“That can’t be right,” she whispered. “Your mother told us something completely different.”
Karen only smiled.
“Looks like she changed her mind.”
Mom and I searched the house from top to bottom for the will Grandma had mentioned.
It was nowhere.
We considered fighting the claim in court, but Karen had something we didn’t — money and powerful lawyers.
Eventually, we had to accept defeat.
We packed our belongings into boxes and left the home where we had lived for decades.
Within weeks, Karen rented the house out to strangers.
Life moved on, but one thing never left my mind.
Grandma’s rosebush.
Nearly a year later, I finally called Karen.
“Can I take Grandma’s rosebush from the yard?” I asked. “I want to replant it near our cottage.”
Karen sounded annoyed.
“If it’s just a plant, take it,” she said. “I don’t care.”
The tenants living there were kind enough to let me come by.
Walking back into that yard felt strange. The house looked the same, but it didn’t feel like ours anymore.
The rosebush stood exactly where it always had, near the fence.
I knelt beside it, pushed my shovel into the soil, and began digging.
The ground was harder than I expected.
After several minutes, my shovel suddenly struck something solid.
The metallic sound made me freeze.
It definitely wasn’t a rock.
Heart racing, I dropped the shovel and brushed the dirt away with my hands.
Slowly, a rusted metal box emerged from the soil.
For a moment I simply stared at it.
Grandma hadn’t just asked me to move her rosebush.
She had hidden something beneath it.
When I opened the box, my hands were shaking.
Inside was a sealed envelope in Grandma’s handwriting.
Under it were legal documents tied with ribbon.
As I read the letter, tears blurred my vision.
Grandma had anticipated everything.
Inside the box was a signed copy of her real will — the one that proved the house belonged to my mom and me.
She had hidden it in the only place she knew Karen would never think to look.
The rosebush.
Grandma had known exactly what might happen after she was gone.
And she had trusted me to find the truth when the time was right.
Months later, after a long legal battle, the court ruled in our favor.
The house was returned to us.
Karen’s scheme fell apart, and the truth finally came out.
When we moved back in, the first thing I did was replant Grandma’s rosebush in the backyard.
As I pressed the soil around its roots, I felt something I hadn’t felt in a long time.
Peace.
Grandma may not have been there anymore.
But in her own quiet way, she had still protected us.
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