When the Will Was Read

My relatives used to laugh at me for taking care of my “poor old aunt.” But their smiles froze when the will was read, and it turned out that everything she owned, including three houses, was left to me…

— Off to see your rich old lady again?
My cousin, Samantha, dripped venom as I buttoned up my coat in the hallway.

I stayed silent. There was no point in answering. Their morning ritual had already begun.

— Leave her alone, Sam, — came the lazy voice of Aunt Linda, her mother, from the living room. — The girl has “work” to do. Playing charity.

Their laughter echoed loudly, perfectly synchronized.

— I just promised to help Aunt Elizabeth with her windows, to seal them up for the winter.
— Those windows have been sealed since ’47! — Samantha shot back, stepping into the corridor. — You’re wasting your youth on an old hag who won’t leave you even a pair of torn socks. That’s some talent!

She eyed me from head to toe: my simple coat, my modest shoes.

— Not everyone lives for an inheritance, Sam.
— Oh yeah? Then what’s your goal? Spiritual enrichment while scrubbing floors in a dusty apartment?

I picked up my bag. Inside were groceries for Aunt Elizabeth and the new book she’d asked me to bring.

— My goal is to help someone I love.
— “Love”? — Aunt Linda burst out, coming to the door. Her face twisted with an old resentment. — That “loved one” sold Grandpa’s villa, our family’s nest, just to buy herself a box downtown! All her life she only thought about herself, never gave a dime to anyone!

There it was — the root of their hatred. The pine-forest villa, built by Grandpa for the whole family. But Elizabeth, being the eldest daughter, put it in her own name, and after his death, sold it. They saw that as betrayal.

I looked at their faces, distorted by greed and bitterness. They had never once tried to understand her reasons.

They didn’t care about the bond I had with Aunt Elizabeth. They weren’t interested in her stories, her sharp mind, her ironic view of the world.

They saw only an old woman in a worn-out bathrobe.

But I saw the person who taught me how to read, who showed me constellations, who taught me to recognize birds by their songs.

— You’ll see, — Samantha hissed after me. — She’ll leave that apartment to some cult. And you’ll be left empty-handed. Along with your “holiness.”

I walked down the stairwell. The door slammed behind me, cutting off their voices.

Aunt Elizabeth’s apartment welcomed me with the smell of dried herbs and old books. Everything was simple, yet incredibly clean.

She sat at the table, bent over a large map of San Francisco Bay. Next to her were not only papers but also a tablet filled with charts and tables.

— Ah, Kira, you’re here, — she looked up, her eyes sparkling. — I’m working non-stop on this.
— What is it? — I nodded toward the map.
— Oh, just sorting out some old properties, — she smiled slyly. — Paperwork.

She carefully rolled up the map and slid the papers into a folder, but I had already caught words like “lease agreement” and “land plan.”

— Your relatives put on another show? — she asked, reading me as easily as ever.
I just shrugged.

— They count every penny, Kira. But they don’t see what truly matters. Well, that’s their problem.

She took the book I had brought, and her face lit up.
— Thank you, sweetheart. You’re the only one who knows what I really need.

A few weeks later, the phone rang. Aunt Linda’s voice was as sweet as an overripe peach.
Kira honey, hi, dear. How’s our Elizabeth doing?
I stiffened.
— She’s fine, thank you.
— Well, that’s why I’m calling… A friend of Sam’s, a real estate agent, is interested in houses in that area. And I thought we should help Liz out.

Make sure all her paperwork is in order. He could stop by, give her a free consultation. Just to be sure no one tricks her.
— I don’t think she needs help.
— Oh, but of course she does! She’s old… You could even ask her about her will, for example. We’re family, we should look out for each other.

A wave of nausea rose in my throat.
— I won’t be asking her anything like that. Goodbye.

At my next visit, Aunt Elizabeth was uneasy.
— Can you believe it? A man came by. Said he was an evaluator from an insurance company. Claimed he needed to check the wiring, assess the risks. But his questions sounded more like an interrogation. About properties, accounts, relatives…

I froze with a stack of plates in my hands. That was Linda’s doing. Much more devious than I had thought.

