Then I picked up a pen.
By the time I was done, everything I had—small savings, jewelry, and this little house—was left to Jack and his mother.
I told his mom first.
“You don’t have to do that,” she said, crying. “Your family—”
Later, I told Jack.
He went very still.
“Why?” he asked. “I mean… thank you.
But why us?”
“Because when I was alone and ready to disappear,” I said, “you sat on my couch, ate my bad oatmeal, and let me be your grandma. You gave me a reason to wake up.”
He hugged me so tight my ribs popped.
“Good,” I said.
“Somebody has to be.”
I don’t know how much time I’ve got left.
But I know this:
I won’t leave this world as a ghost in an empty house.
When I go, there’ll be a boy—almost a man—who remembers that an old woman next door stepped out on a cold night and asked if he was okay.
There’ll be a woman who knows this house is hers now, not just on paper but in memory.
And this house, which once only echoed with a ticking clock, will stay full of life long after I’m gone.
All because one night, I heard a kid crying and decided not to look away.