My parents were married for more than fifty years. Through every storm, every move, every challenge, they stood side by side. My brother and I grew up watching them build a life that was modest but full — full of laughter, discipline, warmth, and the kind of togetherness that doesn’t require grand gestures to feel real.
They weren’t wealthy, but they were generous — the kind of people who made a pot of soup stretch for an unexpected guest, who volunteered at church, who slipped folded bills into the hands of friends “just until payday.”
And they often told us, “We’re proud of you both. When we’re gone, everything we have will be yours.”
Those words stayed with us, comforting and certain — until the day they weren’t.
The Day the Will Was Read
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