05/31/2026
I married a lonely older woman for money and a place to stay — after her funeral, her lawyer handed me a box and said, "She said this is what you really WANTED."
When I married Evelyn, I was 25, broke, drowning in debt, and sleeping in my truck behind a grocery store.
She was 71. Widowed. Quiet. Owned a nice house in a peaceful neighborhood.
And no — I didn't marry her for love.
I told myself it was survival. Stay a few years, play the good husband, inherit the house someday, and finally stop struggling.
I never once thought Evelyn saw through me.
Meanwhile, she treated me better than I deserved.
She cooked dinner every night. Bought me new boots when mine fell apart. Left a winter coat by the front door after noticing mine barely closed.
"You'll freeze in that thing," she said casually.
But honestly? I barely appreciated any of it.
The truth is, I never really saw Evelyn as a wife. I saw her as a waiting game.
Every doctor appointment caught my attention. Every pill bottle on the counter reminded me that one day everything here would belong to me.
I know how horrible that sounds now.
But back then, I thought I was being practical.
Then one morning, Evelyn collapsed in the kitchen. Three days later, she died.
At the funeral, her relatives looked at me like I was trash.
"Gold digger."
"He got what he wanted."
And honestly, I thought I had.
But at the lawyer's office, my stomach dropped as the will was read.
The house went to her niece. Most of the money went to charity. I got NOTHING.
Then the lawyer placed an old shoebox on the table in front of me.
My name was written across the top in Evelyn's careful handwriting.
I frowned. "What is this?"
The lawyer looked at me quietly.
"She said this is what you really WANTED."
My hands shook as I lifted the lid.
And the first thing I saw inside made my blood run cold. ⬇️⬇️ Voir moins