The wind moved softly through the cemetery maples. I opened the savings book one last time. The pages were wrinkled from rain, but Grandma’s handwriting remained.
Emma, don’t let him tell you what a thing is worth. Ask the bank. I traced the words with my fingertip.
For so much of my life, I had believed worth was something other people assigned. Victor said Grandma was a burden, so the family treated her like one. Victor said I was ungrateful, so I learned to apologize for needing anything.
Victor said the book was useless, so everyone watched him throw it away. But Grandma had known better. A thing’s worth is not always visible from the outside.
Sometimes a little blue book is a key. Sometimes an old woman in a wheelchair is a witness. Sometimes a quiet granddaughter is the storm.
I stood and brushed grass from my dress. Before I left, I placed the savings book in a clear waterproof box and set it at the base of Grandma’s stone just long enough to take a picture. Then I picked it back up.
I would never leave it buried. Not in dirt. Not in silence.
Not in the version of our family story my father tried to write. As I walked toward the cemetery gate, my phone rang. It was Danielle from Prairie Union Bank.
“Emma,” she said, “I’m sorry to bother you today.”
“You’re not bothering me.”
“There’s an elderly man here with an old certificate of deposit and a niece who keeps answering all the questions for him. He seems scared. I thought of your foundation.”
I looked back at Grandma’s grave.
The yellow roses moved in the breeze. “I’m on my way,” I said. And for the first time in my life, those words did not feel like running toward another crisis.
They felt like answering a call Grandma had left for me long before I knew how to hear it. THE END







