An Elderly Woman Asked Me to Marry Her as Her Final Wish – After She Passed Away, Her Lawyer Handed Me Her Hospital Bag and Said, ‘She Chose You for a Reason’

PART 1

Discover more

Child Care

Family

Life insurance options

When I first started working at the  nursing home, I never imagined that one resident would change the course of my life. Back then, I believed I was the one helping her. I had no idea she had been quietly helping me, too.

The nursing home was small, always carrying the scent of lemon cleaner, warm tea, and old paperbacks. After a year there as an orderly, it had begun to feel more like home than most places I had lived.

Growing up in foster care teaches you to recognize kindness in tiny pieces.

And that place had plenty of them.

Most of the residents barely noticed me at first.

Except for Gloria.

Gloria was eighty-two, stubborn, sharp-minded, and somehow able to make everyone around her smile without even trying.

The first time I brought her breakfast tray, she looked me up and down and said, “You’re new. But you don’t move like someone new. You’ve been carrying trays your whole life, haven’t you?”

I laughed. “Something like that. I’m Daniel.”

“Well, Daniel,” she said, patting the chair beside her bed, “sit for a minute. Tell me about yourself.”

No one had asked me that in years.

From that morning on, it became our routine. I brought Gloria tea after my shift, and she told me stories about growing up on a farm, about her late husband, and about dancing in the kitchen when the radio played the right song.

She never talked about visitors.

Because none ever came.

One evening, while stirring her tea slowly, she said, “I had a nephew once. Marcus. He stopped coming when he realized I wasn’t going to die quickly. But he’ll return the second he hears I’m gone. People are like that, Daniel. You’ll learn.”

“You don’t sound angry,” I said.

Gloria smiled faintly.

“Bitterness is a house I refuse to live in.”

The one thing I never understood about Gloria was the bag.

It was an old canvas  hospital bag, faded and fraying at the edges. She carried it everywhere. If a nurse tried to move it, Gloria would calmly reach out and pull it back.

“Is that bag special?” I asked once.

“Everything that matters to me is inside it.”

“Can I see?”

She smiled in the kindest way possible.

“Maybe one day.”

So I let it go.

Everyone deserves one private corner of the world.

Sometimes, I caught her touching the edge of a small photograph tucked near the top of the bag. But whenever she noticed me looking, she would close it quickly.

Sarah, another orderly and my closest friend at the home, teased me about Gloria one afternoon in the break room.

“You know she’s basically adopted you, right?” Sarah said. “It’s funny. She transferred here right before you were hired. Almost like she was waiting for you.”

“She’s just lonely,” I said.

Sarah raised an eyebrow. “Daniel, that woman lights up when you walk in. She thinks the sun rises out of your pocket.”

I didn’t know how to answer.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *