When I was young, we spent summers at Grandma’s farmhouse. One night, I was told to stay in my room with the door shut, as they had a “grown-up” matter to discuss. After that, our visits to Grandma ceased abruptly.
Years later, I learn accidentally that my grandma was…
…not who I thought she was. Or maybe she was, and everyone else just couldn’t handle it. Her name was Manuela.
Everyone called her “Mamá Nela,” even the neighbors. Her house smelled like guava jam and wood polish. I remember her hands—warm and always busy, either kneading dough or folding laundry with military precision.
But after that summer night, she vanished. No goodbye. No funeral.
No updates. As a kid, I asked, “Why don’t we go to Mamá Nela’s anymore?” and got the same answer every time:
“Things happened. You’ll understand when you’re older.”
Well, I got older.
Years passed. I left home, worked in two different cities, got my own apartment. One afternoon, I went to help my mom clean out her garage—she was finally downsizing—and found a cracked shoebox sealed with duct tape.
I peeled it open, expecting maybe old bills or Christmas cards. But inside were a dozen letters, all in the same cursive, addressed to my mom, my aunt, and even me. From Mamá Nela.
None of them had been opened. My throat went dry. I took one, dated 2004, and read the opening lines:
“Mi querida Alma, I know you hate me.
I do not blame you. But before I go, I want you to know why I did what I did…”
I was floored. She had written to all of us, year after year, and not a single letter had made it past this box.
I took them home, read every single one. Some were simple updates—how the garden was doing, how she missed my laugh. But a few were harder.
They talked about “the night everything changed.”
Apparently, my grandma had refused to sign over the land the farmhouse sat on. My uncle, Tadeo, had cooked up a plan to develop the acreage. A friend of his worked with a construction firm, and there was potential to make a lot of money by selling it off for a shopping center.
But the land wasn’t his. It was Mamá Nela’s. And she had one condition—it stays in the family, untouched, until her last breath.
Tadeo didn’t take it well. That “grown-up matter” they discussed the night I was told to stay in my room? It was a full-blown argument.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
