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My grandma left $100,000 to my greedy cousin. I inherited only her old dog—until I discovered the secret it was hiding.

I watched his face go from furious red to pale, to something like stunned humiliation.

He crumpled the paper in his fist, then slammed it onto the table so hard Bailey flinched.It slid toward me, and I could not help reading it.

It said, in Grandma’s looping script:

“My darling boy, you always reached for the biggest prize on the shelf. But the biggest prizes belong to people with the biggest hearts. Real wealth is love that does not keep score. I hope one day you understand this. Love, Grandma.”

Zack shoved his chair back so hard it scraped the floor.

“She screwed me,” he shouted. “She lied to me my whole life. I won’t accept this. I’ll contest the will. I’ll make sure you don’t see a cent.”He stormed out of the office, slamming the door so hard one of the certificates on the wall tilted.

The silence after he left felt huge.
Bailey exhaled, almost like a sigh of relief, and rested his head on my knee.

I sat there staring at the little metal tag, at the bank logo, at the numbers that apparently meant I was now a millionaire who still drove a 10-year-old car with a cracked bumper.

“I don’t understand,” I said finally. “Why would she give me all of that and leave Zack with only the house money and things?”

Mr. Harper sighed and took off his glasses, rubbing the bridge of his nose the way people do when they’re tired down to their bones.

“Your grandmother came to see me three years ago,” he said. “She talked about you bringing her to appointments, helping with groceries, fixing her television, sitting with her when she was scared. She said you never asked for anything, never hinted around gifts or money.””I would have done those things even if she left me absolutely nothing,” I whispered.

He nodded. “She knew that. That was exactly why she trusted you with the bigger responsibility. In her mind, this trust is not a lottery ticket. It’s a tool. She believed you would use it well.”

My eyes burned again, but this time it was a different kind of tears, not only grief, but this aching, heavy gratitude mixed with terror.

“I have no idea what I’m doing,” I admitted. “I work in claims. I barely manage my own budget most months.”Mr. Harper smiled. “Then your first step is to hire a good financial planner, not a sports car,” he said. “Your grandmother also left instructions that Bailey is to be cared for using this money if needed. She told me, and I quote, that the dog retires in style.”That made me laugh for the first time in weeks, this weird choked laugh that broke into a sob.

Bailey licked my wrist like he approved of the plan.

The weeks after that were a blur of paperwork, phone calls, and whispered gossip among relatives who suddenly had a lot of opinions about what Grandma “would have wanted.”Zack made good on his threat and tried to contest the will.

From what my mom heard, he burned through almost his $100,000 on lawyers, travel, and rage-fueled spending sprees before a judge finally told him the will was valid and that grief was not the same thing as being wronged.

Last I checked his social media, which I probably shouldn’t have done, he was complaining about fake family and posting cryptic memes about snakes.Meanwhile, I kept going to work, taking Bailey on slow walks around my neighborhood, and meeting with professionals whose offices smelled like coffee and printer ink.

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