
My grandfather left the villa to my older brother in his will, and the only thing he left me was the advice to be a decent person. “Be a decent person.” The estate lawyer finished reading the final four words, then looked up. For two seconds, the living room was dead silent. Then, my brother smiled. My sister-in-law smiled, too. Uncle Paul slapped his thigh, letting out a dry chuckle. “Even at the very end, the old man couldn’t resist giving his granddaughter a little lecture.” My dad sat on the sofa nearby. He didn’t look at me. He hadn’t looked at me once since we walked in. The lawyer closed the leather folder and pushed the will to the center of the coffee table. Black ink on crisp white paper, spelling it out with absolute clarity: The sole real estate property under the name of Arthur Gallagher, namely the Lakefront Drive estate, is to be inherited by his eldest grandson, Derek Gallagher. What was left to his granddaughter, Tina Gallagher, were four handwritten words. Be a decent person. I stared at those four words. It was Grandpa’s handwriting. Every stroke pressed deep and hard into the paper. I knew that handwriting. Over the last seven years, I had seen it countless times. On the pillbox: Take after meals. On the fridge: Tina, don’t forget the milk. On the nightstand: Blood pressure 138 today. The exact same handwriting. Only now, it spelled out: Be a decent person. Around me, everyone started gathering their coats and bags. Like an audience leaving a theater after the curtain falls. No one asked if I had any objections. No one thought they needed to. 1. My sister-in-law, Monica, was the first to stand up. She grabbed the photocopy of the will, folded it sharply, and shoved it into her designer tote. Her movements were quick, almost frantic, like she was afraid someone might snatch it back. “Derek, we need to find time to go to the county clerk’s office this week and get the deed transferred.” Her voice wasn’t loud, but it carried perfectly across the living room. My brother nodded. The look on his face was one of serene entitlement—not surprise, just the calm acceptance of a man getting exactly what he believed he was owed. “Dad, we’ll need you to sign a few release forms for the transfer.” My dad kept his eyes on the floor. “Sure.” From start to finish, just one word. Sure. Uncle Paul took a slow sip from his coffee mug, then finally glanced my way. “Tina, honey, don’t be upset. Your grandpa leaving the house to your brother—that’s just how things are done. Derek is the eldest grandson. He’s the one who has to carry the Gallagher family name. You? You’ll get married eventually, and your husband’s family will provide a house.” I just looked at him. He offered a patronizing smile and added, “Besides, your grandpa told you to be a decent person. That’s a beautiful sentiment, isn’t it? Worth far more than a house.” Aunt Carol chimed in from the hallway. “Exactly. Character is more important than anything. Your grandpa loved you, that’s why he left you with wisdom. He gave your brother brick and mortar, but he gave you a moral compass. A moral compass takes you further than any house.” My lips parted. I wanted to say something. But Derek beat me to it. “Alright, Uncle Paul, Aunt Carol, let it go. Tina isn’t the kind of girl to be unreasonable about this.” He turned his gaze to me. “Tina, you know what Grandpa meant. I’m the eldest grandson. This house was always going to be passed down to me. You’ve worked hard taking care of him these past few years. Tell you what, I’ll take you out for a nice dinner sometime soon to say thanks.” A nice dinner. Seven years. And he was offering to buy me an appetizer and an entree. Monica was already by the front door, slipping on her heels. She didn’t even look up as she spoke. “Let’s go, Derek. We have to be at the zoning office first thing tomorrow.” As she walked past me, she paused for a fraction of a second. “Don’t take it to heart, Tina. Grandpa’s last words to you were really sweet. Be a decent person. So practical.” She laughed. It was a light, airy sound. Like she was brushing a speck of dust off her sleeve. One by one, they filed out. As my aunt and uncle walked down the driveway, I could hear them murmuring, “The old man was sharp right up to the end. It’s the right call.” My dad was the last to leave. He stood in the doorway, his back to me. He hesitated. For a second, I thought he was going to say something real. Instead, he