You spend your whole life believing that if you give enough, love enough, sacrifice enough, people will cherish you. That blood will protect you. That family means something. But sometimes, love just makes you the easiest one to use.
I’m Annie, sixty years old. A widow since my son Thomas was seven. I scrubbed floors, washed dishes, and stitched together every piece of our lives with tired hands and hope. I never remarried. Never took a break. Everything I had, I gave to him.
These days, I live in Skyridge Apartments. One unit down the hall from my son, his wife Lila, and their little boy Max. I helped them buy that place five years ago. Gave them $40,000 from my retirement savings without blinking. Because I thought keeping family close was worth more than any number on a bank statement.
Max is four now. Soft curls, a raspy little laugh that tugs joy out of your bones no matter how tired you are. Last week, he ran into my kitchen holding one of his toy walkie-talkies.
“Grandma Annie,” he said, his sticky fingers proudly offering me the plastic. “Now we can talk when I’m in my room!”
I clipped it to my apron and kissed his head. “I love it, sweetheart.”
I still had my apron on Wednesday night after a ten-hour shift at Murphy’s Diner. My feet were throbbing, my back stiff, but I made it to my recliner like always. I was just dozing off when the static from the walkie-talkie crackled.
“Daddy, are you there?”
I smiled.
But then I heard voices. Lila’s laugh—sharp, dismissive.
“She’s never home anyway. We should rent out her spare bedroom.”
My heart slowed.
“Six hundred a month, easy,” Lila went on. “She wouldn’t even notice.”
Thomas laughed. “Mom’s always been too trusting.”
I gripped the walkie-talkie tighter, frozen.
“And when she starts paying for Max’s swimming lessons too,” Lila continued, “we’ll finally take that trip to Hawaii.”
My stomach turned.
“She thinks daycare costs $800,” she whispered with a snort. “It’s only $500. We pocket $300 every month.”
Then Thomas: “And when she’s too old to be useful, we’ll put her in a nursing home. Rent out her place for some steady cash.”
The silence that followed wasn’t just quiet—it was hollow. Cold. I sat in the dark, staring at the thin wall that separated our apartments. The wall I’d helped pay for. The wall they were planning to capitalize on… once I was out of the picture.
That night, I didn’t sleep. I just kept hearing those words. Playing them over and over like a broken record.
Saturday was my 60th birthday. They came over with a store-bought cake and plastic smiles. Thomas kissed my cheek and said I looked tired. Lila suggested I get a cleaning lady.
“Thoughtful,” I murmured.
Max ran to me, clutching a crayon drawing. “It’s you, me, and Rover!” he said proudly.
“But Grandma doesn’t have a dog,” Lila corrected.
“Not yet,” Max whispered. “But she wants one.”
I smiled and poured coffee.
“Let’s have cake,” I said. “But first, a toast.”
They raised their cups. I raised mine.
“To family. To trust. To the people we love.”
“To family,” they echoed.
I set my cup down slowly. “I gave you forty thousand dollars to buy this place. I pay eight hundred every month for daycare. I’ve skipped meals, worn the same coat for years—because I believed love meant sacrifice.”
Lila’s eyes shifted.
“But it turns out daycare costs five hundred. And you’ve been pocketing the rest. Laughing behind my back. Planning to rent my room. Planning to toss me into a nursing home when I can’t work anymore.”
Thomas opened his mouth, but I cut him off.
“You called me a pushover. And you weren’t wrong. I believed you needed me. But really, you just needed my money.”
I pulled out a checkbook from the kitchen drawer. “This stops today.”
I wrote a check. $500. Nothing more.
“From now on, every extra dollar goes into a separate account for Max. And when he turns eighteen, he’ll get it directly from me. My door will stay locked. My time? No longer free.”
Thomas’s face paled. Lila stood, indignant. “You were spying on us?”
“No,” I said calmly. “Your son gave me a gift. That walkie-talkie gave me something better than plastic and static. It gave me the truth.”
They left without touching the cake.
That night, I stood at my sink washing dishes, the window reflecting a woman who had aged through hard work and heartbreak—but who, finally, looked awake.
Later, as I dried my hands, the walkie-talkie crackled again.
“Grandma Annie? Are you there?”
“I’m here, sweetheart.”
“Daddy’s crying. Mommy’s mad. Did I do something wrong?”
Tears welled in my eyes. “No, baby. You did something very right.”
“I did?”
“You gave Grandma the truth. That’s the best gift anyone could give.”
Silence on the other end. Then: “You’ll still love me?”
“Forever and always.”
He clicked off with a soft “Good night, Grandma Annie.”
I clipped the walkie-talkie back to my apron.
And I meant every word. The rest of my life, and every penny I earn, belongs to the only person in that apartment who never asked for anything but love.