I always thought my grumpy neighbor, Mr. Sloan, existed solely to make my life miserable. He dumped dirt on my roses again one morning — right across the neat bed I tended like art. I was furious. Gardening was the heart of my florist business, and wedding orders were booming.
But everything changed when I learned he’d died overnight. A funeral followed, and to my shock, his lawyer called me into a room after the service. There, I discovered his final wish: I was to inherit his house — on one condition. I had to take care of a frail elderly woman named Rose and let her live with me for as long as she wanted. If I refused, I’d forfeit the house entirely.
My initial reaction was disbelief. My rental was draining me, and a house with a huge garden could save my business. But caring for a stranger felt overwhelming. Still, I agreed. After all, what harm could one sweet old lady cause?
As days passed, I learned Rose’s needs were constant: custom meals, pills at odd hours, and midnight pharmacy runs. I barely slept. I questioned my choice — and Mr. Sloan’s intentions. Yet amidst frustration, I noticed something in his yard: rose bushes more beautiful than mine had ever been. They were a florist’s dream, and maybe a second chance.
One day, while searching the garage for gardening tools, I found a box of old photographs. One showed a young woman who looked eerily like me — holding a baby, standing beside Mr. Sloan himself. My heart dropped. Could this be more than coincidence?
I confronted Rose. With trembling honesty, she revealed the truth: she and Mr. Sloan had once had a daughter — me. They gave me up when life was too hard. Mr. Sloan had spent years searching for me. Before he died, he wrote a letter explaining what he’d never said out loud: that I was his daughter, and his last wish was for Rose and me to reconnect.
Tears blurred the words. I had survived abandonment, tough times, and years of silence. Now, with this unexpected inheritance, I found something I never knew I needed — a family.
Outside, the roses once trampled by revenge now stood tall in the wind. And in that moment, I knew one thing: neither the roses nor I would break again.
