“Mama, I…”
“Shh.” She patted my cheek. “I know what I know.”
I did not understand then. I told myself it was just the dementia, just words drifting loose.
“She left something for you.”
I drove home that night thinking about my own mother, about how rarely I sat with her the way I sat with Rosie. I made a promise to do better. To call more. To stay longer.
Two days later, my phone rang while I was loading boxes onto the truck.
It was the nursing home director.
“Jeremy. Rosie passed away in her sleep last night.”
I set the box down on the wet pavement.
“And she left something for you.”
I opened the envelope with shaking fingers.
***
Three days after the funeral, I sat in Director Helen’s office, staring at a sealed envelope on her desk. I had braced for grief, not paperwork.
“She knew you weren’t her son,” Helen said gently.
I looked up. “What?”
“From the first visit, Jeremy. She told me a week in. She asked me to keep her secret.”
I opened the envelope with shaking fingers. Rosie’s handwriting wandered across the page, looping in places, steady in others.
“My dear boy who is not my boy. My memory failed me, but my eyes never did. I knew your face was not his. I let you stay because you stayed. That was enough. The key opens what I have saved. Use half for my friends here. They have so little.”
I didn’t think much of it at the time.
I pressed my thumb against the paper. A small brass key slid into my palm.
“She left it to you on purpose,” Helen said. “Not by mistake.”
Helen explained that because Rosie had left behind a safety deposit box and a written bequest, the nursing home’s legal executor would be required to notify Tim as her next of kin. I didn’t think much of it at the time.
Word travelled faster than I expected. Four days later, Tim was banging on my apartment door.
“Open up, Jeremy. I know you’re in there.”
I opened it. He pushed past me, eyes wild, jacket half-buttoned.
“Where is the key?”
“It’s not yours.”