I smiled weakly.
“Thank you.”
Linda studied me for a moment.
“You’ll see,” she said quietly. “She’s not the same woman you remember.”
For the next three years, my life became a routine.
Doctor appointments.
Medication schedules.
Helping her dress.
Reading to her at night.
Walking with her through the garden when she felt strong enough.
Yet even as I cared for her, Grandma remained emotionally distant.
“Your hair is too long,” she’d say.
Or:
“You waste too much money.”
Or:
“That dress doesn’t suit you.”
Praise never came.
Affection never came.
Still, I stayed.
Secrets Behind Closed Doors
As the years passed, I began noticing things.
Grandma frequently wrote letters by hand, then locked them away before anyone could see them.
She took private phone calls.
Sometimes, I would overhear fragments of conversations.
One evening, while carrying a tray of soup to her room, I heard her say:
“She must never know. Not yet.”
The moment she noticed me outside her door, the conversation ended.
Questions filled my mind.
What was she hiding?
Why all the secrecy?
Yet every time I tried to ask, she changed the subject.
So I focused on taking care of her.
And waited.
The Day Everything Fell Apart
One quiet Sunday morning in October, Grandma died peacefully in her sleep.
Linda found her first.
The funeral came and went in a blur.
A week later, I sat in the office of her attorney, Mr. Bennett, expecting my future to finally begin.
Instead, my world collapsed.
“The entirety of Margaret’s estate,” he announced, “will be donated to charity.”
I blinked.
Surely I had misheard.
He continued reading.
“The savings accounts are left to Linda in gratitude for her decades of service.”
The jewelry was distributed among friends.
Acquaintances received personal gifts.
Then silence.
“And me?” I asked.
Mr. Bennett looked genuinely uncomfortable.
“There are no additional bequests.”
I stared at him.
Nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
Three years of caregiving.
Three years of sacrifice.
Gone.
I left his office feeling hollow.
Anger and Betrayal
That evening, Linda called.
“Emily, I’m so sorry.”
The words only fueled my anger.
“Sorry?” I snapped. “I gave up years of my life for her.”
“There’s more to this than you know.”
“Then explain it.”
“I can’t.”
I laughed bitterly.
“Convenient.”
“Emily—”
“Did you convince her to cut me out?”
“Never.”
“Then why did she leave everything to you?”
Linda was silent.
Finally, she said:
“Because I made her a promise.”
That answer only made things worse.
I hung up.
For the first time in years, I cried myself to sleep.

The Key
The next morning, someone knocked on my door.
It was Mr. Bennett.
In his hand was a thick envelope.