The Billionaire Stormed Outside Ready to Beat the Orphan Boy Drawing on His Wall… But What He Saw Made Him Drop to His Knees—and Uncovered a Truth That Shocked the Entire City
William Carter was furious.
Just the day before, he had ordered the outer wall of his mansion in Beverly Hills to be repainted—pure white, flawless, not a single imperfection. He demanded perfection in everything. Clean lines. Silence. Control.
Especially after years of living alone.
He hated noise.
He hated problems.
And most of all… he hated the street kids who lingered near his property.
“Nothing but trouble,” he muttered, staring out the window.
Around noon, as he sipped his coffee, a strange sound reached him from outside.
Scratch… scratch…
His eyes narrowed.
He stepped closer to the glass—and froze.
A boy, no older than ten, stood with his back to the house… drawing on the freshly painted wall.
With charcoal.
The child was barefoot, wearing a torn tank top, his hands blackened with soot.
William’s face flushed with rage.
“You little brat!” he shouted. “Who gave you permission to touch my wall?!”
Blinded by anger, he grabbed the expensive leather belt lying on the couch.
He’d had enough.
Graffiti. Vandalism. Disrespect.
Not today.
He threw the gate open.
BAM!
“HEY! WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?!” he roared, marching toward the boy, belt raised.
The child flinched, dropping the charcoal. He turned around, trembling, his face smudged with dirt and ash.
“S-sir… I’m sorry… please don’t hit me…” the boy cried, covering his head.
“Sorry?” William snapped. “That’s it? You think that fixes this?! Look at what you’ve done! What the hell is that supposed to be?!”
He hadn’t even looked at the drawing yet.
His anger was fixed on the boy.
“Sir… please… just look…” the child whispered through tears. “I thought… maybe you’d like it…”
“Like it? You—”
William’s voice stopped.
Mid-sentence.
His eyes shifted… finally landing on the wall.
And everything changed.
The belt slipped from his hand.
His face—twisted with anger—went still.
Then pale.
Then… shattered.
It wasn’t random scribbles.
With nothing but charcoal and chalk, the boy had created something breathtaking.
A portrait.
A woman’s face.
Soft, lifelike, filled with light and shadow… as if drawn not from imagination, but from memory.
Her eyes looked alive—gentle, tired, full of love.
And above her left eyebrow…
A small scar.
William’s lips trembled.
“No… that’s impossible…” he whispered.
It was her.
Elizabeth.
The only woman he had ever truly loved.
The one he lost.
His knees gave out.
He collapsed in front of the wall, as if all the strength had been drained from his body.
Tears—years of buried, locked-away tears—finally broke free.
“Elizabeth…” he choked.
The boy stared, confused.
Moments ago, this man had looked like a monster.
Now… he was crying like a broken child.
“H-how did you draw this?” William asked, his voice shaking, unable to look away.
The boy hesitated.
“I… I saw her,” he said quietly.
William turned slowly.
