Grandpa, who I was very close to, died last week. At the will reading, I was shocked—everything went to my sister, who’d barely visited him. Thinking it was a mistake, I begged her to split it.
She said, ‘Sorry honey, can’t go against Grandpa’s wishes!’ Last night, I found a folded note in my coat’s pocket. I froze as I read…
“If you’re reading this, it means you were the one who stayed close. You showed up when I was lonely, you listened when I rambled about things that no one else cared about.
I didn’t leave you anything in the will… yet. Look in the red toolbox in the garage. Bottom drawer.
Love you always, kiddo.”
My breath caught in my throat. Grandpa had a way with words—short, simple, and full of meaning. I read the note again, just to make sure I wasn’t imagining things.
It felt like a movie scene, and I didn’t know whether to cry, laugh, or call someone. The house had already been handed over to my sister, Carina. Technically, I wasn’t even supposed to be there.
But I still had the spare key, and I couldn’t sleep knowing there might be more to this note. So, I drove back to Grandpa’s house. It was nearly midnight when I slipped through the back door, careful not to trip over the loose tile Grandpa never got around to fixing.
The place smelled faintly of lemon cleaner and old wood. Familiar. Comforting.
The garage was cold. I flicked the light switch, but nothing happened. Figures.
The bulb must’ve gone out again. I pulled out my phone, using the flashlight to guide my way to the red toolbox I’d seen a hundred times before. I knelt down and opened the bottom drawer.
It squeaked loudly—Grandpa never did fix that either. Inside was a manila envelope, taped shut, with my name written in his handwriting. My hands trembled as I opened it.
Inside was a letter. And a key. Not a house key.
A small, old-fashioned one, with rusted edges and a tiny tag that said “24B.”
The letter was longer this time. “I couldn’t put everything in the will. Legal stuff.
I trusted you’d find this. Go to the Greenway Storage facility on 8th Street. Ask for unit 24B.
The manager knows you’re coming. Show him this key. Everything in there is yours.
Trust yourself. You’ve always had more heart than anyone I’ve known.”
I sat there for a while, the key heavy in my palm. A storage unit?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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