said, “Make sure you pack up Grandpa’s room.” Then, he shut the door. I was left alone in the living room. The photocopy of the will was still sitting on the coffee table. I sank into the worn armchair by the window. The wicker frame groaned under my weight. It was Grandpa’s favorite chair. The fabric on the cushion was completely frayed at the edges; it was the third cushion I had bought for him just last year. His favorite mug was still on the side table. There was a dark ring of tea stained into the ceramic, built up over years of use. I had tried to scrub it out so many times. It never faded. Grandpa used to tell me, Stop scrubbing, Tina. A cup with a good stain makes the best tea. I picked up the mug and held it in both hands. It was freezing cold. The whole house was freezing cold. 2. It started seven years ago, when Grandpa lost his ability to take care of himself. He was seventy-nine. He slipped on the icy porch that winter and fractured his hip. After the surgery, the doctor told us the recovery would take at least six months, requiring round-the-clock care. That night, my dad called Derek. I heard my brother’s voice through the receiver. “Dad, I’m in the middle of a huge expansion at the store right now. I can’t get away. Have Tina cover things for a bit. Once things settle down, I’ll come back and take over.” Once things settle down. I waited seven years. It wasn’t that I didn’t ask. The first year, I called him six times. He was always too busy. By the second year, I stopped calling. Three days after Grandpa’s surgery, he needed help getting to the bathroom. At 2:00 AM, he called my name. I dragged myself up from the folding cot I’d set up in his living room. I helped him sit up, then pulled him to his feet, and we shuffled, inch by agonizing inch, toward the bathroom. He was incredibly heavy. I weighed a hundred and ten pounds. He weighed over a hundred and fifty. When he leaned his weight onto my shoulder, I could hear his bones grinding. That winter, I woke up at least twice every single night. Eventually, I learned to keep a urinal by the bed. But Grandpa hated using it. He said he hadn’t lost his dignity entirely yet. So, I kept lifting him. Every night. Every winter. Over those seven years, Grandpa was hospitalized four times. First, the hip. Second, pneumonia. Third, a bowel obstruction. Fourth, the end. Every time he was admitted, I used up all my paid time off to sleep in the chair next to his bed. During his third hospitalization, my department director called me into his office. “Tina, the firm is selecting someone for the executive leadership track. It was going to be you, but... you’ve taken twelve days off this month alone.” He didn’t need to finish. I just nodded and said I understood. The promotion went to Brittany, a girl who had been hired two years after me. I never told anyone in my family about it. Who was I supposed to tell? My mom died when I was young. My dad didn’t care. My brother was a ghost. Every month, the moment my paycheck hit my account, the first deduction went to Grandpa’s pharmacy runs. In the beginning, it was just blood pressure and cholesterol meds. Then, stomach pills. Then, sleeping pills. In the last year, heavy painkillers. His pharmacy bill climbed from $200 a month to over $800. Add in the nutritional shakes, the adult diapers, the waterproof bed pads, the seasonal clothes. My take-home pay was $4,500. After his medical supplies and groceries, I had maybe $1,500 left. My rent was $1,100. The rest was for me to survive on. For seven years, I didn’t buy a single piece of clothing that cost more than fifty dollars. Once, my coworkers organized a weekend trip to Napa. I told them I couldn’t go because my stomach had been acting up. The truth was, I couldn’t afford the $300 split for the Airbnb. I never kept a running tally of these things with my family. Not because I didn’t want to. But because even if I did, no one would listen. One Thanksgiving, I finally gathered the courage to bring it up at the dinner table. I looked at my brother and said, “Derek, do you think you could start chipping in a little for Grandpa’s medical expenses?” My dad answered before Derek even opened his mouth. “Taking care of your grandfather is your duty as a granddaughter. Your brother is out there building a business, making real money. Stop nickel-and-diming him over groceries.” Nickel-and-diming. Derek didn’t say a word. He just kept eating. Monica