforward.
I replied immediately.
The following Saturday, I knocked on the front door of a small brick house tucked away on a quiet street. After a long pause, the door slowly opened.
Standing before me was Evelyn Mercer.
She looked incredibly fragile. Her white hair framed a gentle face marked by time, while her trembling hands leaned heavily on a wooden cane.
Despite the pain that was obvious in every movement, she smiled warmly.
“You must be Danny.”
Her home looked as though time had stopped years earlier. Dust covered forgotten shelves, old family photographs lined the walls, and antique furniture filled nearly every room. An old radio sat silently in the corner, while faded curtains filtered sunlight into soft golden beams.
Mrs. Mercer explained she suffered from severe arthritis and high blood pressure, making ordinary chores nearly impossible.
“I only need someone once a week,” she said softly. “Sweep the floors, dust the furniture, wash a few dishes.”
Then she added something that immediately caught my attention.
“I’ll pay you two hundred dollars every visit.”
For someone living paycheck to paycheck, that sounded like a blessing.
I accepted without hesitation.
During the first few weeks, everything went as expected.
I cleaned.
She thanked me.
We talked for a few minutes before I left.
But slowly, I began noticing details that bothered me.
Her refrigerator was nearly empty every single visit.
Sometimes it held only eggs.
Other times there was nothing except leftover rice and a bottle of water.
One afternoon I finally asked why.
She smiled gently.
“My children live far away.”
“Do they visit?”....