“Because you’re the only one left,” she said.
Then the call went silent, and I sat in the dim kitchen wondering whether I had just agreed to love, or to the final transaction we would ever make.
The drive back to Grandma’s old house felt heavier than I expected, her frail voice from that phone call still echoing in my ears like a debt I had promised to pay.
I unpacked my single suitcase in the guest room and told myself this was love, not a transaction.
The first morning, Linda was already in the kitchen, pouring tea into Grandma Margaret’s favorite cup.
“She doesn’t like sugar anymore,” Linda told me without looking up. “And she’ll ask you three times if the door is locked. Just answer her each time.”
“Thank you,” I said quietly.
Linda finally glanced at me.
“You’ll see. She’s not the woman you remember.”
The years blurred into routine.
Doctor appointments on Tuesdays.
Walks through the garden when her legs allowed it.
Buttoning her blouse when her fingers shook too badly to manage.
In the evenings, I read to her while she stared out the window.
“Your hair is too long,” Grandma said once, without turning her head. “And that dress. Where did you find that dress, Emily?”
“It was on sale, Grandma.”
“Hmm.”
That was the closest we came to real conversation most nights.
I noticed the letters.
Grandma wrote them by hand at the little desk in her bedroom, then slid them into a locked drawer whenever I knocked.
She took private phone calls too, lowering her voice the moment I passed through the hallway.
One evening, I paused outside her door with a tray of soup in my hands.
“She must never know,” Grandma was saying. “Not yet. Promise me.”
I stepped back, my pulse loud in my ears.
When I carried the tray inside, she gave me the smallest smile I had ever seen on her face.
“Sit with me,” she said.
I sat.
She did not say another word for an hour.
At night, I lay awake asking myself the same question again and again.
Was I there because I loved her, or because she had promised me everything?
The answer changed depending on the hour.
Some days, when she clutched my hand through a coughing fit, I knew I would have stayed even without the promise.
Other days, when she criticized how I sliced bread or what I wore, I felt my own bitterness rise.
“You waste too much,” she snapped one afternoon. “You never learned the value of money.”
“I worked two jobs through college, Grandma. I think I learned.”
She looked at me for a long moment.
“We’ll see,” she said, then turned away.
On a quiet Sunday in October, Grandma died in her sleep.
Linda found her first.
I ran down the hall in my robe and froze in the doorway.
The funeral passed like a dream I could not wake from.
A week later, I sat in her lawyer Mr. Bennett’s office, my hands folded tightly in my lap.
He cleared his throat and opened the folder.
“The estate of Margaret,” he began, “is to be donated in full to charity.”
I blinked.
“The savings, in the amount listed here, are bequeathed to Linda, in gratitude for her decades of service.”
My mouth went dry.
“The jewelry will be divided among the named friends and acquaintances.”
I waited.
He did not look up.
“And to me?” I finally asked.
Mr. Bennett’s eyes lifted slowly.
“There is no further bequest in the will. I’m sorry.”
I walked out of his office without a word, the years collapsing behind me like a hallway with no doors, wondering what on earth I had given my life to.
I drove home in silence, the lawyer’s words still echoing in my ears.
Years of my life, and nothing to show for it.
I sat on the edge of my bed and stared at the wall until the light outside disappeared. Every cold dinner, every criticism, every silent breakfast replayed like a film I could not stop.
My phone buzzed.
Linda’s name lit up the screen.
I almost ignored it.
Then I answered.
“Emily, dear,” she said softly. “I just wanted to say how sorry I am. Your grandmother, she always knew what she was doing, you know.”
Something inside me snapped.
“She knew what she was doing?” I said. “Is that supposed to comfort me, Linda?”
“That is not what I meant.”
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