When my boyfriend proposed, I asked my stepfather for the heirloom ring my late mother promised me—only to find it gone. He’d given it to his daughter instead. As grief turned to betrayal, my sharp, unshakable Grandma Theodora quietly planned to make it right.
Calen was down on one knee in the park, and my heart raced as he pulled a small velvet box from his pocket. He’d seemed unusually excited for our picnic that day, but I never guessed this was why. I stared at him, his goofy, love-struck grin lighting up his face.
Was this it? The moment I’d been waiting for? “Brynn,” he said, his voice a bit shaky, “we’ve been together six years.
We’ve overcome every challenge life threw at us and come out stronger. I can’t imagine my life without you. Will you marry me?”
He opened the box, revealing a simple gold band with a small solitaire diamond.
“I wanted to propose with your mother’s ring,” he said quickly, “but I couldn’t find it in your jewelry box, so this is a stand-in.”
I didn’t answer right away. Tears came instead—not delicate, movie-like tears, but raw, body-shaking sobs. It was pure joy, crashing over me like a wave.
But alongside it was a deep, aching void where Mom should’ve been. “Of course, I’ll marry you,” I said between sobs. Calen sighed in relief and slipped the ring onto my finger.
I wiped my eyes, watching the diamond catch the light. “Vance still has Mom’s ring,” I said. “We talked about it before she passed, but she went so fast at the end…”
“I know,” Calen said, wrapping his arm around me.
“I’m sorry she’s not here for this.”
Mom passed away last year. For as long as I could remember, she’d promised me her white gold ring with emerald stones and delicate vine carvings—a family heirloom passed down for generations. It was more than jewelry; it was her laughter filling a room, her teasing “Princess Brynn” when she poked fun at me.
Grief had consumed me when she died, and I’d forgotten to ask Vance, my stepdad, about the ring. But now, it was time to claim it. The thought made me uneasy.
Vance was a good man. He’d tried to be a father to me after Dad died, but one issue always caused tension between him and Mom, and it never sat right with me. Vance had a daughter from his first marriage, Isolde.
She was a teenager when Mom and Vance married, and the seven-year age gap between us was a barrier we never crossed. Because Isolde was older, Vance always insisted she should get Mom’s ring. “It’s only fair,” he’d grumble.
“Isolde’s older, likely to get engaged first. She deserves something special.”
“I won’t neglect her, Vance,” Mom would say firmly. “I have other jewelry for her, like my ruby Claddagh ring, but this ring is Brynn’s, end of story.”
Despite Mom’s insistence, the ring remained a sore point, surfacing in their arguments over the years.
So, when I texted Vance to say I’d stop by to get something from Mom’s jewelry box, I didn’t mention the ring. He greeted me with a warm smile and hug the next day. “Hey, Brynn!
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