That was how we began.
Life with Grandma was modest and full.
She worked mornings at the laundromat. Cleaned offices at night.
On weekends, she repaired clothes at the kitchen table while I did homework.
Her sweaters wore thin at the elbows. Her shoes were held together with tape more than rubber.
At the store, she checked every price tag, sometimes putting items back quietly.
But I never lacked what mattered.
Birthday cakes with my name iced carefully.
Picture-day money tucked into envelopes.
New notebooks every school year.
At church, people smiled and whispered, “They’re like mother and daughter.”
“She is my girl,” Grandma always said. “That’s enough.”
We had routines.
Sunday tea, overly sweet.
Card games where she suddenly forgot the rules when I started losing.
Library trips where she pretended to browse, then followed me into the children’s section.
At night, she read aloud even when I could read myself.
Sometimes she fell asleep mid-page.
I’d mark the spot and drape a blanket over her.
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