When Grandma died, I didn’t just inherit her house—she left me a strange note too. It said: “Burn everything in the attic.”
I didn’t listen. And because of that, I learned something that shattered everything I thought I knew about my family.
I always figured I’d end up alone one day. But not like this. Not so soon.
One minute she was there… and then—bam—Grandma Elinor was gone. Mom had died when I was ten. Dad?
I never even met him. Grandma had been everything. She was the one constant in my life.
When she got sick, I stayed with her in the hospital for the last six months—every single day, every single night. After the funeral, I had to meet with the lawyer to hear her will. The man in a gray suit opened a folder carefully.
“Elinor left you a residential home. Fully yours. No debts,” he said gently.
Then he pulled something else out of a drawer. “And… she also left you a personal letter.”
I unfolded it. One short line, the ink smudged, like she’d been shaking when she wrote it:
“Marie.
If you’re reading this, it means I couldn’t make it back home. Burn everything you find in the attic. Don’t look.
Don’t open. Just burn it. It’s important.
I love you. Grandma.”
I stared at the words. “What…?”
The lawyer tilted his head.
“Something wrong?”
“She wanted me to… burn the attic?”
“Well,” he shrugged, “this isn’t a legal instruction. Not part of the will. Just a personal request.”
I left his office and just walked—through streets, past shops, without looking at anyone—until an hour later, I was standing in front of the house.
Home greeted me with a silence that wasn’t peaceful. I dropped my bag and glanced up. The hatch to the attic.
The one Grandma told me to burn. I gave a small, nervous laugh. “Feels like I’m in some weird horror movie.”
But I pulled the ladder down anyway.
“I’m sorry, Grandma,” I whispered. Dust hit me the second I pushed the hatch open. I sneezed so hard my eyes watered.
I didn’t know it then… but I was making the biggest mistake of my life. Hours passed without me realizing. I sat on the wooden floorboards, surrounded by box after box of Grandma’s life.
Birthday cards I’d drawn as a kid—stick figures and crooked hearts. Her hairpins. Tiny glass jars filled with buttons.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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