By the time Grandpa passed away, I had already accepted my place in the family. But what happened after the will was read made me realize I’d been wrong all along. I’m Angelica, 25, the youngest of five.
By the time I was old enough to remember anything clearly, it was just Grandpa and us.
He stepped in after our parents died in a car accident, just him, five kids, and a small house. ***
Every morning at 5 AM, like clockwork, I’d hear Grandpa in the kitchen.
Then the hum of the coffeemaker and the quiet snap of that same old metal lunch box closing. My siblings couldn’t wait to leave when they got older.
Matthew went first, then Jake, Kirk, and finally Jessica.
They relocated to different cities, living their individual lives. None of them looked back. But I stayed.
After graduating from college, I moved back in to care for Grandpa.
He was much older by then. Slower, but still stubborn.
“You don’t have to stay,” he’d tell me while we watched the evening news together. “I want to,” I’d always reply.
And I meant it, because Grandpa never treated me like a burden or made me feel as if I owed him.
I wish I could say the same about the others. They never let go of what happened. I was told that our parents died when I was two years old, strapped into my car seat.
A truck ran a red light, causing the accident.
I lived. Our parents didn’t.
That was enough for them. My siblings never said it outright, but it hung in the air.
In the way they looked at me.
And sometimes… they did say it. I was 16, passing by the hallway, when I overheard Matthew’s declaration.
“If she hadn’t been born, they wouldn’t have been driving that night.”
I knew then that my brothers and sister never liked me. Grandpa tried bridging the gap between us by organizing many family dinners, but my siblings never let go of their resentment.
Then Grandpa passed away, and I lost the only person who’d ever truly loved and stood by me.
Grandpa’s funeral was small. My siblings showed up, stood in a line, and said the right things. The will reading happened three days later in Mr.
Collins’ law office downtown.
I didn’t expect much. Grandpa wasn’t rich.
He’d worked his whole life. I figured he’d split what little he had evenly.
Mr.
Collins revealed Grandpa had been very specific, and everything was legally binding. But when he started reading the will, nothing made sense. “And to Angelica,” Mr.
Collins said, looking at me, “your grandfather left you his personal lunchbox.”
For a second, I thought I heard him wrong.
But then he brought out that metal lunchbox with rusted corners and faded paint. The same one Grandpa used to carry to work daily.
The room went quiet. Then Jake laughed!
“You’ve got to be kidding!”
Jessica shook her head.
“That’s… wow!”
I didn’t say anything, just sat there, silent and humiliated. Then I stood up and picked up the box.
Matthew smiled. “That box isn’t worth the hassle,” and the others chuckled.
I just took it and left in tears.
I just walked, and by the time I stopped, 20 minutes later, I was standing in the park. Grandpa had brought me to this very same place in my childhood. I sat down.
Angry.
Hurt. Exhausted.
I kept replaying it in my head. The will, laughter, and the way Grandpa used to tell me I mattered.
“Why’d you do that?” I muttered under my breath.
I stared at the lunch box for a long time before opening the rusty latch with trembling fingers. I lifted the lid and froze. My hands started shaking uncontrollably as anger and hurt engulfed me.
Inside wasn’t food.
There was a neatly folded stack of old receipts. Dozens of them, maybe more.
Underneath that was a small empty notebook. At first glance, it looked like nothing, just years of grocery receipts, bus tickets, random slips of paper.
I almost laughed.
“Seriously?” I whispered. But then something caught my eye. On one of the receipts, a single digit in the middle was circled.
I picked up another one.
Same thing, but a different number. My breathing slowed.
I spread them out on the bench and noticed that every receipt had a single number circled. Never the price nor the date.
These were specific digits and clearly not random.
Grandpa didn’t do random. I stayed there for hours, organizing them. Lining them up by date, then by store.
It didn’t click right away.
At first, I thought they were totals, then dates, then phone numbers. None of it worked.
After some trial and error and a few wrong assumptions, I eventually saw it. The numbers formed groups!
And when I wrote them out in his empty notebook in sequence, they looked familiar.
They were coordinates! I sat back, staring at the page in the notebook. “No way.”
But it finally made sense.
When I was a kid, Grandpa used to leave me little notes.
Clues. Tiny scavenger hunts around the house and yard.
“Go find it,” he’d say with a grin. I hadn’t thought about that in years.
This…
this felt the same. Only bigger. I gathered everything back into the lunch box and headed home.
That night, I sat at the kitchen table with my laptop open.
The house was still unoccupied, and I assumed my siblings had returned home. Grandpa’s house was my home until Matthew took over.
I typed in the first set of numbers. A location popped up on the map.
Downtown.
I entered the second one. Another location across town. By the time I finished, I had five points marked across the city.
I leaned back in my chair, heart pounding.
“Okay,” I said aloud. “What were you trying to tell me?”
I decided to investigate further the following day. But I tossed and turned that night, dreaming about Grandpa alive and well.
The following morning, I woke up early, ate, showered, and then grabbed my car keys. “Alright, Gramps,” I murmured. “Let’s see where this goes.”
And I headed out to the first location.
The first place was a small auto shop.
It didn’t look like a place Grandpa would’ve had any reason to visit, but the coordinates didn’t lie. I parked across the street and sat there for a second. “You better not be messing with me,” I muttered.
Then I got out.
Inside, a man, probably in his 60s, stood behind the counter. He had gray hair and a solid build.
“Can I help you?” he asked. I hesitated, then pulled one of the receipts from my pocket.
“I…
think my grandfather knew you,” I said. “His name was Walter.”
The man’s expression shifted into recognition. He studied me for a moment longer.
“You must be Angelica.
Walter was our friend. He showed me a photo of you once.”
That stopped me cold.
Our?
“He said you’d come,” the man said, already turning toward a drawer behind the counter. He pulled out a sealed envelope.
“Walter told me not to hand this over to anyone but you.”
“What is it?” I asked.
He shrugged. “I didn’t ask. Wasn’t my place.”
I picked it up.
“Why didn’t he just give this to me when he was alive?” I said, more to myself than to him.
The man gave a small, knowing smile. I swallowed.
Yeah, he did.