A gentle tale about the rebirth of mercy, second chances, the warmth of Christmas, and the meaning of being family
If you’d like to walk this warm path from the very beginning and read the story from its first chapter, you can start [here] and follow the links within each part until you find your way back to this moment again.
To read the chapter that comes just before this one, kindly click [here].

Chapter: [11]
A Gift, Not a Punishment:
The first days of the new year came — and strangely, the little restaurant was busier than ever.
Angela was on her own, running between tables and the kitchen, serving, cooking, smiling, and trying to keep everything together.
She disappeared all day;
none of the five brothers saw her upstairs.
By evening, the rush finally faded.
The chairs were empty again.
The kitchen was chaos.
And Angela… was sitting on one of the chairs, completely exhausted.
When the brothers came down, they found her like that — a gentle smile still on her lips, but her face pale with fatigue.
Cian was the first to speak.
“Whoa, Angela… you look completely worn out.”
She smiled softly.
“Yes, it’s been unusually busy today. I’ll rest here for a few minutes, then I’ll clean up and make dinner for you.”
Angela smiled faintly, trying to hide how drained she was.
For a second, none of them spoke.
They just stood there — watching her shoulders rise and fall with each tired breath, watching her small hands trembling slightly as she tried to stand up again.
Something about that sight hit them hard.
She’d been holding this place together, all alone.
How could she possibly do any more tonight?
The five of them exchanged a look.
That silent kind of look that says, “there’s no way we’re letting her do this.”
Then, Milo stepped forward.
“Angela, go home. We’ll clean everything up and make dinner ourselves. Don’t worry about a thing.”
Angela’s eyes widened.
“What? No, absolutely not! I can’t let you do that — how could I?”
Sorin crossed his arms.
“We’re not asking for permission, Angela. We’re telling you what’s going to happen.”
Rein added, laughing softly,
“Yeah! What do you think we are — spoiled guys? We’ve worked in restaurants before. We know how it goes. Go home, rest.”
Then Tavin, the youngest, grabbed her bag from behind the counter,
walked over with that mischievous grin of his, and — amid the brothers’ laughter — gently took her hand,
hung the bag over her shoulder, and guided her toward the door.
Angela tried to protest, but he just smiled — that charming, infuriating smile — pushed her gently outside and said,
“Goodnight, see you in the morning.”
Then he shut the door, turned off the sign of the restaurante from the botton behind the counter,
exactly like she’d done that other night —
the night they feared the security footage of their fight would leak.
The brothers burst out laughing at Tavin’s boldness.
Then Milo stood again — their leader, but not on a stage this time.
He looked around at the messy, chaotic dining hall and said,
“Alright. Let’s split up. Some of us handle the kitchen, the rest clean the floor.”
So they did.
Sorin, Cian, and Rein took the hall.
Milo and Tavin went into the kitchen.
Somehow…
it felt like they’d gone back in time.
As Rein had said before — they weren’t born rich or polished.
They’d known hunger, sweat, and pain.
They’d known what it meant to work hard — since they were just kids trying to earn enough to eat.
They’d cleaned tables, washed dishes, baked bread, worked in tiny shops, delivered food, carried heavy boxes.
They’d built their dreams one shift at a time.
Maybe that’s why they’d made it so far — because they have always known, since they were young, what it means to live as hard workers.
They rolled up their jeans - jeans that probably cost enough to feed a family for a month - plugged in a flash drive of old songs into the speaker, and started cleaning.
In the kitchen, Milo and Tavin were scrubbing pots.
In the hall, the others were sweeping, wiping, laughing.
In these warm moments, they forgot who they were — the most famous band in the world, each one worth millions.
They forgot the scandals, the elimination from the opening ceremony, the pressure from all upon them so hard.
For that night, they were just… ‘Brothers and Hard Workers’ again.
Cian and Rein doubled over laughing , when Sorin slipped on a patch of soap water and fell flat on his back.
Cian teased him, “Look at our main dancer! How’s this idiot supposed to perform again?”
Sorin, laughing, shouted: “I’m going to kill you both!” and ran after them around the tables.
Meanwhile, in the kitchen,
Milo burst out laughing at the sight of Tavin’s face — smeared with rust from an old pan.
He shouted, “Look at our pretty boy!
If we post this photo, our fans will faint!”
And then…
from the speakers, by pure chance — came the song that had started it all.
‘ One Hand, Five Fingers.’
They froze for a moment — then..
turned to each other, smiling wide.
Without a word, they lined up, just like they used to on stage.
And right there,
in the middle of the restaurant,
they danced.
Not under the dazzling lights,
not for the cameras,
not for the fan's screams,
but,
for themselves ,
for their deep bond,
for their brotherhood,
for life itself.
The restaurant’s sign outside was off,
but inside… the place was alive.
With laughter.
With lights.
With rhythm.
With warmth.
What they once thought was punishment from heaven —
was, in truth,
a Gift.
The thing that brought them together again dancing and laughing again.
The reason they could laugh, and breathe, and be brothers once more.
Because sometimes heaven gives us its greatest gifts
wrapped in the disguise of pain —
in problems, in disasters, in heartbreak.
We cry, we break…
and then we realize — those were the only paths back to warmth, to love, to healing.
Sometimes, what we call a curse
is really the Star of Bethlehem,
guiding us back to the small, humble place
where true light , salvation and warm wait.
That’s how they spent that night —
laughing, singing, dancing, cleaning.
And when Angela came in the next morning,
she froze at the door.
Her eyes filled with tears.
The restaurant was spotless — even the walls and ceiling gleamed.
It looked exactly as it did when she was nine years old,
when her parents built it with their hands and filled it with love.
And then she saw them — the five brothers, fast asleep at one of the tables.
They hadn’t even gone upstairs.
They’d fallen asleep mid-laughter, mid-dreams, Sorin’s head slipping onto Milo’s leg.
Angela smiled through her tears.
That morning, the restaurant wasn’t just clean —
it was reborn.
Not a stable in Bethlehem…
but a Nest —
filled with warmth, laughter, and the kind of love that shapes great families and lasting brotherhood.
............To be continued in “chapter : 12 ” tomorrow.
“One hand-Five Fingers” is now available on SoundCloud.
Feel free to listen, dance and sing along with Pulse 5 here.
© 2025 , CorNer. All rights reserved. This work is protected under international copyright law.
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