
A homeless man found a strange box in the river and thought it was trash, but when he opened the box, he almost dropped it from surprise
A homeless man, who looked about sixty years old, carefully packed his fishing gear into a worn but sturdy backpack. That backpack had seen a lot — rain, snow, and heat. Inside were jars of bait, hooks, floats, and maggots in an old matchbox. Fishing wasn’t a hobby for him; it was a way to survive.
He wore an old, worn-out coat and rubber boots he had found a couple of years ago at a dump — one boot was slightly smaller than the other, but he was used to it. His back was bent under the weight of the backpack, but the man straightened up and headed to the river, as he did every day. He had no home, no family, no job. Sometimes someone gave him a hot cup of tea or a piece of bread, but most often he relied only on the river.

After an hour of fishing, when he pulled the line in, it wasn’t a fish on the hook… but a cardboard box.
“Trash again,” he muttered under his breath.
The box was heavy. There was clearly something inside, and the man was about to throw it back when a strange sound came from it.
He tensed up. Carefully, he tore open the wet cardboard, and his heart stopped for a moment. Inside was…
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Inside, trembling and pressing its ears close, sat a small ginger cat. Thin, wet, with eyes full of fear. It looked at him scared and meowed.
The man said nothing. He took off his jacket, wrapped the trembling cat in it, and sat down right by the water. He wasn’t sentimental, but something about this tiny life unlocked an old, rusty door in his soul.

He named her Spark.
Since then, everything changed. He began sharing his fish with her, sheltered her at night in his jacket. Despite life on the streets, the cat quickly recovered and always followed him — like his shadow with a tail. One day, she literally saved him.
That winter, when it became especially cold, the man lost consciousness right on a park bench. He was weak, cold, and hungry. Spark didn’t leave him. She jumped onto her owner’s chest, rubbed against him, meowed, and stayed close.
A passing woman noticed the strange scene and approached. She called an ambulance. The man was revived. Then he went to a shelter where he was given hot food and a clean bed. He was allowed to keep the cat.

A couple of weeks later, on a volunteer’s advice, he got a job as a janitor. The salary was small, but enough. Spark lived with him in a small room near the housing office. He himself was surprised at how much his life had changed.
He no longer fished. Now he had a job, a roof over his head, and — most importantly — someone to care for.
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