My husband left me alone with his sick grandmother and went away on a business trip for a year, and just before her death she suddenly grabbed my hand and whispered: “There’s something behind the mirror at the country house — go there”
And when I saw what was hidden there, I was truly horrified.
My husband simply left. He said it was an expedition for six months, that there would be almost no connection, and that we would discuss everything important later. And he left me alone with his blind grandmother.
At first I thought I could handle it. After all, an elderly person needs help. But the reality turned out to be very different. Constant reproaches, whims, nightly screams, the smell of medicines and old age that soaked into my clothes and my thoughts.
Every morning I washed her, fed her with a spoon, listened to accusations that I was stealing something and deliberately starving her. At the same time, I worked twelve hours a day at a hotel, came home exhausted and almost without money.
The days merged into one long gray stretch. Work — home — more complaints. My husband didn’t call. He wrote briefly: “No signal,” “It’s hard in the mountains.” I endured it. For the family, for our daughter, for the hope that all of this would someday end.
In her last days, the grandmother became very weak. She barely spoke, just lay there and breathed heavily. And just before she died, she suddenly squeezed my hand so hard that I flinched. Her voice was hoarse, but surprisingly clear.
— Go to my old country house, — she whispered. — In the bathroom, look behind the mirror. Everything is there.
A few days later I was standing in front of that house. Dampness, dust, the smell of abandonment. In the bathroom hung an old, cloudy mirror, crooked, as if no one had touched it for years. I took it off the wall, not imagining what I was about to see.
What was behind the mirror made my heart drop and my hair stand on end… Continuation in the first comment
A few days later I was standing in front of that house again. Dampness, dust, the feeling that time had stopped there. In the bathroom was an old, cloudy mirror, crooked and cold. I took it off the wall, expecting nothing special.
Behind the mirror was a hiding place. Bundles of money, documents for the house, the land, and savings no one had ever spoken about. Everything was in my name.
I stood there and couldn’t believe my eyes. At that moment, everything became clear: the grandmother saw everything, even though she was blind. She watched how I endured everything, how I took care of her, how I didn’t abandon her and didn’t seek revenge. My husband knew nothing about this. He simply left, without thinking.
And the grandmother decided herself who should inherit everything she had. Not by blood, but by conscience.
For the first time in a long while, I cried not from exhaustion, but from relief.
