When my grandma died, she left me her paid-off house in a neighborhood that felt a little too watchful. I moved in to grieve and clean out drawers. Then I found five sealed envelopes labeled with the neighbors’ names and a note that said, “After I’m gone, deliver these.”
My grandma lived in the same small brick house for 42 years. The porch steps had started to dip where she sat with iced tea, watching the block every day.
Two weeks after her funeral, I moved in. I told everyone it was purely practical, but really I couldn’t bear strangers buying her place and changing everything about the house that reminded me of my Gran.
“We like to keep things tidy around here.”
The neighborhood looked trimmed and polite, like a brochure. Still, curtains shifted when I carried things inside, and the air felt watched. Her wind chimes hung under the porch roof, perfectly still.
Mrs. Keller lived across the street in a beige house with flawless flowerbeds. Grandma used to call her “the mayor” when she thought nobody could hear. That morning, Keller stood in her doorway with a stern look on her face.
“You must be the grandson,” she called, voice tight. “We like to keep things tidy around here.”
I could already see conflict brewing. “I’m just moving in. I’m not here to start problems.”
“After I’m gone, deliver these.”
Her eyes swept my yard, over the bins and the hedges. “Your grandmother had… habits,” she said, and with that, she marched off.
That night I ate a half-hearted lasagna for dinner, and every car headlight that slid across the walls made me jump. It was difficult to get used to the house without Grandma being there.
***
The next morning I searched Grandma’s dresser for towels and found five sealed envelopes instead. Each one had a neighbor’s name in her neat handwriting. On top sat a small note:
“After I’m gone, deliver these.”
I stared at the names in disbelief.
I promised myself I wouldn’t open them.
Mrs. Keller, Don down the street, Lydia around the corner, Jared, and Marnie. Grandma had complained about them, but I didn’t think she’d have words for them after her death.
“What did you do?” I whispered to the empty room.
I promised myself I wouldn’t open them. It felt like reading her diary, and she deserved privacy even in death. Still, she’d asked, and I couldn’t get myself to ignore her request.
Around midmorning, I walked across the street with Keller’s envelope. The sun was shining brightly, which made the foreboding in my chest even worse. Keller opened the door before I knocked.
Less than an hour later, sirens cut through the street.
“This is from my grandmother,” I said, holding it out. “She asked me to deliver it.”
Keller’s gaze dropped to the handwriting. “That’s… unexpected,” she said, and took it with two fingers.
The door shut without another word. I stood there, embarrassed by how much my hands shook. Back home, I decided I’d deliver the other four after lunch and be done.
Less than an hour later, sirens cut through the street. Two squad cars pulled up in front of Keller’s house. My stomach dropped as soon as I heard them wailing down the street.
“Did you deliver a letter to the woman across the street?”
I walked onto the sidewalk and approached an officer. “What happened?”
He looked me over and said, “You live here?”
“My grandma did. She passed and left me her home.”
The officer looked incredibly stern after that. “Did you deliver a letter to the woman across the street?”
My mouth went dry. “Yes. It was sealed.”
“Well, she called 911. She says it had documents and a flash drive. She reported it as threatening.”
“A flash drive? I didn’t put anything in it, officer. It’s just one of the letters I was asked to deliver.”
Dates ran down the page.
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