I spent my whole life knowing I had no family, just an orphan with no ties to the past. Everything changed with one phone call, revealing an unexpected inheritance from a man I had never heard of and a devastating secret that would forever alter how I saw my parents’s tragic death.
I didn’t expect my life to change that Thursday afternoon. My phone rang while I was at work, and I thought nothing of it.
But when I picked up, the voice on the other end said, “Hello, Ms. Daniels. This is Mr.
Stevens from Stevens & Associates. I’m calling because you’ve been named in an inheritance.”
I paused, confused. Inheritance? “I’m sorry,” I said.
“I think you have the wrong person. I don’t have any family.”
“No, this is correct,” the lawyer assured me. “It’s from a Mr.
Greenwood.”
That name meant nothing to me as it wasn’t my parents’ last name, and I had no living relatives — none I knew of, anyway. “I don’t know any Mr. Greenwood,” I said.
“Well, he left something for you,” Mr.
Stevens replied calmly. “I’d like you to come by my office on Friday to discuss the details.”
I didn’t know what to think. Who was Mr.
Greenwood? Why would he leave me anything? I was 28 years old and had spent my entire life as an orphan, with no family.
I grew up in the system after my parents died in a car accident when I was just three months old.
I never had any relatives, no grandparents, aunts, and uncles. My parents were orphans themselves, raised in an asylum with no family of their own. I had spent years wondering if I was the only person left in my family tree.
But now, a stranger named Mr.
Greenwood was said to have left me something. I agreed.
After my parents died, I bounced around foster homes until I was about 12. No one wanted to keep me for long.
I wasn’t a bad kid, just quiet. I’d seen a lot by then — foster families who only wanted the state checks, homes where the other kids were mean. I learned not to trust people.
“You’re better off keeping to yourself,” one of the older girls had told me when I was 10.
“People come and go. You’ll see.”
She was right. No one stayed.
When I was a teenager, I stopped expecting anyone to love me or even stick around.
I’d become tough and independent. I had to be. School was my escape, and I worked hard, getting decent grades, and dreaming of the day I could leave the system behind.