“I’m twelve.”
“Exactly.”
“You really think I’ll be successful someday?”
“I know you will.”
Her confidence felt impossible.
Nobody had ever believed in him like that before.
Not even himself.
After a long silence, Ethan spoke.
“When I’m rich, I’ll marry you.”
Maya burst out laughing.
“You will?”
“Absolutely.”
“That’s your big plan?”
“Yep.”
“What if I don’t want to marry you?”
Ethan grinned.
“You will.”
She rolled her eyes.
But secretly, she smiled.
Then she held out her hand.
“Deal.”
He shook it.
Neither child understood how important that moment would become.
Life Pulls Them Apart
The years passed quickly.
Middle school became high school.
High school became graduation.
Life grew more complicated.
Maya excelled academically.
Ethan worked every part-time job he could find.
They remained close despite busy schedules.
But shortly after graduation, life intervened.
Maya earned a scholarship several states away.
Ethan stayed behind to help support his mother.
The night before Maya left, they met beneath their old oak tree.
Neither wanted to say goodbye.
Neither knew how.
“I’ll come back,” Maya promised.
“You better.”
“You’ll probably be rich by then.”
Ethan smiled.
“I’m working on it.”
For a moment, neither spoke.
Then Maya hugged him.
The embrace lasted only seconds.
Yet both remembered it for years.
The next morning, she was gone.
The Long Road to Success
Life became difficult after Maya left.
Ethan worked construction during the day.
At night, he studied business books borrowed from the public library.
Most people considered his dreams unrealistic.
Some laughed openly.
Others advised him to be practical.
But Ethan remembered something Maya once said.
“You won’t always be poor.”
Whenever obstacles appeared, those words pushed him forward.
Years later, he started a small home renovation business.
The beginning was rough.
Clients were scarce.
Money remained tight.
There were moments he nearly quit.
Yet he refused.
Slowly, things improved.
One satisfied customer became three.
Three became ten.
Ten became fifty.
Within a decade, Ethan’s company expanded across multiple cities.
The poor boy who once skipped meals became a successful entrepreneur.
His promise had come true.
At least partially.
He had become rich.
But there was one problem.
He had lost contact with Maya.
Searching for Maya
Over the years, Ethan occasionally searched online.
Sometimes he found social media profiles.
Sometimes he discovered old information.
But nothing current.
No phone number.
No address.
No reliable way to reach her.
The absence bothered him more than he expected.
Success felt incomplete.
Not because he needed romance.
Not because he expected her to fulfill a childhood promise.
But because he wanted to thank her.
The world celebrated his achievements.
Nobody understood how much he owed a girl with a lunchbox.