“Your Grandpa Told Me…”

After my grandpa passed away, my grandma didn’t shed a single tear. Not even at his funeral. She stood tall, calm, and strangely peaceful. Confused, I whispered, “Grandma, are you… not sad at all?” She smiled softly and said, “Your grandpa told me not to cry when he left — because he’d find a way to make me smile again.” I didn’t understand how she could smile when the man she’d loved for sixty-two years was gone. Yet, she stayed composed, even joking that Grandpa would’ve hated all the attention.

A week later, I visited her. The house smelled like lavender and old books, just like my childhood memories. She was knitting by the window when I asked, “How are you really doing?” She smiled that same mysterious smile. “Oh, I’m alright, sweetheart. He’s been talking to me,” she said. Then she told me about a note Grandpa had left decades ago before leaving for the Navy: “If you ever miss me, look for my signs. I’ll find a way to make you smile — always.”

Grandma said she always did find signs — their song on the radio, a daisy blooming out of season, even a heart-shaped cloud. After his death, she waited for one again. Then one morning, she found his old pocket watch ticking for the first time in years. The time? 6:17 — their wedding date. “See?” she said, touching it gently. “He told me not to cry. He knew he’d still find me.”

As the months passed, Grandma grew frail, but her spirit never dimmed. We spent Sundays sharing her love stories — wartime letters, kitchen dances, and stolen cookies. I realized then how rare it was to witness a love so strong that even death couldn’t break it.

One rainy Sunday, I found her laughing in the garden, pointing at a rainbow stretching over their house. “He did it again,” she whispered. “He always promised me he’d send one when it was time.” That night, Grandma passed peacefully. On her nightstand was the same pocket watch, still ticking at 6:17, and a note: “He found me again. Don’t cry for us — love never dies. It just changes rooms.”

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