Valeria Mendoza was just twenty-two years old when she accepted the strangest job of her life.
During the day he attended university. At night he worked arranging products in a supermarket. And in every spare moment he helped his mother take care of his younger brother, Mateo.
Mateo was only fourteen years old, but he was already used to hospitals. Medical treatments were expensive, and bills came in one after another, becoming increasingly difficult to pay.
His mother worked double shifts as a nursing assistant. She never complained, but Valeria saw reality.
He saw the bills accumulated on the kitchen table.
He saw his mother crying silently when everyone was asleep.
He saw the fear he was trying to hide to protect his family.
One night, after receiving another unaffordable medical bill, Valeria decided to look for any additional work she could find.
While she was browsing ads on the internet, one caught her attention.
“We are looking for a young woman to accompany a blind veteran every Sunday. Excellent remuneration. She must be willing to act like a family member.”
At first he thought it was a scam.
But he kept reading.
The old man had a granddaughter who had stopped visiting him years ago. The family wanted her later years to be filled with affection and companionship.
The person hired had to pretend to be a figure similar to a granddaughter.
Valeria felt a knot in her stomach.
That seemed wrong.
Almost cruel.
He was about to close the page.
Then he looked again at Mateo’s medical bill.
And he sent his application.
Getting to know Don Ricardo
A week later he met Laura Salazar, the veteran’s daughter.
“My father’s name is Ricardo Salazar,” she explained. He lost his sight six years ago. He is proud, stubborn and much lonelier than he admits.
Then he added sadly:
“My daughter stopped visiting him after a family argument. He still asks about her.
Valeria understood the situation, although she still felt uncomfortable.
“What should I do?” he asked.
“Visit him every Sunday.” Talk to him. Have lunch together. Make him feel like someone is still coming to see him.
“And pretend I’m your granddaughter?”
Laura looked down.
“Yes.
Valeria accepted.
The first Sunday
Sunday arrived full of nerves.
Don Ricardo lived in a small white house surrounded by flowers and trees.
When Valeria knocked on the door, he appeared almost immediately.
Although he couldn’t see her, he smiled.
“You’ve arrived.”
The young woman felt a weight in her chest.
“Hello, grandpa.
That word seemed to him a robbery.
However, Ricardo took her hand warmly.
“Come in, daughter.
The visit lasted more than four hours.
The veteran told him stories of his military service, the years when he repaired vehicles, fishing days and, above all, his wife Elena.
Each time he spoke of her, his voice became softer.
“Elena could make anyone laugh,” he said. Even me.
At times, Valeria forgot that she was acting.
A relationship that stopped being a lie
The Sunday visits continued.
The weeks turned into months.
And something unexpected happened.
Don Ricardo stopped feeling like a job.
He became someone important.
He remembered every detail she told him: her college exams, her mother’s long shifts, and Mateo’s treatments.
One afternoon he asked him:
“How is your brother?”
Valeria froze.
Then he understood that he no longer shared those things because he had to.
I shared them because I trusted him.
“This week has been difficult,” he confessed.
Ricardo gently squeezed his hand.
“He’s very lucky to have you.
Those words almost made her cry.
Over time she began to visit him even when it was not his turn.
I brought him cookies.
She sat with him on the porch.
Sometimes they talked for hours.
Others simply listened to the birds singing.
The lie began to disappear.
And the affection became completely real.
It wasn’t really his grandfather.
She wasn’t really his granddaughter.
But somehow they had become family.
Time began to run out
One Sunday, Valeria noticed something different.
Don Ricardo seemed weaker.
He was breathing heavily.
His voice trembled.
“Are you all right?” she asked.
The old man let out a small laugh.
“Growing old is not for cowards.
She smiled, though fear began to grow inside her.
Over the next few months, his health deteriorated rapidly.
Visits to the hospital became frequent.
Walking is no longer easy.
Then it was no longer possible.
Even so, every Sunday I wanted to see her.
One afternoon, as she was arranging a blanket over her lap, he took her hand.
“Do you know anything?” he asked.
“What?”
“You changed my last years.
Valeria’s eyes filled with tears.
“No, Ricardo… you changed mine.
The old man smiled.
They didn’t need to say anything else.
Three weeks later, Laura called her.
It was enough to hear his voice to understand him.
“Dad died.
Valeria cried for hours.
Not because I had lost a job.
