Stories: Auntie says you’re a bad person

When my husband Jake passed away, the house felt too big and too quiet at the same time.

Grief came in waves, but responsibility came like a storm. School lunches. Mortgage payments. Bedtime tears I had to soothe while swallowing my own.

Just when I felt like I was learning how to breathe again, the requests started.

First it was my sister-in-law.

“Jake would have wanted to help family,” she said gently. “Just a small loan.”

Then his brother called. Then an aunt I’d met twice. Even distant cousins somehow knew about the life insurance policy.

Their phrasing was always the same.

“Jake would have wanted this.”

As if they knew his heart better than the woman who’d shared it for fifteen years.

I tried to be polite. I said no carefully. I explained that the money was for the kids’ future—for braces, college, emergencies.

It didn’t stop.

One evening, my eight-year-old daughter walked into the kitchen, eyes red.

“Auntie says you’re a bad person,” she whispered. “She said Daddy would be disappointed because you won’t share.”

Something inside me broke.

I knelt down in front of her. “Sweetheart, what else did she say?”

“She said Daddy would want us to help everyone.”

I took a slow breath.

“Do you remember what Daddy used to say about our family?” I asked.

She nodded. “That we take care of our own first.”

“That’s right.”

The next day, I invited Jake’s sister over.

Not to argue. To finish it.

She arrived stiff and self-righteous.

“I don’t appreciate you turning the kids against us,” she started.

“I haven’t,” I replied calmly. “But you’ve been speaking to my daughter about adult matters.”

She faltered.

I placed a folder on the table. Inside were Jake’s handwritten notes—his will draft from years ago, scribbled before we finalized it.

Highlighted in his messy handwriting were the words: Everything for the kids. Always.

“He made his wishes clear,” I said. “You don’t get to rewrite them because it’s convenient.”

She looked at the paper. For the first time, she had nothing to say.

After that, the calls slowed. Then stopped.

That night, I tucked my daughter into bed.

“Mom?” she asked softly. “Are we selfish?”

I brushed her hair back. “No, baby. We’re responsible.”

“Would Daddy be proud?”

I smiled, even through the ache. “He already was.”

Because protecting our children wasn’t greed.

It was love.

And love—real love—doesn’t get divided by pressure.

It stands firm.

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