The knock came just before five in the morning, and before I even looked through the window, I knew it was my son-in-law, Garrison, standing outside in the middle of the worst snowstorm our county had seen in years. He only visited when he needed something, and for the last eleven winters, that something had always been my snowblower. I stood quietly in my late husband Foss’s old robe and let him wait, because after everything that had happened, I wasn’t in a hurry anymore. My name is Vesta, I’m seventy-one, and I’ve lived alone on our sixty-acre farm since Foss passed away eleven years ago. We built this place together, and after he was gone, I learned to handle every chore myself, including clearing snow from the long driveway that connected us to the county road.
Our daughter, Elaine, and Garrison lived only fifteen minutes away, yet after Foss’s funeral they slowly disappeared from my life. They never visited for birthdays, holidays, or Sunday dinners, but every winter, whenever a storm buried their driveway, Garrison expected me to bring over my snowblower. He never offered to help maintain it, never replaced the fuel, and never once thanked me properly. I told myself I was doing it because family should help family, even though I was always the one giving. Year after year, I drove through blizzards to rescue people who barely remembered I existed once the snow melted.
This winter was different because my old snowblower had finally broken beyond repair, and I had spent my savings on a brand-new commercial machine that could clear almost anything. I hadn’t told anyone, wanting one thing that belonged only to me after years of giving everything away. Then Garrison banged on my front door before sunrise, expecting me to drop everything once again because their driveway had disappeared under nearly three feet of snow. When I finally opened the door, he wasn’t there to ask for help—he was there to demand it. What he said next erased eleven years of patience in a single moment.
STORY CONTINUES HERE… ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️