I Was Paid to Visit a Blind Veteran and Pretend to Be His Granddaughter – Then His Lawyer Said, ‘Before He Passed, He Left One Final Instruction About You’

Desperation has a way of making unusual opportunities seem reasonable. Looking back, I never expected that accepting one peculiar job would lead me into a story I still struggle to explain today.

I was 23, carrying a full college course load while working to finish my degree and drowning in student loans.

When I wasn’t focused on school, I was helping my mom care for my younger brother, Caleb, who had serious health problems. I pretended everything was fine, but it wasn’t.

At almost 12 a.m., I sat at our kitchen table surrounded by textbooks, overdue notices, and hospital bills.

My homework stared back at me, untouched.

From the next room, Caleb coughed. The sound made my stomach tighten every time.

My mom stepped into the kitchen wearing her robe. She looked exhausted.

The dark circles under her eyes seemed deeper every week. She placed a mug of tea beside me.

“You should be asleep, Taylor.”

“So should you.”

She smiled, but it faded quickly.

Caleb’s treatments had drained everything we had. Mom worked nonstop: mornings at a grocery store and nights cleaning office buildings.

I worked at the diner, taking every extra shift I could whenever I wasn’t in class.

Even then, it wasn’t enough.

“Dr. Patel wants to try a new treatment plan,” Mom said quietly.

“That’s good, right?”

The pause told me the rest.

“It’s expensive?” I asked.

She nodded.

Neither of us said anything for a moment. Then her eyes landed on the pile of unopened mail.

She picked up an envelope from the hospital and opened it before I could stop her.

I watched her face fall.

“How much?” I asked.

“It’s okay.”

“Mom.”

She swallowed.

“Four thousand dollars,” my mom replied.

My chest tightened.

We didn’t have that kind of money.

We barely had $400.

Mom reached over and touched my shoulder.

“Focus on graduating,” she said. “We’ll figure it out.”

Then she disappeared down the hallway.

A minute later, I heard her bedroom door close.

I stared at the bill for a long time.

I grabbed my laptop and started searching job boards. I’d already applied for most of them.

Then I found an ad buried near the bottom of the page.

A family was looking for a young woman to spend time with an elderly, blind veteran.

The pay was incredible!

Then I read the final sentence.

“Applicant must be willing to portray his estranged granddaughter who’s in her early 20s.”

I blinked.

Then I read it again.

It felt wrong, but after staring at that medical bill, I clicked “Apply.”

***

A week later, my phone rang.

“Taylor?” a woman asked.

“Yes.”

“This is Margaret.

You applied for the companion position. I want to meet you.”

Two days later, I drove to a large house in a quiet neighborhood.

Margaret answered the door, looking polished, calm, and impossible to read.

She led me into a study.

After we sat down, she got straight to the point.

“My father is Walter. He’s 82.

He lost his sight after several strokes. His hearing isn’t what it used to be either.”

Margaret slid a folder across the desk.

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