I couldn’t afford to fix it up either. Just one more burden to bear. It was getting dark outside when I heard it.
A sound so faint I thought I’d imagined it at first. I froze, listening hard. There it was again — a cry?
It seemed to be coming from below. “Hello?” I called out, feeling stupid. The crying continued, soft but unmistakable now.
A baby’s cry. My heart started pounding as I moved toward the basement door. The rational part of my brain said to call the police, but curiosity pushed me forward.
I flicked on my phone’s flashlight and slowly descended the creaky stairs. The beam cut through the darkness, illuminating cobwebs and old boxes. The crying got louder with each step.
When I reached the bottom, I swept the light around and —
“Oh my God!” I stumbled backward, nearly dropping my phone. Three faces stared back at me from the corner: a man, a woman, and a baby wrapped in a ratty blanket. The woman clutched the infant closer, while the man raised his hands.
“Please,” he said, his voice hoarse. “We didn’t mean any harm. We just…
we had nowhere else to go.”
I backed up against the wall, my mind racing. “Who are you? How did you get in here?”
“I’m David.
This is my wife Sarah and our daughter Emma.” He gestured to the broken window. “The house looked empty. We’ve only been here a few days.
The baby’s sick, and it was so cold outside…”
The baby let out another cry, and Sarah tried to quiet her. In the beam of my flashlight, I could see their clothes were dirty and worn. They were obviously homeless and looked exhausted and desperate.
My first instinct was to call the cops to get these strangers out of my house. But something made me hesitate. Maybe it was the way Sarah rocked the crying baby, or the shame in David’s eyes.
“I’m very sorry, miss,” David continued. “I lost my job after the factory closed down, and then we lost everything else, too. The shelters were full, and we just…
we couldn’t stay on the streets with Emma.”
I slid down the wall until I was sitting on the bottom step. My head was spinning. This wasn’t supposed to be my problem.
I had enough to deal with already. If Grandpa hadn’t died, if he’d discovered this family down here instead of me… he wouldn’t have thought twice about helping them. But Grandpa was dead and now I was stuck with this falling-apart house and a family of homeless strangers in the basement.
I felt ashamed the moment the thought ran through my mind. What would Grandpa think of me right now? He’d given everything to raise me after my parents died, never complaining about the burden.
And here I was, treating these people like they were less than human. I took a deep breath. “Look, you can stay tonight.
But tomorrow, we need to figure something else out. I can’t… I’m barely keeping it together myself.
There’s nothing more I can do for you.”
“Thank you,” David said softly. “We understand.”
I retreated upstairs, my mind in turmoil. I settled into Grandpa’s old bedroom, but I couldn’t sleep.
For hours, I lay awake, listening to the occasional cry from below. The room still smelled like Grandpa’s aftershave. “What am I supposed to do, Grandpa?” I whispered to the ceiling.
“I’m not ready for any of this.”
Morning came too soon. I made coffee and toast, then hesitantly carried some down to the basement. The family was already awake, and packing their meager possessions.
“Thank you,” David said when he saw the food and coffee. “And don’t worry, we’ll be out of your hair soon.”
I nodded, but his words did nothing to quiet the gnawing sense of unease in my chest. Emma started coughing then, her whole body shaking.
“She needs medicine,” I remarked, watching as Sarah tried to soothe the infant. “We know,” she replied, not meeting my eyes. And that was it.
I couldn’t just let them go without doing something to save them from the mess life had dumped them into. “Don’t worry about leaving just yet,” I said. “We need to get your little girl to a doctor first.
I have some savings. Not much, but… let me make some calls.”
Over the next few days, I reached out to every organization I could find.
A shelter across town had space opening up soon. The community center knew about some job training programs. It wasn’t much, but it was a start.
I even found a kind doctor who offered to help Emma for a steeply discounted fee. As I helped this family, something shifted inside me. The resentment I’d been carrying — toward Grandpa, toward my situation, toward this family — began to loosen its grip.
I started to see what Grandpa had known all along: sometimes the best way to help yourself is to help others. A week after I found them in the basement, I helped David and Sarah load their few belongings into a volunteer’s car. They were headed to the shelter, where Emma could get proper medical care.
“We can’t thank you enough,” Sarah said, hugging me tight. I shrugged, embarrassed. “Just pay it forward someday.”
After they left, I walked through the quiet house.
In Grandpa’s study, I found myself drawn to his old desk. The bottom drawer had always been locked, but on impulse, I tried it. It opened easily.
Inside was a letter, and beneath it, a stack of savings bonds. My hands shook as I read the letter:
My dearest Sasha, I know you’re scared right now. The world can be a hard place.
But you have a strength inside you that you don’t even know about yet.
These bonds should help with your loans. The house needs work, but it’s yours to make into whatever you want.
Just remember, the most valuable inheritance I could give you isn’t money or property. It’s the knowledge that you’re capable of more than you think. All my love, Grandpa
I sat there for a long time, the letter in my lap, tears rolling down my cheeks. The house creaked and settled around me, but for the first time since Grandpa died, it didn’t feel empty.
It felt like home.
