Every Saturday, My Son-in-Law Claimed He Was Going “Fishing.” I Decided to Follow Him—and Discovered Something I Never Expected

Thomas, off fishing again? my daughter poked her head out of the bedroom as her husband rattled around the balcony, arms full of fishing rods.

Mmm, he muttered, continuing to mess with his tackle.

I sat in the kitchen, cradling my tea, ears pricked against my will. It was the sixth Saturday in a row the same routine. Thomas rising early, backpack and rods loaded into his old Ford Fiesta, gone all day and back in the evening, tired but oddly content. Most curious of all: never any fish. Not a single carp or bream.

Half an hour later, Thomas left the flat, waving us goodbye. I wandered over to the balcony and, on a whim, checked the shelf with his wellies. They stood neatly lined up, soles gleaming, spotless. Untouched, as if theyd never stepped in mud, let alone a stream.

How peculiar I breathed out.

Abigail, my daughter, shuffled in, groggy in her dressing gown.

Mum, what are you muttering about?

Oh, nothing. Thomas has gone fishing. Again.

She flopped into a chair and reached for the kettle.

Let him be, Mum. One day a week just for himself. His jobs brutal, you know. Garage all day, always on his feet. If fishing relaxes him, let him fish.

I kept quiet, but suspicion was already swirling in my mind. It didnt sit right. Thomas earned well as a mechanic, but lately hed seemed distracted, distant. These mysterious fishing trips it was all a bit fishy. No catch, just some secret glint in his eyes.

Id moved in with them three years ago, after they bought the three-bed on mortgage. Abigail was pregnant then, Thomas working round the clock to pay the bills. I tried to help however I could cooking, cleaning anything to make life easier. Id come to know Thomas as solid, dependable, not a drinker, devoted to family. But lately, these Saturday disappearances

Abigail, has Thomas ever actually brought any fish home? I asked, as casually as I could.

She frowned into her teacup.

Not even once, truth be told. Says nothings biting, or that he lets them go. Why do you ask?

Just curious.

She shrugged and went to get dressed. I stayed behind, my tea gone cold, mind churning with uneasy questions. Was there someone else? Some young woman, childless, motherless?

The thought made my heart ache. Abigail would be crushed; she truly loved her husband.

That evening, Thomas returned as usual weary but cheery. He washed up, ate heartily, even played with little Lydia before bedtime. The perfect family man. Still, it felt like I was only seeing half the story. The other half lived somewhere unreachable, every Saturday.

The following week crawled by. I watched Thomas like hawk nothing. He came home on time, helped Abigail with Lydia, paid the mortgage without a reminder. Yet something gnawed at me.

By Friday night, Id made up my mind. Tomorrow, Id follow him. I couldnt bear the uncertainty. If he had another woman, Abigail needed to know. If it was something else, it still deserved the light.

On Saturday, I rose before everyone. Thomas crashed around on the balcony at seven, packing up. I was already dressed, ready. As he drove off in the battered Fiesta, I dashed to the high street and flagged a cab.

See that grey car? I nodded at the Fiesta, heart pounding. Could you follow it, please? But unobtrusively.

The cabbie, a tired-looking bloke, raised an eyebrow.

After your husband, is it? Cheating?

Son-in-law, actually. And I dont know. Yet.

He grunted and set off.

We followed for nearly forty minutes. Thomas drove steady, out past the shops, then further, into the old estates and industrial sprawl. My nerves tightened what could there possibly be out here? No lakes or rivers for miles.

The Fiesta eventually stopped outside a drab, peeling three-story brick building. The sign read: St. Michaels Childrens Home, Number 12. I stared. What?

Maybe hes got relatives working here? wondered the cabbie.

Thomas popped the boot and pulled out, not fishing rods, but a giant backpack and a sports holdall, then marched inside. I paid, nerves jangling, then crept after him.

