We used to think our lives would always be quiet.
Just two old farmers, living at the edge of a small village, tending to our fields and feeding our chickens. We never had children of our own, and for many years, our little wooden house echoed only with the sound of the wind.
Then one rainy evening, everything changed.
At the market, we saw four little girls — sisters — huddled together under a broken umbrella. Their parents had died in an accident. No one wanted to take all four, and they refused to be separated.
They were cold, hungry, and frightened.
We had almost nothing… but we had love to give.
So, we brought them home.
Our house became filled with laughter — tiny shoes at the door, giggles in the kitchen, songs in the fields. Life wasn’t easy. Sometimes, we went to bed hungry so the girls could eat. But every smile they gave us was worth more than gold.

Years passed. They studied hard — harder than anyone we’d ever known.
And one by one, they rose higher than we ever dreamed.
The oldest became a doctor, the second a lawyer, the third a scientist, and the youngest a professor.
We watched them grow with tears in our eyes — proud, amazed, and endlessly grateful.
Then one spring morning, all four daughters returned to the village. They led us to the edge of town, where a beautiful white villa stood among blooming cherry trees.
“This,” they said, “is your new home. For the parents who gave us everything when they had nothing.”
We couldn’t speak — only cry and hold their hands.
People say we were the luckiest parents in the world.
But the truth is simpler:
Our luck was meeting our four angels — the daughters who turned our little life into a miracle.