It was all she could afford. I didn’t like it, and I just told her a dry “Thanks.” She died weeks later.
Years passed. I never wore it.
Now my daughter is 15. She asked to try it on.
We froze. Hidden in the pocket, there was a small, folded envelope.
Inside, a note in my grandmother’s handwriting:
“I know you may not love this cardigan, but I made it with love — and something more. Inside the left sleeve is a locket. It belonged to my mother. I want you to have it. One day, pass it on to someone who will cherish both the cardigan and the memory.”
Tears welled up in my eyes. I turned the sleeve inside out — and there it was: a delicate gold locket with an old photo of my grandma as a young woman, standing next to a baby I’d never seen before.
On the back of the photo were the words:
“Family secrets don’t stay buried forever. Ask your mother about Rose.”
And just like that, the cardigan I once rejected became the beginning of a mystery — and a legacy — that would change everything.