I thought I did the right thing by signing my Grandma up for a senior center that seemed safe, warm, and friendly. But weeks later, she seemed unusually sad and she even stopped calling. Something felt off.
When I looked into it, what I found at that center chilled me to the core.
My name’s Abigail, but everyone calls me Abby. I’m 28 and I live just 10 minutes from Grandma Rosie, the woman who raised me after my mom passed when I was six. Grandma Rosie isn’t just family…
she’s my anchor, history, and my home.
We talked every night unless one of us was in the ER. Grandma taught me how to ride a bike, braid my own hair, and check my car’s oil.
She’s sharp, proud, and talkative… which is why I didn’t worry much when she started going to the new senior center nearby.
She was excited and said the building smelled like fresh lemon and the staff smiled with their eyes.
They had jazz nights and craft sessions, even a tai chi instructor named Chuck who she said was “weirdly limber for 70.”
But after a few weeks, she got… quiet.
Not the tired quiet. Not that “I’m old and my back hurts” kind.
It was like she’d pulled a curtain around herself.
“I’m fine,” she’d say when I asked about her day.
“How’s Chuck?” I once joked.
“Fine.”
“Did you win bingo again?”
“I didn’t play.”
Then silence.
At first, I chalked it up to a bad day. Then it turned into a bad week. Then she stopped calling me back.
I knew something was terribly wrong during another visit.
“Grandma, I brought your favorite blueberry muffins,” I called out, letting myself in with the key she’d given me years ago. The house was quiet except for the ticking of that vintage clock in the hallway.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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