Three days before my family gathered to hear my final will, a stranger delivered a giant wooden box to my doorstep. Inside was a message that made me question everything I thought I knew about the people I’d spent 15 years missing.
For over a decade, my grandchildren acted as if I no longer existed.
Not once did my phone ring on my birthday because of them. Not once did they stop by for Christmas dinner.
No cards. No visits. No invitations.
The silence started after my son, Ethan, died.
At least, that was what I believed for 15 years.
When Ethan’s funeral ended, everyone promised we’d stay close.
His three children, Lily, Mason, and Chloe, stood beside me at the cemetery.
For a while, they still visited.
Then life got busy.
Or so they said.
One missed birthday became two.
Two became five.
I tried at first.
I called.
I left messages.
I sent birthday gifts.
A few thank-you texts arrived days later, usually only one sentence long.
As the years passed, I stopped reaching out as often.
Every unanswered call felt like another door closing.
After my wife, Margaret, died, the loneliness became harder to ignore.
Nina from next door brought soup when I was sick.
Derek across the street shoveled my driveway every winter.
My church friends visited regularly.
Meanwhile, my grandchildren seemed to remember I existed only when rumors about my money surfaced.
But after decades of running a successful construction company and making careful investments, I had accumulated a sizable estate.
Word travels fast through families.
Especially when money is involved.
Over the years, the occasional call would arrive.
“Hey, Grandpa,” Mason would say after months of silence. “Just checking in.”
And somehow it always drifted toward finances.
“Have you thought about downsizing?”
“What’s going to happen with the house someday?”
“Do you have everything organized?”
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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