When my stepmom grew gravely ill, her own son didn’t even bother to visit. Not once. I was the one who cooked for her, changed her blankets, held her hand during the worst nights, and reassured her when she cried from the pain. She passed away with her fingers wrapped around mine, whispering “thank you” as her final words.
At the funeral, her son strutted around like he was royalty. When the will was read and everything — the house, the savings, the valuables — went to him, he smirked at me and said, “You were just a free sitter. Don’t expect anything.”
I didn’t. I never cared about the money. I loved her.
But the very next morning, my phone rang. His voice was shaking with rage.
“You KNEW! WHY didn’t you tell me?!”
I had no idea what he was talking about, so I asked. He shouted:
“The house has $38,000 in unpaid taxes. The car has a loan. The savings account is empty. There’s NOTHING! She left me NOTHING but DEBT!”
Then he went quiet… and whispered:
“And she left YOU her safe.”
I froze.
I hadn’t opened it. I didn’t even know what was inside. Later that day, an officer delivered it to me — exactly as her will instructed.
Inside were just two things:
A handwritten letter and an envelope.
The letter said:
“You were the only one who cared for me without expecting anything. This is for you — not as payment, but as love.”
The envelope? It held a cashier’s check with my name on it.
A check worth more than everything her son inherited — combined.
And suddenly, her last words made sense.