looked down at her plate, a faint smirk playing on her lips. I saw it. Later that evening, when it came time for holiday gifts— Derek’s son got a crisp hundred-dollar bill inside a glittering card from my dad. I got nothing. Not a twenty. Nothing. From the year I turned twenty-three and started taking care of Grandpa, the gifts stopped. My dad’s reasoning? “You have a full-time job now. You don’t need presents.” Derek’s kid was four that year. He didn’t even know how to spell his own name yet. I was twenty-three, waking up in the dead of night to haul a grown man to the toilet. One of us got a hundred dollars. The other got nothing. Who actually needed the money more? No one asked that question. They didn’t have to. In their minds, the answer was already set in stone: This is just how it is. During Grandpa’s most dangerous hospital stay, his oxygen levels suddenly tanked to 85 at three in the morning. He was gasping, his chest heaving. I had to pull him upright by myself and pound on his back to clear his lungs, frantically mashing the call button with my other hand. When the nurse rushed in, she yelled at me to go find the resident doctor. The corridor was endlessly long. As I sprinted, one of my flats flew off. I didn’t stop. I ran the rest of the way to the on-call room with one bare foot slapping against the freezing linoleum. That night, I made eleven phone calls. My dad—sent to voicemail. My brother—sent to voicemail. Uncle Paul—phone turned off. In the end, it was a stranger—the exhausted daughter of the patient in the next bed—who helped me push Grandpa’s gurney down to the imaging wing. My dad finally showed up the next afternoon. He looked at Grandpa, then looked at me, and frowned. “Why didn’t you call sooner?” I looked him dead in the eye and said, “I called eleven times.” He didn’t say anything to that. He sat in the plastic chair for twenty minutes, then left. 3. Word about the will spread fast. I didn’t tell anyone. It was Aunt Carol. She was the kind of woman who couldn’t let a piece of gossip sit overnight. The next morning, I ran into Mrs. Higgins from down the street while taking out the trash. She grabbed my arm. “Tina, honey, I heard your grandpa left the whole Lakefront property to your brother?” I didn’t answer. “Well, you know how it is. Derek is the boy. The older generation is just traditional like that. Don’t let it eat you up, okay?” She patted my arm and walked away. That afternoon, Uncle Paul called me again. “Tina, don’t cause any trouble with the deed transfer. Your dad made it clear—this was your grandpa’s final wish, and we have to respect it. Just keep your head down and live your own life.” Live your own life. Just like Be a decent person. They were both just polite ways of telling me to shut up. Three days later, I went back to the office. In the breakroom, Brittany—the same Brittany who took the promotion that was meant for me—slid into the chair across from mine. “Hey Tess, I heard your family is dealing with an inheritance thing?” Gossip travels at the speed of light. I took a bite of my salad. “Yeah.” “So, what’d you get?” My fork stopped mid-air. “My grandpa told me to be a decent person.” Brittany blinked, confused. Then she let out a bark of laughter. “Wait, seriously? Just a quote? What about your brother?” “The house.” Her jaw dropped. “Holy shit... your brother is a total—” She didn’t finish the sentence, but I could read her expression perfectly. It wasn’t sympathy. It was the thrilling, popcorn-eating entertainment of “Wow, that sucks for you, but this tea is piping hot.” That afternoon, my dad sent me a text. “Tina, we’re doing a family lunch this weekend. Derek’s treating. Don’t cause a scene. Stop being so emotional.” Stop being so emotional. I took care of Grandpa for seven years. I drained my meager savings on his copays and adult diapers. To be close to him, I moved into a dump of an apartment just ten minutes from his house, paying $500 more in rent than I would have further out. To manage a full-time job and round-the-clock caregiving, I turned down every happy hour, every networking event, every chance at a promotion. I hadn’t taken a vacation. I hadn’t been on a date. From twenty-three to thirty, I spent my prime years in total isolation. And my grand reward was a four-word sticky note. Meanwhile, my brother Derek— In seven years, he had visited exactly five times. First time: Grandpa’s hip surgery. Stayed for an