A Woman Begged Me Not to Buy That Old Fridge — When I Looked Inside Days Later, I Finally Understood Why

When my old fridge broke, I scraped together every penny and bought a used one from a thrift store. A strange woman begged to buy it instead, but I got there first. Three days later, I found something hidden inside that made my heart pound.

I’m 63 years old, and for the past four years, it’s been just me and my grandsons, Cullen and Joss. They’re eight-year-old twins with sticky hands, endless questions, and hearts big enough to warm the coldest day. Cullen and Joss’s parents, my daughter Avelyn and her husband Merrick, died in a car crash when the boys were only four.

Since then, I’ve been both Grandma and Mom, doing my best to keep us going on a fixed income and more grit than money. People always say grandkids keep you young. I tell them grandkids keep you tired and running on coffee.

Every dollar gets stretched thin. We buy cheap cereal, wear hand-me-down clothes, and make do with what we have. The fridge in my kitchen came with the house back in 1992, a big beige thing that rattled like an old truck every time it turned on.

But it worked, and that was enough. Until last month, when things went wrong. It happened on a Sunday morning.

I opened the fridge to pour milk for the boys’ cereal, and warm, sour air hit me in the face. The light was out, and the milk felt warm in my hand. Oh no, I thought.

I unplugged it, waited ten minutes, and plugged it back in. Nothing. I said a quick prayer, turned the dial, and even kicked it.

Still nothing. By noon, half our food was spoiled and in trash bags on the back porch. I sat at the kitchen table with my head in my hands while Cullen and Joss played with toy cars on the floor.

“Grandma,” Joss said softly, putting his little hand on my arm. “Is the fridge broken?”

I laughed, even though tears stung my eyes. “Looks like it, sweetie.”

“Can we fix it?” Cullen asked, his serious brown eyes looking at me.

“I don’t think so, honey.”

We’d been saving about $180 for back-to-school clothes. Now it was fridge money, and it hurt thinking of the boys starting third grade in tight shoes. The next day, I packed Cullen and Joss into the car and drove to Briar’s Thrift, a dusty little appliance shop on the edge of town that smelled like oil and old coffee.

Inside, rows of used fridges stood like old soldiers, tall and banged up. The owner, a round man with kind eyes and dirty hands, greeted us. His name was Halden, and I’d bought a washer from him two years ago.

“What’re you looking for today, ma’am?” he asked, wiping his hands on a rag. “Something that keeps things cold,” I said, with a tired smile. “And costs less than my rent.

Hope that’s not too much.”

He laughed. “Alright. Let me show you what I have.”

He took us to a corner where an old white fridge stood against the wall.

It was dented on one side, missing a shelf, but the motor ran, and it felt cold inside. “One hundred twenty bucks,” Halden said. “She’s old, but she works.

I tested her this morning.”

I was about to say yes when I heard a sharp voice behind me. “I’ll take it.”

I turned around fast. A woman stood there, maybe 70, tall and thin with a long gray braid over one shoulder.

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