

Priya leaned closer, holding her breath.
Amma spoke softly:
“When your husband filed for divorce, he asked me to sign the papers.
I refused. He stormed off.
A few years ago… he had an accident.
He passed away.
His ashes were sent from abroad… I kept them under the altar.”
Priya’s heart sank—but there were no more tears.
Then Amma added:
“In the closet is the deed to the land. It’s in your name now.
I never had any daughters—but you have always been mine.”
Amma passed away peacefully.
At the funeral, the whole village came to say goodbye.
Everyone wept when they saw Priya kneeling beside the coffin, a silent grief welling up from the depths of her soul.
Days later, Priya opened the cupboard.
Along with the deed, she found a savings account: more than two million rupees.
Amma had been secretly saving for years:
renting out the back of the land, selling a small vegetable garden, setting aside money from her pension—all in Priya’s name.
On the first anniversary of Amma’s death, Priya renovated the house.
She opened a small shop in the front yard and called it:
“Amma’s Oatmeal House.”
Customers paid what they could.
Some paid nothing at all.