My grandpa raised me alone after I lost my parents. When he passed away last week, I found a letter hidden under his toolbox that read: “Dig beneath the weeping willow in the backyard. There’s a private matter I’ve been hiding from you for 22 years.” What I unearthed was only the beginning of something much bigger.My name’s Nolan. I’m 22, and for as long as I can remember, it was just Grandpa Earl and me in that old farmhouse outside Cedar Hollow. Creaky floors.
Radio humming in the kitchen every morning. The smell of coffee that never quite left the walls. We weren’t rich, but it was our home.
The kind of home where every crack in the ceiling told a story, and every squeaky floorboard felt like a greeting. My parents passed away in a car crash when I was three. Grandpa stepped in without hesitation.
He traded his quiet retirement for sleepless nights, scraped knees, and school projects. He never complained. Not once.
My cousin, Marla, was already 16 when it happened. She’d visit maybe twice a year, always in a hurry, always checking her watch. But the second Grandpa passed away last week, she showed up as if she’d been circling the property for months.
She walked into the funeral home, shook hands, and accepted condolences meant for me. Later, after we’d lowered Grandpa into the ground, Marla cornered me by the coffee table at the farmhouse. “We should sell this place,” she said, stirring sugar into her cup without looking at me.
I blinked. “What?”
“You’re young, Nolan. You’ll figure something out.
But this place?” Marla glanced around as if the walls offended her. “It’s falling apart. Winter’s coming.
You can’t handle this alone.”
I wanted to explode, but I didn’t let it show. Marla kept going. “Did Grandpa leave a will?
Where did he keep important documents?”
She shrugged. “Exactly! We shouldn’t waste time.”
That’s when I realized she wasn’t here to grieve.
She was here to collect. I watched Marla walk through the house, opening drawers, checking cabinets, and scanning the walls. She picked up Grandpa’s old pocket watch from the mantle, turned it over in her hands, then set it back down without a word.
“I’ll be back tomorrow,” she said at the door. “We can start going through his things then. Figure out what’s worth keeping.”
What’s worth keeping.