I emptied my bank account and handed over the $25,000 I’d scraped together from years of cleaning floors so my granddaughter could have her dream wedding. Then she told me I wasn’t welcome, claiming I’d embarrass her and wreck her big day. What came next was straight-up justice.
I’m Siver, and I’m 81 years old. I’d lived through plenty in my eighty-one years—poverty, loss, heartbreak, and burying the man I loved. But nothing got me ready for the day I turned into a problem for the little girl I’d helped raise.
My husband, Rook, died when I was 75. Losing him felt like losing half my heart. We’d built our life from scratch, and once he was gone, everything fell apart.
My health went downhill right after. Grief eats away at you until you’re just an empty shell. That’s when my son, Finnik, said I had to move to the city to live with him and his wife, Brielle.
At first, they were kind and caring. Finnik checked on me every morning before heading to work. Brielle brought me tea in the afternoons.
I thought this might be where I’d spend my last years—around family, feeling loved and useful. Then the doctor gave the news. Early-stage dementia, he said.
Not bad yet, but it was on its way. The second those words came out, everything shifted. I could hear my son and his wife fighting almost every night after that.
Their voices floated up through the vents, sharp and full of blame. “We can’t pay for this, Finnik. What if she gets worse?”
“She’s my mom, Brielle.
What do you expect me to do?”
“I’m just saying we have to be realistic. Nursing homes cost money, but so does keeping her here if she needs round-the-clock help.”
I’d lie in bed listening, my heart cracking a bit more each time. I wasn’t dumb.
I knew I was turning into a load they didn’t want. But I stayed for Eira—my granddaughter, my joy, the little girl who used to climb into my lap and beg for stories about Rook and me from back in the day. All I wanted after Rook passed was to see Eira get married before I went to join him.
That’s it. Just one more happy memory before I left this world. I’d been putting money aside for years.
When I was still healthy, I cleaned at a small bistro downtown. The wages were low, but I was thrifty. Every extra dollar went into a savings account Rook and I started together.
It was meant for emergencies or our retirement. But after he died, I didn’t need retirement anymore. I needed a reason to keep going.
So I saved it for Eira. $25,000. Every cent sat there untouched, waiting for the day she’d use it.
When Finnik told me Eira was engaged, I felt a spark I hadn’t felt in ages. I was thrilled. “Mom, she’s over the moon,” Finnik said, grinning as he showed me venue photos on his phone.
“It’s going to be a huge wedding. Her fiancé, Cove, comes from a solid family. They’re planning something amazing.”
“I want to help,” I said right away.
“I’ve saved $25,000… for her.”
Finnik stared at me. “Mom, you don’t have to…”
“I want to. Please.
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