Not my uncles. Not my cousins. Not even the priest who had just finished the final prayer.
Everyone stared at the muddy blue booklet like it was trash.
Like it wasn’t the last thing my grandmother Eleanor Hayes had left me in this world.
I was twenty-seven years old, wearing a borrowed black dress, my hands so cold I could barely feel my fingers.
My father, Richard Hayes, adjusted his black gloves and smiled at me the same way he used to when I was little and he told me crying was “just attention-seeking.”
“There’s your inheritance, Claire,” he said. “An old bankbook. No house. No land. No money. Your grandmother always loved pretending she had secrets.”
My stepmother, Denise, laughed softly behind her dark sunglasses.
“Poor thing,” she muttered. “She still thinks Grandma left her treasure.”
My half-brother Tyler leaned close and whispered in my ear.
“If there’s twenty bucks in there, you’re buying burgers.”
A few cousins laughed.
I didn’t.
Mr. Bennett, the family attorney, stood pale beneath the funeral tent. Twenty minutes earlier he had read my grandmother’s will aloud:
“To my granddaughter Claire Hayes, I leave my savings book and all rights connected to it.”
My father received nothing.
That was why he was furious.
My grandmother raised me after my mother died in a car accident when I was five years old. She taught me how to stretch a dollar, how to read contracts before signing them, and how to look directly at people who tried to intimidate me.
One week before she died, in her hospital room, she squeezed my hand with her thin fingers and whispered:
“When they laugh, let them. Then go to the bank.”
At the time, I didn’t understand.
Now, staring at the muddy passbook resting on her casket, I started shaking.
I stepped toward the grave.
My father grabbed my arm.
“Don’t you dare.”
I looked at him.
“Let go.”
“Don’t embarrass yourself in front of everybody, Claire.”
“You already did that for me.”
Silence fell heavier than the rain.
Carefully, I climbed down into the muddy edge of the grave and picked up the passbook. Dirt clung to the cover. It smelled like wet paper and earth.
I pressed it against my chest.
“It belonged to her,” I said. “Now it belongs to me.”
My father stepped closer until I could smell whiskey on his breath.
“Your grandmother couldn’t even save her own house. You think she saved you?”
Something inside me went cold.
Or maybe it finally caught fire.
I slipped the passbook into my purse and walked toward the cemetery gate.
Tyler blocked my path.
“Where are you going?”
I looked past the rusted gates toward the rainy street beyond.
“To the bank.”
They laughed while I walked away.
My father laughed louder than anyone.
But Mr. Bennett didn’t laugh.
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