I TOOK CARE OF MY SICK NEIGHBOR FOR YEARS, BUT AFTER HER DEATH, THE POLICE KNOCKED ON MY DOOR – IF ONLY I KNEW WHY

I TOOK CARE OF MY SICK NEIGHBOR FOR YEARS, BUT AFTER HER DEATH, THE POLICE KNOCKED ON MY DOOR – IF ONLY I KNEW WHY:

For seven years, I cared for Mrs. Patterson, an elderly woman abandoned by her own family.

They visited just enough to take money before vanishing again, leaving her heartbroken by the window, waiting for love that never came.

She had wealth but no warmth, and over time, she became my family. We cooked, played games, shared stories—she was my home in a way no place had ever been.
Meanwhile, I had no family left. But with Mrs. Patterson, my life had meaning.
Recently, she passed away.

At her funeral, her relatives shed fake tears, their eyes gleaming with greed. I went home, grieving… until a knock at my door changed everything.

Two officers stood there. “Are you the caretaker of Mrs. Patterson?”
A chill ran down my spine. “We need you to come with us.”
I stepped inside her house to find her entire family waiting—furious.
And then, her daughter pointed at me and screamed, “It’s her!”

I froze. Me? What had I done?

The room was tense, thick with accusations I didn’t understand.

The police officer cleared his throat. “Miss, we need to ask you some questions regarding Mrs. Patterson’s will.

My heart pounded. “Her… will?”

Her son sneered. “Don’t play dumb. We KNOW what you did.”

I looked around, bewildered. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

The officer sighed. “Mrs. Patterson recently updated her will. Her lawyer confirmed it was done legally, with witnesses present.” He handed me a document. “As of three months ago… she left everything to you.

My breath caught in my throat.

Everything?

Her home, her savings, her assets—it was all in my name.

I clutched the paper, my hands shaking. “That… that can’t be right.”

Mrs. Patterson’s daughter lunged at me, barely held back by another officer. “You manipulated her! You poisoned her against us! You stole what was OURS!”

I flinched. “You were never there for her! You only showed up when you wanted money!”

The room erupted into shouting.

The officer raised his voice. “ENOUGH.”

Silence fell.

He turned to me. “Do you contest the will?”

I looked down at the document. The shaky signature at the bottom was hers.

I thought about the lonely nights she spent waiting for them. The birthdays they never called. The moments we sat together, her frail hand in mine, as she told me how much she wished she had a real family.

She had made her choice.

I took a deep breath, lifted my chin, and said, “No. I don’t.”

Her daughter let out a choked scream.

Her son clenched his fists. “We’ll take you to court.”

I met his glare. “Go ahead.”

Because Mrs. Patterson wasn’t just my neighbor.

She was my family.

And now?

Her real family was paying the price for abandoning her.

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