If someone had told me an old couch would become my most precious possession, I would have laughed. But after my grandmother Mabel died, everything changed.
Grandma wasn’t just family — she was my rock. My mom, Clara, was always chasing something else, but Grandma showed up: school plays, broken hearts, scraped knees, spicy chicken soup and cinnamon donuts. When she was diagnosed with terminal cancer, I moved in to care for her. My mom chose a European cruise instead.
After Grandma died, Mom only cared about the house and jewelry. But Grandma left me the faded peach couch — not for its looks, but for what it meant. I spent nights by her side, bathing her, reading to her, holding her hand. She told me things she’d never shared before, and in her final moments, she told me she loved me.
Weeks later, the lawyer revealed her will: the house to Mom, but the couch was mine. Mom mocked it, but I knew its value. With help from my friend Marcus, I moved it home.
While cleaning it, I found a hidden zipper and inside a velvet bag with jewelry and a letter from Grandma. She’d hidden her grandmother’s jewels there for me, knowing Mom would overlook something sentimental. Each piece was proof of her love.
Mom never looked in the couch. But I did. Now the couch holds every story, every hug, every memory Grandma gave me. I sit on it with my children, feeling her love still here.
Love matters more than anything — and cleverness runs in our blood. And as I prepared for a dinner with Marcus, wearing emerald earrings from Grandma’s secret stash, I realized I’m more than grief. I’m loved. And she’s still with me.