afternoon. Second time: Christmas. Stayed two hours, then left. Third time: Grandpa’s birthday. Didn’t show, just Venmoed him fifty bucks. Fourth time: Grandpa’s final hospital stay. Stood in the doorway for ten minutes before Monica called to complain that their son was late for soccer practice. Fifth time: The funeral. Five visits. Totaling less than ten hours of his time. And he walked away with a $1.5 million estate. That was the Gallagher family way. I went to the lunch that weekend. I don’t even know why. Habit, maybe. The ingrained reflex of a stray dog that still comes when called. At the restaurant, Monica ordered half the menu. “Dad, I ordered the sea bass specifically for you. I know you love it.” My dad actually smiled. A rare occurrence. Derek placed a flaky piece of fish directly onto my dad’s plate. “Dad, whatever you need from here on out, just say the word. I’m planning to gut the first floor of the Lakefront house and totally remodel it. Once it’s done, you should move in. There’s plenty of room.” My dad nodded eagerly. Monica leaned in. “We’ve already been looking at floor plans, Robert. We’re giving you the south-facing master suite. We’re even going to put a massage chair in there for you.” A massage chair. While Grandpa was alive, neither of them ever mentioned buying him a massage chair. When his spine ached, I was the one who massaged his back with my fists. Half an hour at a time. Until my arms burned and went numb. Eventually, I bought a cheap $20 vibrating massager from Amazon. It burned through batteries so fast I had to replace them every two weeks. I barely touched my food. Monica raised her wine glass. “Come on, it’s rare we get the whole family together. Tina, raise your glass.” I lifted my water glass. She smiled warmly. “Tina, honey, let the past be the past. Grandpa is gone, and from now on, we need to stick together. You shouldn’t dwell on all that ugly stuff anymore.” All that ugly stuff. That’s what she called seven years of my life. My dad chimed in. “She’s right. We’re family. Your brother will look out for you from now on.” Derek grunted in agreement. Monica laughed. “Exactly. If you ever need anything, just ask Derek. He’s a homeowner now.” She said it so lightly. But under the table, her hands were busy. I saw her texting Derek. I caught a glimpse of the screen. Two words: The deed. After dessert, I got up to use the restroom. On my way back, I walked past an alcove near the private dining rooms and heard Monica whispering furiously to my brother. “You need to push the deed transfer through this week. Don’t drag your feet. Your sister looks quiet, but you never know what she’s scheming.” Derek scoffed. “What’s she gonna do? She makes four grand a month. You think she can afford a lawyer to contest a will?” “I don’t care,” Monica hissed. “Just don’t wait. Make sure your dad signs the waivers by Friday.” I stood in the shadows of the hallway. I didn’t move. When they stepped out, they nearly bumped into me. Monica’s face froze. But only for a second. The mask slipped right back on, bright and cheery. “Oh, there you are, Tina! Come on, they’re bringing out the cheesecake.” After that lunch, I went straight back to Grandpa’s house. The deed hadn’t transferred yet, so technically, my keys still worked. Grandpa’s room was exactly as we’d left it. The quilt was still folded the way I had arranged it on his last morning. The half-empty pill bottles still sat on the nightstand. I began to pack his things. The closet. The drawers. The bookshelves. Piece by piece. On the second shelf of the closet was an old, heavy flannel-lined barn coat he had worn for thirty years. The elbows were patched over patches. He could never bear to throw it away. I didn’t either. On his bookshelf were three editions of the Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. All gifts he had given me over the years. Elementary school. Middle school. High school. On the inside cover of each one, he had written the exact same inscription. Read well, Tina. And be a decent person. Be a decent person. Those four words again. It felt like it was the only phrase the man knew. I slid the dictionaries back onto the shelf. As I did, my fingers brushed against a cold metal box pushed to the very back. It was an old tin of Earl Grey tea. I popped the lid. The tea was gone. Inside was a manila envelope. Thick paper, sealed tightly with two layers of clear packing tape. Written across the front in thick black marker: For Tina. My breath caught. The envelope was incredibly light, but I didn’t dare open it. Because it was late. And because... I was terrified of what was inside. Was it just another note telling me to be a decent person? Or was it something else entirely? I slid the envelope under my pillow. I didn’t sleep a wink that night. 