“Love is the greatest inheritance,” my late Grandma Rosalind used to say. Her words came to life after a shocking will reading, revealing the truth about her family.
I was 15 when I spent a summer with Grandma instead of partying. She was 89, her hands trembling slightly, and I could sense her age catching up with her. I loved her dearly and spent time in her garden while my uncle mocked me for “wasting” my time with her. But I didn’t mind—Grandma was everything to me.
A week before her 89th birthday, we learned she had suddenly lost her hearing. I was heartbroken but still prepared a special celebration for her. At the party, I overheard Uncle Bill and Aunt Sarah talking cruelly about her, their words dripping with greed as they discussed her wealth and property. I was furious, but Grandma, sitting silently, seemed unaffected. Little did I know, she wasn’t truly deaf.
Later, Grandma revealed she could still hear faintly. She had been pretending to be deaf to understand her family’s true feelings. They had shown their cruelty, and she planned to expose it. Grandma and I secretly recorded their awful words over the next few days. I couldn’t believe how heartless they were—talking about her like she wasn’t even there.
Grandma’s wisdom struck me: “Sometimes, the people who should love us the most are the ones who hurt us the deepest. But that’s why love is the greatest inheritance.”
A week later, Grandma passed away peacefully. At her funeral, the relatives shed fake tears, pretending to mourn while eyeing her possessions. Three days after, we gathered for the reading of the will. Grandma had left a letter for me, saying I was the only one who saw her for who she truly was, not what she had. She left everything to me, teaching me that love was more valuable than any inheritance.
Meanwhile, each relative received a recorder with their cruel words playing back. Uncle Bill, Aunt Sarah, and the others were exposed for what they really were. Grandma had outsmarted them all.
The lawyer confirmed that Grandma’s will was valid despite their protests. As we left the office, Dad pulled me aside. “I’m so proud of you, Emily,” he said. “I didn’t see what was happening before.” I hugged him, grateful that Grandma knew he loved her.
It’s been ten years since that day, and I still miss her. But her lesson stays with me: love your family unconditionally, because nothing in this world is permanent—except love.