For seven years, I had cared for Mrs. Patterson, an elderly woman who had been abandoned by her family. She was frail, lonely, and heartbreakingly hopeful that one day, her children would love her the way she loved them.
But they only visited when they needed money, leaving her sitting by the window, watching them disappear without a second glance.
With no family of my own, she became more than just my employer—she became my family.
One morning, I found her peacefully lying in bed, her hand resting on a photo of her late husband. She was gone. My heart shattered as I sank to the floor. I called her children, and the moment they heard the news, they dismissed me coldly, saying they would “take care of everything.”
At the funeral, her family put on a show—tearful words, somber expressions—but their eyes gleamed with greed. They weren’t mourning her; they were waiting for their payday.
That night, exhausted and heartbroken, I returned to my small rented room. Just as I was about to lose myself in grief, a sharp knock startled me.
When I opened the door, two police officers stood there. One of them spoke.
“Are you Grace?”
“Yes… is something wrong?”
“We need you to come with us.”
Panic surged through me. Had something happened? Was I in trouble?
I followed them to Mrs. Patterson’s house, where her entire family, a lawyer, and a notary were waiting. The tension in the room was suffocating. As soon as I stepped inside, her daughter, Victoria, turned on me.
“It’s her! She manipulated my mother! She planned this whole thing!”
I froze. “I… I don’t understand.”
The lawyer cleared his throat. “We are here to read Mrs. Patterson’s will. Her family requested it be done immediately. And you, Grace, were mentioned in it.”
The room fell silent as he began to read.
“To my children, I leave my forgiveness, for they forsook me long ago.”
A gasp escaped Victoria. Her brother, Mark, clenched his fists.
“To my grandchildren, I leave my hope that they will one day understand the value of love and loyalty.”
Confusion flickered across their faces. Their excitement was fading.
“And to my Grace, who has been my caretaker, my friend, and my family… I leave everything. The house, the land, the money—all of it.”
The room exploded.
Victoria collapsed onto the couch, her face pale. “She… she left us nothing?”
The lawyer nodded. “She made it clear that you abandoned her. This was her final wish.”
To silence any disputes, Mrs. Patterson had left behind proof—letters, photos, and records of our time together. The lawyer handed me a box filled with memories—snapshots of us baking pies, laughing, playing board games. Letters in her delicate handwriting, expressing the love she had for me.
Now I understood why she had insisted on taking so many pictures. She had known her family would react this way. And she had anticipated their greed, leaving one final instruction in her will:
“Ensure that my caretaker, Grace, has security present when my family learns of my decision. I do not trust them to handle this with grace.”
As the guards escorted her furious family out, their protests and accusations filled the air. But it didn’t matter. It was over.
When the house finally fell silent, the lawyer turned to me.
“She loved you, Grace. She wanted you to have a home. A family. Honor her memory by living in the place she cherished.”
I looked around, overwhelmed. The house that had once felt like a second home was now mine. Mrs. Patterson had given me more than just property—she had given me belonging, even in death.
Holding the box of memories close, I realized she would always be with me. My friend, my grandmother, my home.