I fulfilled my late granny’s last wish to rebuild her house, even when it meant doing it alone. On her deathbed, she had taken Walter’s and my hands and asked us to honor the home our grandfather built with love decades ago. Walter nodded back then, but I could tell his heart wasn’t in it. That truth hit hard later at the lawyer’s office when he walked away without regret, leaving me with nothing but a promise and an aging house.
Despite the fear and financial strain, I couldn’t abandon her memory. I borrowed money from a close friend and started the rebuild myself. Every cracked wall and broken pipe felt like a conversation with the past, like Granny was watching, making sure I didn’t give up. The work was exhausting, but it gave me purpose.
One afternoon, while repairing the old sewage system in the front yard, my shovel struck something solid. It didn’t sound like stone. Curious, I dug deeper until I uncovered a wooden hatch, old and weathered, clearly hidden on purpose. My pulse quickened as I pried it open.
A narrow staircase led down into a small cellar buried beneath the house. Inside, I found dusty shelves stacked with sealed jars, old documents, and a small metal chest. Everything was neatly arranged, as if someone expected it to be found one day. With shaking hands, I opened the chest.
Inside were gold coins, cash wrapped in cloth, and a handwritten letter in Granny’s familiar cursive. She wrote that during hard times, she and Grandpa had saved everything they could, hiding it away in case the family ever truly needed it. She ended the letter by saying she trusted the one who rebuilt the house would find it—and would deserve it.