— He kept asking who visits me and how often. And he repeated over and over that old people are easy to trick. It felt like he was preparing me for something…

I sat down beside her, heart pounding.
— Did you let him in?
— No, I told him to leave. Then I called an attorney, just in case.

Aunt Elizabeth was no fool. That’s what they didn’t understand.

Weeks passed. I kept visiting, helping with errands, bringing books and listening to her long stories. She told me about her younger days — how she’d wanted to be an astronomer, how she ended up in real estate almost by accident, and how she’d made quiet but smart investments over the years.

And then, one Friday, I walked into her apartment and something felt off.

She was sitting in her chair, a cup of tea untouched in front of her. Her face was pale, her hands trembling slightly.

— What happened?

She looked at me with a long, weary gaze.

— I got my diagnosis today. Stage 3 cancer. They say it’s aggressive.

My heart sank.

— But… there’s treatment, right?
— I’m eighty-three, Kira. I’ve lived a full life.

I sat with her for hours. We didn’t talk much. We didn’t need to.

Over the next few months, I helped manage her appointments, cook meals, sit with her through chemo. Some days she was strong, stubborn even, telling the doctors how to do their jobs. Other days, she simply stared out the window, quiet, reflecting.

One morning she handed me a folder.
— I want you to keep this.

I opened it slowly. Inside were copies of deeds, bank documents, and a will.

— Why me?

She looked at me, her voice soft.
— Because you saw me. Not what I owned. Not what I used to be. Just me.

Tears welled up in my eyes.

— I don’t want anything from you.
— That’s exactly why you deserve it.

She passed away in late spring. I was there, holding her hand. Her last words to me were:
— Don’t let them make you bitter.

The funeral was small. Just a few neighbors, her lawyer, and me.

But it was the reading of the will that brought out the vultures.

We met in a small legal office. Aunt Linda arrived wearing all black, dramatically dabbing her eyes. Samantha came in a designer coat I knew she couldn’t afford without her mom’s credit card.

The lawyer, Mr. Carson, read the document slowly, clearly.

“To my niece, Kira Walton, who stayed by my side not out of duty but love, I leave all that I own…”

You could hear a pin drop.

He continued, listing the properties: three houses — one in San Francisco, another in Carmel, and a rental duplex in Santa Rosa. There were stocks, savings accounts, a trust fund for future maintenance.

Samantha’s mouth fell open. Linda gasped, then demanded:
— This is a mistake! She was senile!

But the lawyer calmly presented recorded video testimony from Elizabeth, made just three months prior. Her voice, though thinner, was clear:
— My family had years to show they cared. Only one did. This is my decision.

Outside the office, Samantha chased me down.
— You tricked her! You manipulated her, you little parasite!

I turned and looked her straight in the eyes.
— You never visited her unless you thought you could get something. She saw that.

— You’ll regret this!
— No. I think I’ll finally sleep in peace.

For a while, I didn’t know what to do with everything she left me. I didn’t feel I’d earned it.

Then I remembered something she once said:
— Money is only as good as the kindness it funds.

So I kept the little apartment she’d lived in and moved in. I turned the Carmel home into a small community reading center for kids. The duplex in Santa Rosa became affordable housing for two single mothers I met through a local charity.

I still worked my regular job, but I volunteered more. I taught kids how to recognize birds, just like she had taught me.

Months later, I got a call from a woman named Melanie, one of the mothers I helped. She told me her son had won a scholarship thanks to the tutoring program we started in the reading center.

— I don’t know how to thank you, — she said, her voice cracking.

— Just pass it on someday, — I replied. — Help someone who needs it.

That was all I needed.

Samantha, on the other hand, got caught up in some pyramid scheme and was later sued for fraud. Linda ended up renting a small condo near Bakersfield, still blaming the world.

And me? I learned that sometimes the most rewarding inheritance isn’t the money or the properties. It’s the life you build after.

Aunt Elizabeth taught me that.

If you’re still reading this — take it as a sign. Love the ones who shaped you. Be kind without expectations. And when you least expect it, life rewards you in ways you couldn’t have planned.

Like and share if you believe kindness always finds its way home.