When I presented my grandson and his bride with a handmade gift at their grand wedding, she held it up and laughed in front of 400 guests. I turned to leave, humiliated, but then someone gripped my hand so firmly I gasped. What happened next stunned everyone.
My name’s Beatrice, but those close to me call me Bea. At 82, I thought life had run out of surprises. But what unfolded at my grandson’s wedding showed me that even at my age, the heart can still break in the most unexpected ways.
I live alone now in the small house on Willow Lane. My husband, Henry, built it with his own hands in 1963, and I can still picture him working away on summer evenings, shirt drenched with sweat, his grin as wide as the horizon. He’s been gone nearly 20 years, and my son, Arthur, passed from cancer a decade later.
Now it’s just me and Liam, my grandson. He’s all I have left, and he’s more than enough. Arthur’s widow remarried after the funeral and moved to Florida with her new husband.
Liam was 16 then, caught between boyhood and what comes next, and she asked if he could stay with me through high school. I nearly begged her to let him. Those were wonderful years.
I cooked his breakfast every morning, slipped notes into his lunch, and watched him grow from a lanky kid into a man who held doors open for strangers and called to check on me. He worked his way through college, became an architect, and stayed kind through it all. So when he called last spring, his voice trembling with joy, I knew something big was coming.
“Nana, I’ve met someone. I think she’s the one.”
I cried right there on the phone, happy tears from deep in my heart. “Tell me about her, dear.”
“Her name’s Cassandra.
She’s smart, beautiful, and… Nana, she’s so elegant. Her family owns half the businesses in town—real estate, boutiques, even that fancy golf club. But she’s different.
She’s warm.”
I wanted so much to believe him. I met Cassandra at a brunch her mother hosted at their sprawling estate. I wore my best dress, the soft green one with the pearl pin Henry gave me for our 15th anniversary.
When I arrived at their house, I had to stop myself from staring. It wasn’t a house—it was a mansion with grand columns, fountains, and a driveway that could fit a dozen of my little cottage. Inside, everything gleamed.
Chandeliers sparkled from towering ceilings. Servers in crisp uniforms carried trays of food I couldn’t name. The guests wore outfits that likely cost more than my monthly pension.
Cassandra’s mother greeted me with a smile that didn’t touch her eyes. “How lovely you could come. Liam’s told us so much about you.”
Her tone was like she was humoring a child who’d wandered into the wrong party.
Cassandra appeared next, all polished hair and flawless makeup. She gave me a quick side hug that felt like nothing. “Hi, Nana Bea,” she said, her voice sweet but hollow.
Her gaze flicked to my shoes, the ones I’d shined that morning. “Oh, those are so retro, aren’t they?”
“Yes, Henry got them for me back when—”
“How charming!”
She was already turning away, waving at a friend across the room. I spent the brunch trying to fit into conversations that had no space for me.