Jason and I had a bond that went deeper than love — it was built on survival. He was just 17 when his parents kicked him out without warning or reason. He came to my door with a backpack, broken and crying. My mom welcomed him like a son, and from that day on, we were family.
We grew up together, leaned on each other through college, and eventually made a life in the house Jason bought. He was brilliant with computers; I worked in HR. We were opposites in the best way — until everything changed.
Four years ago, Jason was diagnosed with bone cancer. We fought it together. I picked up extra hours, handled the mortgage, and never left his side. But one thing hurt him more than the disease — his parents never came back. Not one call, not one visit.
After his funeral, they appeared on my doorstep. I expected awkward condolences. Instead, they brought a lawyer.“This house should come back to us,” his father said. “We’re his next of kin.”I could barely breathe.
After everything, they wanted his house? I told them it was legally in my name — Jason had made sure of that. But I said I’d consider their claim… on one condition: They had to answer the question Jason asked himself until his dying breath:
Why did they abandon him?They fumbled for excuses. “He didn’t want the life we wanted for him,” his mother said quietly. That wasn’t good enough. It never would be.Then I gave them the only thing Jason had left for them: a letter. In it, he wrote, “I forgive you. I hope one day you can forgive yourselves.” They left without the house — just a letter full of the grace they didn’t deserve.And me?
I locked the door behind them with my heart still breaking, but proud. Because I didn’t just protect the house Jason built — I protected the truth. And that, more than anything, is what he would have wanted.