But because he had lost someone he loved.
The unexpected call
A week after the funeral, he received a call.
“This is lawyer Alejandro Vargas,” said a formal voice. There is a matter related to Mr. Salazar’s inheritance.
Valeria was confused.
“I think he has the wrong person.
“I wasn’t wrong. Mr. Salazar expressly asked that you be present.
The following Friday he arrived at the office.
Several relatives were already there.
Some were watching her.
Others murmured.
“It’s her.
“The false granddaughter.
Valeria wanted to disappear.
Then the lawyer opened a thick folder.
Before he died, Ricardo Salazar left a special instruction related to Miss Valeria Mendoza.
Everyone turned their heads towards her.
His heart was pounding.
And then the reading began.
The truth that Don Ricardo always knew
The letter read:
“To my family:”
“Many will be surprised to see Valeria here.”
“Some know that she was not my biological granddaughter.”
“But I want you to understand something.”
“I knew it from day one.”
The room fell silent.
Valeria felt the air disappear.
Had he known all along?
The lawyer continued reading.
“The first time she came home I understood that she was not the granddaughter I remembered. People believe that blindness means ignorance. It is not like that. I recognized a different voice, different steps, and a different way of moving around the house.”
“I knew it.”
Tears began to fall down Valeria’s cheeks.
All those Sundays.
All those conversations.
And he had known the truth from the beginning.
“At first I accepted the situation because I felt alone.”
“But after a few weeks, Valeria stopped acting.”
“She started to be herself.”
“And that person brought more affection, patience, and love to my life than I ever imagined.”
Many relatives lowered their gaze.
The lawyer’s voice softened.
“Many people share your blood. Very few share your heart.”
“Valeria didn’t keep coming because she was being paid.”
“He kept coming because he cared.”
The gift that no one expected
Then came the part that left everyone speechless.
“My last wish is that a part of my estate be allocated to a fund for the medical treatments and future education of Mateo Mendoza.”
“No child should have to suffer because their family cannot afford the care they need.”
“This fund will be called the Second Chance Fund.”
The room was paralyzed.
Valeria could barely breathe.
The lawyer looked up.
“The fund contains two hundred thousand dollars.
The young woman burst into tears.
That sum would cover Mateo’s treatments, his rehabilitation and his future studies.
His mother would no longer have to work to exhaustion.
For the first time in years, the family could look to the future with hope.
But there was still something more.
The lawyer handed him an envelope.
The lyrics were unmistakable.
It belonged to Don Ricardo.
The Last Letter
“Valeria:”
“If you’re reading this, I’m probably somewhere telling stories and arguing with angels.”
“Thank you for every Sunday.”
“Thank you for every conversation.”
“Thank you for treating an old blind man as if he still matters.”
“The family is not always made up of the people we are born with.”
“Sometimes it’s made up of people who decide to stay.”
“You decided to stay.”
“And that made you my granddaughter in everything that really matters.”
“Love,”
“Your grandfather Ricardo.”
When he finished reading, there wasn’t a single person in the room who wasn’t crying.
Three years later
Three years have passed since that day.
Mateo is healthy and full of projects.
Valeria finished college.
His mother returned to normal work hours.
And every Sunday, Valeria continues to visit the small white house.
Now it belongs to Laura, but she always leaves the porch open for him.
Valeria sits in Don Ricardo’s favorite rocking chair and tells him how his life is going.
He tells him about Mateo.
Of the studies.
Of the new dreams.
And sometimes, when the wind blows through the trees, you can almost hear their voice.
“How is your brother?”
Then smile.
Because now he can respond exactly as he always wanted.
“It’s all right, Grandpa.
And deep in his heart, he feels that Don Ricardo already knows.
What do we learn from this story?
This story reminds us that true family is not always united by blood, but by love, loyalty, and constant presence.
It also teaches us that acts of kindness, even the smallest ones, can transform lives in ways we never imagined.
Don Ricardo understood something that many people forget: those who decide to stay in difficult times are the ones who really deserve a place in our hearts.
And, above all, it shows us that when we give sincere love without expecting anything in return, that love always finds a way to return multiplied. I was hired to visit a lonely blind veteran every Sunday, pretending to be his granddaughter. But after he passed away, his lawyer looked at me and said, “BEFORE HE DIED, HE LEFT ONE LAST INSTRUCTION ON YOU.”