My father-in-law had no pension, no savings—only me. I cared for him devotedly for 12 long years. As he took his final breath, he pressed a torn pillow into my hands. When I opened it, my knees nearly gave out, and tears spilled before I could stop them…

My name is Althea, and this is not a story of inheritance, but of an inheritance of the heart. It began the day I became a daughter-in-law at twenty-six, stepping across the worn threshold of a farmhouse in the small, dusty town of San Francisco. I was marrying into a family that had been weathered by hardship like an old tree battered by storms. My mother-in-law had been taken by illness far too young, leaving my father-in-law, a man named Bill Ernesto, to raise four children with nothing but the soil under his fingernails and a relentless will. His entire life was a testament to the earth he tilled—a cycle of planting, praying for rain, and harvesting just enough to get by. He never had a job that offered a pension or the soft cushion of security. His wealth was in his children, a currency that, by the time I arrived, had severely devalued.

By the time I married his youngest son, most of Bill’s children had already built their own lives, brick by brick, far from the fading paint and creaking floors of their childhood home. Their visits became rare, then perfunctory, brief eclipses over their father’s lonely world. The responsibility for his remaining years, a heavy cloak of duty, fell almost entirely upon my husband and me. And soon, just upon me.

The town had its own chorus, a choir of whispers that followed me from the market to the church steps. I would hear them, the words sharp as broken glass, from behind cupped hands and drawn curtains.

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