Classmate
Dec 06, 2025

He Cared for a Dying Old Man… and Inherited More Than Just a Farm

Dawn mist rolled over the hills of Santa Clara del Cobre as Daniel Reyes, twenty-four, walked toward the coffee estate El Amanecer with a worn backpack and heavy responsibility on his shoulders. Since his father’s death six months earlier, he had become the only support for his sick mother and three younger siblings. This job was not ambition—it was survival.

From a distance the estate still looked proud, but up close its paint peeled, fences leaned, and the coffee plants cried out for care. A thin brown dog approached him before a rough voice called out. The foreman, Miguel Alvarez, studied Daniel carefully before sending him to meet the owner.

Inside the old hacienda stood Don Rafael Montoya, seventy-five, stern and sharp-eyed. He asked short questions and offered no warmth. In the middle of the interview, a violent cough bent him forward, leaving a trace of blood on his handkerchief. Daniel instinctively stepped closer, offering water. The old man rejected pity but hired him on a month’s trial.

The weeks that followed were exhausting. Daniel worked from before sunrise until nightfall. He realized the estate still held extraordinary high-altitude Arabica coffee that could thrive again with patience and knowledge. The cook, Doña Isabel, told him the story: Don Rafael and his late wife Elena had built the farm from nothing. They had never been able to have children, so they poured all their love into the land. Since Elena’s death, Don Rafael had grown bitter and lonely.

One afternoon Daniel heard a crash and found Don Rafael collapsed near the stairs. He helped him to his room and discovered many medicines hidden in a drawer. Soon pneumonia struck. Don Rafael refused hospitalization, so Daniel divided his days between tending the coffee plants and caring for the old man—bringing medicine, preparing compresses, and sitting by his bedside at night.

“Why are you doing this?” Don Rafael once asked weakly. “You barely know me.”

“Because no one should be alone when they’re sick,” Daniel answered.

Something changed after that.

When Don Rafael improved slightly, they began talking on the veranda about coffee, patience, and dignity. Daniel shared ideas about specialty markets and sustainable practices. The old man listened with pride.

Then the nephews arrived: Victor and Laura Montoya. Well-dressed and uncomfortable in the countryside, they made it clear they intended to sell the estate for luxury development. Daniel overheard their plans. Don Rafael firmly refused.

Victor later confronted Daniel, offering money to stay out of “family matters.” Daniel declined.

One stormy night Don Rafael suffered a severe heart attack. On the way to the hospital he gripped Daniel’s hand. “No matter what happens… don’t give up on the farm.” In intensive care he whispered one final instruction: “Behind Don Quixote on my shelf… there’s a letter for you. Read it when the time comes. I trust you, son.”

Three days later, Don Rafael passed away with Daniel at his side.

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