When my grandma got sick, I was the one who showed up for chemo rides, meds, and nights on her couch. My sisters showed up for photos. After the will, they left smiling, and I went home with her old dog, until he started acting like he had something to tell me.
I was 28 when my grandma got sick, and my life snapped into a new shape. I drove her to chemo, sorted her meds, stocked her fridge, and slept on her couch when the nights got long.
Her dog, Scout, stayed glued to her like a shadow. He was old and stubborn, with a graying muzzle, and a wheezy sigh that always sounded offended.
I was 28 when my grandma got sick.
My sisters stayed “busy.”
Maris texted “Thinking of you,” and Kaia reacted with heart emojis like that counted as help.
Every couple of weeks they showed up with grocery-store flowers, took a sad selfie, and disappeared again.
One night after chemo, Grandma June’s hands shook so hard she spilled tea on the blanket. I dabbed at it with a paper towel, trying not to look scared.
Scout pressed his head into her lap and stared at me like I was responsible for fixing the world.
“Promise me one thing.”
Grandma squeezed my hand. “Blythe,” she said, “they’re going to come running when I’m gone.”
“Grandma, don’t,” I whispered.
Her eyes held mine, calm and sharp. “Promise me one thing. If it turns into a circus… you take Scout.”
I swallowed. “Why would it turn into a circus?”
“Because they’ll smell money,” she said, voice flat. “And they’ll forget I was a person.”
Scout’s ears twitched at his name.
The house felt wrong without her humming.
“I promise,” I said. “I’ll take him.”
She nodded, then softened. “Good, softheart.”
That nickname used to make me roll my eyes as a kid.
That night it made my chest hurt.
***
Three months later, she was gone. The house felt wrong without her humming, without the little cough-laugh she did when Scout begged.
Kaia’s mascara was smudged in a way that looked intentional.
At the funeral, Maris cried loudly, face pressed into a tissue like a performance.
Kaia clung to her arm and stared around like she was checking who noticed.
People told me, “You did so much,” and I nodded like a ghost.
Two days later, the three of us sat in an attorney’s office that smelled like lemon cleaner and old paper.
Maris wore a fitted black dress and lipstick that didn’t quite match grief.
Kaia’s mascara was smudged in a way that looked intentional.
Then the attorney turned to me.
Maris leaned forward before the attorney finished his opening sentence.
“SO… THE HOUSE?” she asked, bright-eyed.
Kaia jumped in. “IS IT SPLIT THREE WAYS?”
The attorney adjusted his glasses. “June left the house jointly to Maris and Kaia.”
Maris’s smile flashed. Kaia’s shoulders lifted like she’d just won something.
Then the attorney turned to me.
“Guess you got your reward.”
“Blythe,” he said, “June left you Scout.”
Kaia laughed. “The DOG?”
Maris smirked. “WOW. CONGRATS. YOU TENDED TO GRANDMA FOR NOTHING!”
My throat tightened, but I didn’t give them a reaction to feed on.
I stood. “So I can take him today?”
The attorney nodded. “Yes.”
I sat on the floor beside him and cried into his fur.
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