The will was simple. He left me the house and not much else. We’d burned through most of our savings on treatments and medications. I didn’t resent that—I would have sold the roof over my head if it meant one more good day for him. But love doesn’t pay electric bills, and once the shock faded, reality moved in.
My stepson was nineteen then. Smart. Capable. Tall enough to look like his father when he stood in the doorway, which sometimes hurt more than I wanted to admit. He’d been living with us through the worst of the illness, watching me juggle hospital visits, night shifts, and stacks of unpaid envelopes on the kitchen table.
Eventually, I sat him down.
“I need you to contribute,” I said, my hands shaking slightly around my coffee mug. “Five hundred a month. Just to help with expenses.”
He laughed.
Not a nervous laugh. A dismissive one.
“You’re childless,” he said, leaning back in his chair like this was all a joke. “I’m your retirement plan. It’s your job to support me.”
The words hit harder than I expected. Childless. As if the years of scraped knees, late-night talks, and standing in the rain at school events didn’t count. As if caring for his father until my hands ached and my back screamed hadn’t woven us into a family.