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Grandma the ghost

🇮🇳priyanka_princes
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Chapter 1 - She’s gone

It was a cold and somber afternoon, the kind where the world seemed to move at half-speed, muffled by the weight of sorrow. Yuvika sat in the sterile hospital waiting room, her heart pounding against her chest like a prisoner rattling the bars. She was just 23, too young to know this kind of heartbreak, but old enough to carry the scars life had already dealt her.

Her grandmother lay in the room down the hall, fragile and pale, fighting a battle the doctors assured her she could not win this time. Yuvika's mind was a blur, replaying the words of the doctor like a cruel echo: "She doesn't have much time. You should talk to her, while you still can."

But how could she? How could she summon the strength to walk into that room and face the woman who had been her anchor in a stormy sea of loss? Her grandmother wasn't just family; she was everything. After losing her mother to a car accident—a tragedy that still haunted her dreams—Yuvika had clung to her grandmother like a lifeline. And when her father, in his well-meaning but misguided attempt to rebuild a family, married her late mother's friend, Yuvika had refused to stay. She couldn't bear the weight of pretending everything was fine, so she left, choosing instead the quiet, unwavering support of her grandmother's home.

Her grandmother had been her pillar, her shield, and her cheerleader through every trial life threw her way. She was the one who wiped Yuvika's tears, who believed in her when she didn't believe in herself. And now, as the inevitability of goodbye loomed over them, Yuvika felt paralyzed by grief.

The hospital hallway seemed to stretch infinitely, each step toward the room feeling heavier than the last. She stood at the door, her hand trembling as it hovered over the handle. What could she possibly say? Words felt inadequate, like they would shatter under the weight of what she was feeling.

Inside, her grandmother lay peacefully, her breathing shallow, her face etched with a serenity that almost felt cruel in contrast to Yuvika's turmoil. Her frail hand rested on the blanket, and for a moment, Yuvika just stood there, memorizing every detail, every wrinkle, every strand of white hair. This was the woman who had given her life structure and meaning when it felt like everything was falling apart.

"Yuvika," her grandmother's voice was soft, barely audible, yet it cut through the silence like a melody. Her eyes opened, tired but warm, filled with the kind of love only a grandmother could give.

Yuvika stepped forward, tears streaming down her face, her chest tightening with every breath. "I... I don't know how to do this," she choked, her voice breaking.

Her grandmother smiled faintly, lifting a hand to motion her closer. "You've already done it, my sweet girl," she whispered. "You've given me a lifetime of joy. That's all I ever needed."

Yuvika sank to her knees by the bedside, her head resting on the thin mattress as her grandmother's hand found its way to her hair, stroking it gently. The air in the hospital room felt thick and suffocating, filled with the mechanical hum of machines and the faint, sterile smell of antiseptics. Yuvika sat at her grandmother's bedside, her hands tightly gripping the frail, paper-thin ones of the woman who had been her entire world. Tears streamed unchecked down her face, her chest heaving with the weight of emotions she could no longer contain.

"You promised me," Yuvika said, her voice trembling, almost accusing. "You promised you'd be with me through everything. You said you'd never leave me. How can you break that promise now?"

Her grandmother's eyes, dim with exhaustion but still holding that familiar warmth, fluttered open. She managed the faintest smile, a glimmer of the strength she had always carried, even now as she lay on the edge of the inevitable. Her thin lips quivered as she inhaled deeply, gathering what little strength she had left.

"Sweet girl," her grandmother whispered, her voice barely audible. "I would never break my promise to you." She paused, her breath labored, but her eyes sparkled with a love that transcended words. "I will always be with you… here." With her trembling hand, she touched Yuvika's chest, over her heart, her smile soft but resolute.

Yuvika opened her mouth to protest, to argue, to plead—but before she could speak, her grandmother's hand slipped from hers. The faint smile lingered on her face, but the light in her eyes faded as her chest stilled.

"Grandma?" Yuvika's voice cracked, her heart pounding in terror. "Grandma!" She shook the still hand, refusing to believe what her eyes were seeing. "No, no, no! You can't leave me!"

The door creaked open as the doctor entered, his face grim but composed. He checked the machines, then placed a gentle hand on Yuvika's shoulder. "I'm so sorry," he said softly. "She's gone."

The words hit Yuvika like a thunderclap, shattering the fragile denial she had been clinging to. A guttural sob escaped her lips, her entire body shaking as the reality of the moment crushed her. She clung to her grandmother's lifeless hand, burying her face into the blanket, her cries raw and unrelenting.

"She promised," Yuvika choked out between sobs, her voice broken. "She promised she'd stay. She promised…"

But the room was silent now, save for her cries and the hollow echo of her grief. The woman who had been her rock, her guide, her everything, was gone. Yet, as her grandmother's words echoed in her mind—"I will always be with you…"—Yuvika realized that the promise wasn't broken. It had simply changed.

Her grandmother wasn't there in the way she desperately wanted, but she was there in the memories they shared, in the strength she had imparted, and in the love that would forever live within her heart. But in that moment, none of it eased the pain. Yuvika sobbed until there were no tears left, cradling the empty shell of the person who had meant everything to her.

And in the quiet aftermath, she whispered, "I'll carry you with me, always."