A millionairess hired a young man to tend her garden, but she never expected who he would turn out to be.

The autumn breeze rustled leaves across the worn flagstones, brushing against the windows like a whisper from the past. Victoria stood motionless behind the glass, staring out at what once was a garden. Now it was wild, overtaken by weeds, vines, and the silence of things left unattended for too long.

She sighed. “This can’t go on.”

Opening her laptop, she scrolled through emails until one caught her eye—Elena Sergeevna’s message. A young gardener, Kirill, had completely transformed Elena’s backyard in under three months. Victoria hesitated, then clicked “reply.”

The garden had been neglected since the day she moved in three years ago. A fresh start, she’d told herself. But parts of her past clung like ivy—especially the garden. Especially him.

Her gaze drifted to the dusty photo frame on her desk. She and Alexey, arms around each other, their smiles wide, still glowing from their honeymoon. Victoria turned it face down.

Fifteen years had passed since Alexey left—no warning, no explanation. One day he kissed her goodbye and never came back. She searched, pleaded, waited. Eventually, a faceless lawyer sent the divorce papers. No letter. Just the end. She had been married to a mystery, a man who told stories but never the truth.

Her phone rang. Elena.

“Yes, let him come,” Victoria said. “Ten o’clock tomorrow.”

Kirill arrived promptly the next morning. Tall, composed, soft-spoken. There was a quiet attentiveness about him that put her strangely at ease.

“I’m Kirill,” he said. “Elena Sergeevna sent me.”

She walked him through the garden. He asked thoughtful questions, made notes, touched the soil with reverence.

“It’ll take a couple of months,” he said, “but we can bring it back.”

The word “we” struck her. She nodded. “Do what you need to.”

And so he did.

Each day, Victoria watched him work from her office. He moved through the space as if he understood the garden’s bones. Under his hands, the wildness began to retreat. Brick paths reemerged, flowerbeds found their shape, and the air seemed to breathe again.

They spoke occasionally—about roses, rain, and novels. Kirill had a quiet curiosity and a surprising love for poetry. There was something about his presence that unsettled Victoria, though. Something too familiar. His posture. His half-smile. The way he tilted his head when thinking. It tugged at memories she wasn’t ready to revisit.

One afternoon, she found him at the far end of the property, near the old gazebo. It was hidden behind vines and time, the place where Alexey had once knelt with a ring in his hand.

“It’s a shame this is forgotten,” Kirill said. “Want me to restore it?”

“No,” she said sharply. “Leave it.”

He nodded, surprised, and didn’t press.

That night, sorting through a drawer, she found a photo of Alexey from their early days. Her breath caught. The resemblance was undeniable. Same eyes, same mouth. Even the same mole by the jawline.

The next morning, she approached Kirill in the garden.

“Tea?” she offered.

He looked up and smiled. Her knees nearly gave out.

“Sure,” he said.

They sat beneath the cherry tree.

“How long have you been gardening?” she asked.

“Professionally, a year or so. My father taught me.”

Victoria steadied her voice. “What’s his name?”

“Alexey.”

Her hand went cold. She turned away.

“Victoria?” he asked. “Are you alright?”

She murmured something and walked quickly back inside, her heart pounding. The math lined up. Kirill was nineteen. Alexey had left fifteen years ago. He’d been a father—during their marriage. Every dream they’d had of children had been a lie.

She barely slept that night. What should she do? Confront him? Tell him? Tell Alexey?

A few days later, Kirill brought her roses—the first from the reborn garden.

“They’re beautiful,” he said.

She stared at the blooms, and her voice came out sharp. “Take them away. I hate roses.”

He paused, confused. “I’m sorry, I didn’t know…”

“There’s a lot you don’t know,” she muttered, retreating into the house.

That night, she pulled out the photo album again. Alexey’s eyes stared back at her from page after page—and from the young man tending her garden.

A knock pulled her from her thoughts. Kirill stood at the door, nervous.

“Victoria Andreevna, may I talk to you?”

She let him in, heart heavy.

“It’s about my father,” he began. “Ever since I mentioned him, something’s felt strange.”

Victoria nodded slowly. “Go on.”

“I don’t remember much. I was four when he and my mom died. My uncle—his twin—raised me. Uncle Lesha. He adopted me. I call him Dad now, but…”

Victoria felt the floor tilt beneath her. “Twin?”

Kirill smiled faintly. “Identical. Everyone always says I look like him.”

She turned away, hiding the tears that had welled in her eyes. Everything shifted. Her anger, her grief—it had been aimed at a ghost.

“I want to meet him,” she whispered.

A few days later, Alexey walked into her home. Older now. Gray at the temples. Still the man she remembered—and didn’t.

They stood in silence for a long while.

“I’m sorry,” he said softly. “I made the wrong choice.”

“You made it alone,” Victoria replied.

“I thought it was best. His parents died, and I couldn’t let him grow up without someone. I didn’t think I could ask you to give up everything for a child that wasn’t yours.”

“You should have given me the choice.”

He nodded, eyes lowered. “I know.”

They talked through the night—about everything they had left unsaid, everything that had broken them, and the part of their love that had never gone away.

In the morning, Kirill found them on the couch—Victoria asleep on Alexey’s shoulder. He stood quietly in the doorway.

“Is everything different now?” he asked.

Alexey looked up at him and smiled. “Now things can be the way they should’ve been.”

Victoria stirred, blinking into the morning light. She saw them both—Alexey, who had come back, and Kirill, the boy she never got to raise but now could know.

“Stay,” she said softly. “Both of you.”

The roses bloomed again in the garden, not as symbols of betrayal, but of healing—fragile, resilient, and full of life. Just like them.

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