I took care of my 85-year-old neighbor for her inheritance, but she left me nothing — then her lawyer knocked the next morning with a dented lunchbox and a key I wasn’t supposed to recognize.

I took care of my 85-year-old neighbor for her inheritance, but she left me nothing — then her lawyer knocked the next morning with a dented lunchbox and a key I wasn’t supposed to recognize.

“That’s it? But she promised me…”

The words dried in my throat as one terrible thought hit me. Had Mrs. Rhode lied to me? I stood up and walked out before either of them could see me cry. By the time I got back to my small rental, my chest ached. I went inside, shut the door, and collapsed onto the bed without removing my boots. At first, I felt anger. Then humil:iation.

Then that old, familiar shame of realizing I had been the fool in a story everyone else understood before I did. But beneath all of that was something worse: grief. Because somewhere along the way, I had started to believe I mattered to Mrs. Rhode as much as she mattered to me.

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