In a Single Day, I Lost My Job, My Home, and My Father—But an Inheritance I Never Expected Changed Everything
Routine was my anchor.
I stocked shelves. Smiled politely. Remembered which customer loved oat milk and which one only bought cereal when it was on sale. I wasn’t dreaming big—I just tried to stay afloat. Every week, I tucked away a few dollars, not for any clear goal. It was just… what I did. A quiet act of hope, maybe.
Then one ordinary afternoon, everything collapsed.
“We’re downsizing, Adele,” my manager said without meeting my eyes. “I’m so sorry.”
And that was that. No speech. No second chance. I unpinned my name tag, laid it on the counter, and walked out of the store where I’d spent the last six years.
When I got home, something felt… off. The front door to my apartment hung open slightly, and the faint scent of an unfamiliar woman’s perfume lingered in the air.
He was waiting for me inside.
“Oh, hey. We should talk,” he said, like we were about to discuss dinner plans.
“I’m listening.”
“You’re amazing, really. But I think… I’m evolving. And you’re just… stuck.”
The words stung like cold wind on raw skin.
“I need someone who pushes me,” he added, eyes drifting toward the window—where “someone” was already waiting in the driver’s seat of his car.
I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I packed a single suitcase, walked out, and didn’t look back.
I didn’t have a job. I didn’t have a home. And now, I didn’t have him.
That’s when my phone buzzed.
“Your father passed,” the voice on the other end said. “The funeral is Saturday.”
My father. Howard. Technically, not by blood. But the only man who had ever earned that title in my life.
Within thirty minutes, I was on a bus out of the city, heading back to the place where I had once been saved. I had been fifteen when I met Howard and his wife—already hardened by foster homes and heartbreak. But they gave me warmth. They gave me family. Even when I doubted myself, they never did.
Now they were both gone. My mother had passed the year before. And now Howard.
I was an orphan again, just older this time.
The funeral was quiet. I stayed near the back, letting memories swell and crash inside me. I noticed Synthia—my adoptive sister—throwing sharp glances in my direction. She had always reminded me that I wasn’t “really” family. Her presence was cold and clipped, like she’d been inconvenienced by the grief.
After the service, I was called to the lawyer’s office. I wasn’t expecting anything—maybe a toolbox or an old photo. Just something small, something his.
The lawyer opened the will and began reading.
“As per the final wishes of Mr. Howard, the primary residence and all personal property within are to be transferred to his biological daughter, Synthia Howard.”
I glanced at her. She was already smiling.
But the lawyer continued.
“A portion of land known as the apiary—along with its hives, equipment, and rights to future honey production—is to be inherited by Adele Monroe. She is also granted full residential rights on the beekeeping property, provided she maintains the hives and continues operations.”
Synthia’s head whipped toward him. “You’re joking.”
The lawyer cleared his throat. “There’s more. The property in question is debt-free and includes a modest savings account for maintenance.”
My heart was thudding. The apiary? That old plot of land behind the orchard? I had forgotten it even existed.
But then I remembered the summers. Howard in his veil, gently tending to the bees. The golden jars of honey lined up on the porch. The hum of life all around. I had helped him sometimes, clumsy but eager. He always said bees had their own kind of wisdom, that they taught you patience and purpose.
Synthia scoffed. “She doesn’t know the first thing about bees.”
Maybe not. But I knew loss. I knew starting over.
So I nodded and said, “I’ll take it.”