”My father flung my grandmother’s savings book onto her open grave as if it were worthless. “It’s useless,” he said, brushing dirt from his black gloves. “Let it stay buried.” The entire cemetery fell silent. Rain ran down my cheeks—maybe tears, maybe not. I was twenty-six, in the only black dress I owned, standing among relatives who had spent the whole funeral whispering that Grandma had “wasted her last years” raising me. My father, Victor Hale, looked at me with the same cold smile he wore when I was twelve and begged him not to sell Grandma’s house. “You heard the lawyer,” he said. “She left you that little book. Not money. Not land. A book. Typical old woman nonsense.” My stepmother, Celeste, let out a soft laugh behind her veil. My half-brother Mark leaned closer. “Maybe there’s a dollar in it. Buy yourself lunch.” A few cousins snickered. I didn’t move. The priest cleared his throat, uneasy. The lawyer, Mr. Bell, looked pale but stayed silent. He had already read the will beneath a dripping cemetery tent: Grandma left her “savings book and all rights attached to it” to me, her granddaughter, Elise. My father received nothing. That was why his

mouth had twisted. Grandma raised me after my mother died. She taught me to sew a button, balance a budget, and face wolves without showing fear. In her final week, when her hands were nothing but bones beneath hospital sheets, she whispered, “When they laugh, let them. Then go to
the bank.
I stepped forward.
My father’s hand shot out. “Leave it.”
I met his eyes. “No.”
His gaze hardened. “Don’t embarrass yourself, Elise.”
“You already did that for me.”
The cemetery froze again.
I climbed down carefully, my heels sinking into wet mud, and lifted the small blue savings book from Grandma’s coffin lid. Dirt stained its cover. My fingers trembled, but my voice stayed steady.
“It was hers,” I said. “Now it’s mine.”
Father leaned close enough that I smelled whiskey on his breath. “You think she saved you? That old woman couldn’t save herself.”
Something inside me went still.
I slipped the book into my coat.
Celeste smiled sweetly. “Poor girl. Always so dramatic.”
Mark stepped in my way as I turned to leave. “Where are you going?”
I looked past him toward the iron cemetery gate.
“To the bank.”
He laughed. My father laughed too, loud and cruel, as thunder rolled across the graveyard.
But Mr. Bell did not laugh.
He watched me walk away with the look of a man who had just seen a spark land in gasoline.
The bank was nearly empty when I arrived, rainwater dripping onto the marble floor.
A clerk in a navy suit looked up. “Can I help you?”
I placed Grandma’s savings book on the counter.
Her name was printed inside: Margaret Rose Hale. Beneath it, faded stamps marked deposits spanning forty years. The clerk smiled politely at first. Then he entered the account number.
His smile vanished.
He typed again.
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