Even at seventeen, the memory of that day is vivid. I came home from school to find Mom waiting — rare for her night shift schedule. She told me Grandpa Walter had passed at eighty-two, peacefully. Grandpa wasn’t just family — he was my best friend. Every Saturday, we worked on his pride and joy: a cherry-red 1957 Chevy Bel Air. I’d clean chrome, check oil, and dig candy from the ashtray while he reminded me, “Stick to candy, kid.”
The day after his death, Mom told me he’d left me the Chevy — then said I couldn’t keep it. “You’re not old enough to drive. It’ll be sold and the money split.” Watching a stranger drive it away felt like losing Grandpa twice. I promised myself I’d get it back. Ten years later, after college and saving every penny, I tracked it down to Michael Bennett, a collector. He agreed to sell it to me for $80,000, saying he could tell it meant more to me than money.
Driving it home, I checked the ashtray — empty, but with a yellowed envelope inside. In Grandpa’s handwriting: If you’re reading this, you found her again. I knew you would. You’ve always been my son. That’s why you get the Chevy. And something else — wrapped here. Find it the way I meant for you to.
Inside the tissue was a flawless green gemstone. On the envelope’s back, he’d written: I knew you’d find the candy. It wasn’t just a car he’d given me. It was truth, love, and one last gift no one could take away.