At 58, I never expected To Be Starting Over in Rural Georgia

That night, after they finally left, I sat on the bedroom floor with the jewelry box in my lap. My hands were shaking so badly I almost dropped it.

I remembered Mike smiling when he gave it to me years ago. “If anything ever happens,” he’d said, “don’t forget to look underneath.”

At the time, I thought he meant the jewelry itself.

I carefully pulled at the faded velvet lining, and for a second nothing happened. Then one corner lifted.

Underneath was a sealed envelope with my name on it in Mike’s handwriting.

Inside was a folded document and a key.

The document wasn’t a love letter. It was the deed to a small lake property two counties over — fully paid off, transferred into my name six months before he died.

And clipped to it was a short note:

“She only cares about this house. Let her have it. This one is yours.”

I cried so hard I couldn’t even see the page anymore.

The next morning, his daughter showed up again with that same smug look, asking if I was finally ready to leave.

I just handed her the house keys.

Then I smiled for the first time in weeks and said, “Actually, I already have somewhere better to go.

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