4. Twenty-seven days after Grandpa’s funeral. I received a call from an unknown number. “Is this Tina Gallagher? Hello, my name is Thomas Harrison. I’m an attorney, and an old friend of your grandfather, Arthur.” “Hello,” I managed, my voice tight. “Arthur instructed me to contact you exactly one month after his passing. We are three days shy of that, but given certain circumstances, I felt I couldn’t delay any longer. Can we meet?” I gripped my phone, my heart pounding against my ribs. “You knew my grandpa?” “I did. Arthur was my high school English teacher. After he retired, we kept in touch. Three years ago, he came to me and asked me to handle something for him.” “Handle what?” “We need to discuss this in person. It’s not something for a phone call.” That afternoon, I took a half-day off work and drove to Mr. Harrison’s law firm downtown. He was in his late fifties, wearing wire-rimmed glasses. Sitting perfectly center on his mahogany desk was a framed photo of him and Grandpa. They were standing outside my old high school. Grandpa was wearing that patched-up barn coat. “Tina,” Mr. Harrison said gently, folding his hands on his desk. “Three years ago, your grandfather asked me to do two things for him.” He pulled a thick, sealed file folder from his drawer. “The first thing was to notarize his Last Will and Testament.” I froze. “A will? But... the estate lawyer already read the will at the house.” “The document that was read to your family,” Mr. Harrison said, looking me dead in the eye, “was not Arthur’s final will.” He let that hang in the air for a moment. “Arthur executed a new will in my office three years ago. It is dated two years after the document your family currently possesses.” He pushed the thick folder across the desk toward me. “The second thing... Arthur asked me to tell you that ‘Be a decent person’ wasn’t just a piece of advice.” He watched my face closely. “It’s a key.” My hands began to shake. Mr. Harrison leaned forward. “Arthur kept an old steel floor safe in the back of his closet. The combination is a four-digit number.” “What numbers?” I asked, my voice barely a whisper. “He never told me. He said you would know how to figure it out. He said the code is hidden inside those four words.” Be a decent person. Four words. Four digits. I stared at the thick folder resting between us. I couldn’t bring myself to touch it. Mr. Harrison softened his tone. “Arthur said something to me that day, Tina. He said, ‘My granddaughter hasn’t uttered a single word of complaint in seven years of lifting my dead weight. I’ll be damned if I let her walk away with nothing.’” His voice was perfectly steady. But my vision blurred, the edges of the room swimming in tears. I didn’t cry. I bit the inside of my cheek and stared down at the framed photo on the desk. Grandpa was smiling in the picture. Wearing that old coat. Seven years. He knew. He knew everything. 5. I drove straight from the law firm back to the Lakefront house. Monica hadn’t finalized the deed transfer yet. I still had the keys. I locked myself in Grandpa’s bedroom. The safe was buried under a pile of old shoeboxes in the deepest corner of the closet. I had seen it while cleaning over the years but always assumed it was empty. Grandpa used to say he kept his cash in it during the eighties, but that it had been hollow for decades. I knelt on the floorboards. The safe was rusted, the green paint chipping away. It had a heavy mechanical dial with numbers from 0 to 9. Four digits to unlock it. Be a decent person. I sat there for a solid minute, staring at the dial. How do you turn words into numbers? Syllables? Be (1). A (1). De-cent (2). Per-son (2). 1-1-2-2? I spun the dial. Click, click. The handle didn’t budge. I sat back on my heels. Grandpa was an English teacher. He spent forty years hammering grammar and vocabulary into teenagers’ heads. His favorite punishment for kids who slacked off was making them sit in the corner and count the letters of every word in a chapter. Count your letters, check your dictionary.
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