I Became an Old Woman’s Granddaughter for $400 a Week – She Left Me Only a Sewing Kit with a Hidden Bottom and a Note: ‘You Haven’t Received the Real Gift Yet’

59

I answered a flyer offering $400 a week to be an old woman’s granddaughter. What started as a strange job became the closest thing to family I’d ever known. Then Marianne died.

Her nephew claimed she’d left me nothing, but an old sewing box proved him wrong.

I almost walked past the flyer taped to the pharmacy wall, but then I saw it mentioned money.

Wanted: a granddaughter for Sundays.

$400 per visit. No questions.

I was 27, raised in the system, with no friends and no family.

Four hundred dollars was more than half of what I made in two weeks.

So I called.

A thin voice answered on the fourth ring.

“You’re looking for a granddaughter?” I said.

That was all.

That Sunday, an 84-year-old woman opened the door, one hand gripping the wall to steady herself. Her silver hair was pinned with a comb.

“I don’t need a nurse,” she said. “I need someone to sit at my table and pretend this house still has a family.”

I shifted on the porch.

“Pretending costs extra.”

She smiled. “Then you’re honest. Come in.

I’m Marianne.”

Her kitchen smelled like rosemary and old wool. She poured tea so bitter it made my eyes water, and I drank every drop.

“You’re holding that cup like someone’s going to snatch it from you,” she said.

“From where?”

“Nowhere worth telling.”

She nodded slowly and slid a tin of shortbread across the table.

Every Sunday after, I came back.

Marianne had worked as a seamstress and designer.

She said she’d even had her own store.

She told me about the gowns she’d sewn for senators’ wives, and the silk that came in from Lyon. I listened, and I left with soup containers tucked into my bag.

Then she started noticing things no one else ever had.

“There’s a button missing on your coat,” she said one afternoon, already opening her tin of sewing supplies and pulling out a needle.

“It’s fine.”

I handed her the coat. She sewed in silence, then frowned at the small burn on my wrist.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