When my grandmother passed away, the family reunion that followed had nothing to do with grief and everything to do with money. Relatives who hadn’t spoken to her in years suddenly appeared, circling her house like vultures, demanding to know where the will was and who got what. While arguments echoed through the rooms, I did the one thing no one else wanted to do: I clipped a leash onto Grandma’s aging dog, Berta, and took her home. At the time, it felt like a small, lonely choice — I had no idea it would change everything.
Grandma had always been complicated. She was generous with education and guidance, but never handed out cash, believing everyone should build their own future. During the last months of her life, I moved in to care for her while juggling my job as a nurse, and Berta was always at our feet. After the funeral, the lawyer made it clear that none of the arguing relatives would inherit anything, and the mood turned ugly fast. When someone suggested putting Berta down because she was “too old,” I knew I couldn’t leave her behind — even if it meant breaking my lease and stretching my finances thinner.
Days later, exhausted after a night shift, I noticed something unusual on Berta’s collar: an engraved address and a number. Curiosity turned into disbelief when it led me to a train station locker, opened by a tiny key hidden inside the tag. Inside was a folder marked with my name, a handwritten note from Grandma, and legal documents. In her words, she explained that her entire estate would go to the person who cared for Berta without expecting anything in return — proof of a kind heart. That person, she believed, was me.
The truth didn’t stay secret for long, but the lawyer stepped in and enforced Grandma’s wishes. As the noise finally died down, I understood her final lesson: compassion reveals character far better than greed ever could. I kept Berta, honored Grandma’s memory, and chose to give much of the inheritance to the hospital where I work. In the end, while everyone else fought over what they thought they deserved, Grandma quietly gave everything to the one person who chose love first — and trusted her enough to do good with it.