My 32-year-old son died just three months ago, and even now I still wake up expecting to hear his voice in the house. For a moment everything feels normal, like I could call his name and he would answer from another room. Then reality hits again, and I remember he’s gone. I thought that loss would be the hardest thing I’d ever survive.
I was wrong. His wife of eight years moved on almost immediately, as if nothing had happened. Before the grief even had time to settle, she announced she was leaving for New York with a new man and demanded my son’s $90,000 inheritance. She said it like she was entitled to it, like love automatically came with payment.
When I refused, she leaned in and told me coldly, “You won’t like how this ends.” The next day, my 8-year-old grandson stood at my door crying, saying his mother was leaving without him. Then she called and told me it was now my responsibility to raise him until he was grown, as if he were something she could simply hand off.
I’m 65, and I love that boy more than anything, but I never planned to raise a child alone at this stage of my life. My days have turned into school runs, meals, and explaining a loss he still doesn’t fully understand. And yet I know one thing for certain—I will not hand over my son’s inheritance to someone who erased him so quickly. Now I’m left carrying both a child’s future and a decision I never thought I’d have to make