My dad died and gave me his house. I asked his wife, Marlene, to pay me rent with the $10k he left her or go live with her son. She refused, saying, “This was my home for years; shame on you!” I hated doing it, but with no other choice, I filed for eviction. After that, Marlene cut off all contact. Years passed in silence.
Yesterday, out of the blue, she called. Her voice trembled, not with anger but urgency. “We need to meet,” she said. “It’s about your father.” My heart pounded — what more could there be to know after all this time? Reluctantly, I agreed. When I walked into the café, she looked thinner, older, but her eyes burned with the same fire.
She slid an envelope across the table. “I never hated you,” she whispered. “I stayed quiet because I was ashamed. Your father left you the house — but he also left you something else. Something I couldn’t bring myself to tell you before.” Inside was a letter in my dad’s handwriting, along with a key.
Tears blurred my vision as I read. The key belonged to a safety deposit box, and in the letter, Dad explained that he had saved more than I ever knew — for me. “Forgive Marlene,” he wrote. “She kept this secret because I asked her to, until the right time.” Suddenly, I realized the eviction had cost us years of silence we both regretted. And now, I wasn’t sure if I felt relief, anger, or both.