I thought Mr. Sloan, my grumpy old neighbor, lived just to ruin my peace. When he dumped soil over my prized roses one morning, I was ready to confront him until I found out he’d died the night before. Shockingly, his lawyer told me I’d inherited his house on one strange condition: I had to take in and care for an elderly woman named Rose, a stranger I’d never met. Desperate after losing my garden and income, I reluctantly agreed.
At first, Rose seemed sweet but demanding. She asked for perfectly peeled tomatoes, warm milk at midnight, and special migraine pills at dawn. I was exhausted, yet something in her gentle eyes stopped me from saying no. One day, while searching in the garage, I found an old photo—Rose, a young woman, standing beside Mr. Sloan, holding a baby who looked eerily like me. The caption read: “Rose and my girl – August 1985.”
Confronting Rose, I learned a truth that cracked me wide open: I was that baby. Rose and Mr. Sloan were my birth parents. They had given me up as infants themselves, believing someone else could give me a better life. Mr. Sloan had spent his final years watching me from across the street, too ashamed to tell me the truth. The house wasn’t just a gift—it was his last attempt at redemption. And Rose? She was the part of my past I never knew I was missing.
Now, we live together in the house built on roses, thorns, and second chances. Forgiveness doesn’t come easily—but it’s growing, slowly, like the new blooms in our garden. The woman I once resented turned out to be the mother I never knew I had. And the man I thought hated me… had loved me all along, the only way he knew how.