I spoon-fed him when he couldn’t hold a fork. Cleaned him when he couldn’t make it to the bathroom. Whispered comfort into the night as he slipped away.
And when he died, I thought I’d at least have the home we built together.
But his will? It left everything to his kids from his first marriage—the ones who never called unless they needed money.
I got nothing. Not even a thank you.
So I did the unthinkable: I listed his ashes for sale.
A man named Theo responded immediately. Paid double. Said he needed them today.
He came at sunset, eyes scanning the shadows. “You don’t know how much this means,” he said, cradling the urn.
Curious, I emailed him later: Why?
His reply stunned me. “Because he saved my life. He was my father.”
Theo was the son Richard never talked about. The one he quietly helped during dark times. The one he never stopped loving.
Together, we scattered Richard’s ashes. And somehow, in our shared grief, we found healing.
Grief isn’t about ownership. It’s about connection.
Sometimes the deepest peace comes not from holding on—but from letting go.