Inside, the air smelled clinical. At a battered reception desk sat a stern woman of about fifty, her suit as sharp as her eyes. She smiled at my confusion.

Hello, can I help you?

Sorry, Im looking for a tall man, came in just now, in a denim jacket

Oh! Mr. Thomas Harris. Our favourite volunteer. Youre a relation?

Mother-in-law, I croaked.

Wonderful! Im Mrs. Price, director here. Your son-in-law is a real gem. Every Saturday, for six months now.

The world swam. Volunteer. Childrens home. Six months.

But he says He says he goes fishing.

Mrs. Price nodded understandingly.

Youd be surprised how many volunteers keep it under wraps. Mr. Harris is especially modest. He wandered in by accident first time, fixing our caretakers car out front, then offered to help. Fixed a few taps, mended doors, little repairs at first. Pretty soon, he started working with the boys as well.

She led me down the hall to a workshop. Behind a glass door, Thomas sat surrounded by lads in mismatched jumpers, showing them how to take apart an engine component, gesturing, explaining. They hung on his every word.

Hes teaching them about mechanics, Mrs. Price whispered, Most of our boys have nobody to look up to. Mr. Harris well, three of them have already gone off to college to learn the trade.

I stood dumbstruck, watching as Thomas showed a fourteen-year-old the mysteries of a carburettor.

He buys tools, parts usually from his own pocket, she said softly. I know hes got a mortgage, a young family. He still finds a way. Says he grew up without a father, remembers not having anyone to teach him how to turn a spanner.

He never said, I managed.

Men rarely do, dear. Especially the self-reliant kind.

At that moment, one of the boys glanced our way and tugged at Thomas sleeve. Thomas looked over, caught my gaze, face flushing like a guilty schoolboy.

He muttered to the boys, then ducked out to the hall.

Mrs. Smith, he started awkwardly. I can explain

Youve been secretly helping at the childrens home for half a year, I interrupted. Why hide it?

He rubbed his neck, embarrassed.

I thought Abigail wouldnt understand. Weve got Lydia, the mortgage. If she found out I was buying tools for the home, shed worry I wasnt putting family first.

Oh, you daft fool, I sighed. A proper fool.

His eyes widened in fear, until I pulled him into a hug, just like I used to do for Abigail when she came home from school, top marks in her bag, modest and wary of boasting.

Thank you, I whispered. Thank you for who you are.

That night, the three of us sat in the kitchen, Thomas telling his story: how he fixed the caretakers car, met the kids wandering aimless, remembered his own childhood. How he simply wanted to show them something real.

I worried youd be angry, he admitted to Abigail. You might think, Hes got his own daughter, debts to pay, why help someone elses kids?

Abigail got up and, silent, rested her head on his shoulder.

I love you even more for it, she said simply.

Life changed after that. Thomas never hid his Saturday trips to the childrens home anymore. Sometimes Abigail went too, helping the girls with homework. I baked a huge tray of scones and brought them round. Mrs. Price greeted me like family. In the summer, Thomas arranged work experience for a few lads at his garage; two were invited to stay on afterward.

But perhaps the greatest lesson was for me: I realised that people reveal their worth through quiet action, not self-congratulation. Thomas never boasted he simply did what felt right, quietly, humbly.

Once, I asked him:

Thomas, why say you went fishing? Why not just tell the truth?

He thought for a moment.

If you go on about charity, it starts to feel like boasting. Fishing thats something people get. Simple, ordinary. This this just felt like helping, nothing heroic. Talk too much about it and folk start fussing. That makes me uncomfortable.

Thats my son-in-law: the gentle, silent sort, doing good for its own sake. Im grateful Abigail found such a husband.

Because real kindness well, it isnt for show. It lives in what we do, not what we say.

Wouldnt you agree?

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Every Saturday, My Son-in-Law Claimed He Was Going “Fishing.” I Decided to Follow Him—and Discovered Something I Never Expected
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