The Millionaire’s Proposal to a Homeless Mom Silenced the Lobby-kimochi

“Will you be my wife?”

For a few seconds, Emily Carter honestly thought she had misheard him.

The bus station was too loud and too cold, full of hissing brakes, tired voices, and the hollow rattle of suitcase wheels over tile.

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It smelled like old coffee, wet coats, and the sharp lemon cleaner someone had dragged across the floor an hour too late.

Outside, sleet tapped against the glass doors.

Inside, Emily sat on a metal bench with her little girl pressed to her side, trying to look less frightened than she felt.

Lily was four years old.

She had fallen asleep twice that evening and woken both times with her stomach growling.

Emily had given her the last two crackers from the bottom of her purse and told her dinner was coming soon.

That was the kind of lie mothers tell when the truth would be too heavy for a child to carry.

At 9:47 p.m., Emily’s phone was dead.

Her debit card had declined at the kiosk.

Her purse strap had torn somewhere between the ticket counter and the bathroom, and one side now hung lower than the other, exposing a folded birth certificate, Lily’s school intake paperwork, and a plastic bag with two pairs of socks inside.

Everything she owned was either on her body, in that bag, or wrapped around her daughter.

Six hours earlier, she had still been in the laundry room at her sister-in-law’s house.

She had been folding towels slowly, mostly because folding towels was something her hands understood even when her life did not.

Then she heard the whisper through the kitchen wall.

“She’s useless,” her sister-in-law said.

Emily froze with a damp towel in both hands.

“So what are we supposed to do?” another voice asked.

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