I sat down across from her and tried not to stare too much. The lawyer opened his folder.
“Alright.
I’ve gathered you here to read Mr. Sloan’s last will. Two points concern you.”
I clenched my hands together under the table.
“Linda, you inherit Mr.
Sloan’s house. The entire property.”
“What? Is this some joke?
He left ME his house? Me?”
Of course. There it was.
The catch.
“You must take in Mrs. Rose D., here she is,” he nodded to the woman in the hat, “into your new home. And look after her.
She will live with you for as long as she wishes.”
“Excuse me… Look after her? Why?”
Rose lifted her gaze and smiled so gently. I felt a stab of guilt for even doubting her.
I turned to the lawyer.
“Is this… mandatory?”
“If you decline this condition, you automatically forfeit the house.”
Perfect.
Just perfect. My rental was draining me every single month. And I’d lost all my orders along with my roses.
Obviously, Mr. Sloan had made sure of that before he died.
But his yard was full of his own rose bushes, the same ones that could save my ruined wedding contracts if I played it right. That garden was a dream, whether I liked it or not.
A chance to finally work in peace.
Rose smiled at me lightly. “We’ll be good company for each other, won’t we, dear?”
I nodded. After all, that’s who I was: the kind of person who helped others.
The first few days, I tried to convince myself that everything would be fine.
I had the land for my roses. All I had to do was take care of sweet old Rose.
Until she asked for steamed broccoli.
I was standing in the kitchen, covered in petals and dirt after planting new bushes.
“Sweetheart, I know you’re busy… But would it be too much to make me some broccoli? Don’t overcook it, please, my stomach can’t handle it…”
I sighed and went to the stove.
The next morning, Rose wanted a tomato salad.
But not just any salad. The tomatoes had to be peeled, sliced into thin matchsticks.
“I know you’re the kindest girl,” she said as I peeled those damned tomatoes. “No one’s ever done something so nice for me.”
At night, I woke up to her little bell ringing.
Rose wanted warm milk.
Then she needed me to check the radiators because of the wind howling through them.
An hour later, she needed her pills.
“Sweetheart, could you look at these? I think they’re expired… Would you be so kind as to go to the pharmacy for me?”
“I just need my migraine pills, I don’t know if I can bear this pain until sunrise…”
The city was forty minutes away.
I took Mr. Sloan’s old bicycle and rode through the darkness anyway. I got back around seven.
Rose was sleeping soundly in her bed.
“Oh, sweetheart. Sleep is the best medicine…”
“But…”
I tried to hold it together. But that day, I didn’t even go back to sleep.
Minutes later, I was looking in the garage for the old watering can, but instead I found an old box. The lid was left slightly open.
I knelt down and carefully lifted it. Inside — old photographs.
Black-and-white, faded. On one of them, I saw…
What? It was me!
Twenty-five? No, it couldn’t be. No, no, not me.
A woman who looked so much like me that I flinched.
She was holding a small baby. Next to her, young Mr. Sloan.
I flipped the photo over — there was a note scribbled on the back:
“Rose and my girl, August 1985.”
I sank onto the floor, feeling a chill run down my spine.
Suddenly, I heard Rose’s voice behind me. “Oh, you found the old photos, dear? That was back when everything was… different.”
I turned around.
She was standing in the garage doorway.
“The woman in this photo… Her name’s Rose… That’s you?”
“Some things never go away, even when you try not to remember them… You look so much like me at that age.”
“Not now, sweetheart. I need to take my medicine.”
She turned and walked away, leaving me with that box of photos.
What was she hiding?
And who was she really to Mr. Sloan?
I’d grown up in foster care. All I knew was that my mother had left me when I was a baby.
That was it.
My head was spinning.
If Mr. Sloan had a daughter, why didn’t she come to his funeral?
Why Rose? Why me?
Why did her eyes look at me like that, as if she knew something I didn’t?
I had to find out the truth.
Because maybe… it was my truth, too.
The following rainy evening, I knocked on Rose’s door.
“Rose, we need to talk. That photo… the baby. Who was she?”
Rose patted the chair across from her.
“Sit, sweetheart. I suppose you’re ready for some of it now.”
I could hear the rain drumming on the old roof. Rose stared into her lap, gathering the words like broken beads.
“We were just kids ourselves, Harold and I.
Wild, stupid kids. We thought we could make it work. But life… doesn’t care about love when there’s nothing else to hold you together.”
Rose looked up, and for a heartbeat, I saw her young — that same softness in the eyes as the woman in the photo.
“She was born in August.
1985. It was such a hot summer. We were living out of his mother’s house back then.
No money. No work. Just dreams.
We really thought we could raise our daughter right.”
“We thought a better family could give her what we never could.”
The room seemed smaller, the air thick.
“It took him years. He said it was the one thing he had to get right before he died.
That’s why he moved here. He used to stand by the window, watching you work in the garden. He wanted to tell you so many times.
But he was stubborn. Proud. He thought you’d spit in his face for what he did.”
Rose gave a sad little laugh.
“My body’s failing me. Harold thought… maybe… You and I could still have something. He wrote you a letter.
I was supposed to wait until you were ready.”
She pulled a small envelope from her knitting basket. My name on it. I held it in my lap like a hot coal.
A truth was buzzing in my bones, begging to be said aloud, but my mouth couldn’t move.
Rose reached for my hand, curling her paper-thin fingers over mine.
“You’ve always been my girl.”
I opened the envelope with trembling hands.
“Linda,
I deserve every bitter word you could throw at me. I wanted to tell you the truth a thousand times, but I was never man enough to stand there and see the hate in your eyes.
I told myself I was protecting you, just like when I let you go.
I thought you’d have a better life without me.
Watching you — your roses, your strength, that fire in you — it was the only good thing I did at the end.
I hope one day you forgive Mom for all she couldn’t do. And maybe, you’ll find a way to forgive me, too.
Take care of Mom. Take care of yourself.
No more secrets now.
Love, Dad”
Hot tears hit the paper. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d let myself cry. All my life I did my best to be strong.
I was strong when my parents left.
Strong when no one came back for me.
Strong when Mr. Sloan dumped dirt on my roses…
My father, my own father, punishing me for being his ghost.
I didn’t know how long I sat there, hugging my knees. The storm had passed.
I finally took Rose’s hand. Her eyes were swollen like she’d been crying too.
“I don’t know how to forgive you yet,” I whispered.
“But I want to try. I want us both to try.”
“We’ve wasted so many years.”
We sat like that, two women who’d been too hard on the world, and too hard on ourselves, feeling like we didn’t have to fight alone anymore.
Outside, the roses bent in the wind.
But they didn’t break.
And neither would we.
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