Stories

You’ll bury it pretend, the gravedigger heard a child’s voice. He touched it and pulled his hand back.

For over twenty years, Sam Whitaker had worked alone in Willow Glen Cemetery, on the edge of a forgotten Ohio town. Life in the city had cast him aside long ago, but here, among the graves and the whispering birch trees, he found peace. The quiet, the honest labor, the smell of damp earth—it all suited him.

Each day was the same, until one afternoon, a voice like birdsong called out:
“Mister Sam!”

A thin girl of about eight bounded over a grave mound, barefoot and bright-eyed. Her name was Ellie, a local kid from a broken home nearby. She came often, never asking for much. Sam always kept a sandwich in his bag for her. She ate fast, like she hadn’t had breakfast.

“There’s my little sparrow,” Sam said, setting his shovel aside with a grunt.

“Can I stay here tonight?” she whispered that evening, tracing the hem of her dress. “Mom’s… busy again.”

Sam knew what that meant. Strangers, noise, danger. He saw bruises once and never forgot. “Of course,” he said gently. “Let’s get you warm.”

The next morning, he was digging a grave for a young woman. A sleek black car delivered the coffin—no mourners, just men in suits who barked, “Get it done quick.”

“It’s not firewood,” Sam muttered. “Give her a moment.”

Left alone, he sat smoking, Ellie nearby, watching silently. She crept to the grave and peered in.

“She doesn’t look dead,” she said.

Sam approached to close the lid—then froze. The woman’s skin wasn’t quite cold. He touched her neck. Faint… but there: a pulse.

He staggered back, heart racing. If not for Ellie…

He called an ambulance. Paramedics confirmed she’d been drugged—likely by family, for money. The woman lived.

“You saved her,” Ellie whispered later.

“No,” he said, pulling her close. “You saved me. Without you, I’d have buried someone alive.”

***

A month passed. Sam returned to his quiet routines. Ellie came by every day. As fall neared, Sam began saving pennies to get her ready for school—some notebooks, a backpack, maybe a sweater.

One afternoon, a knock came on the guardhouse door. Sam opened it and froze. A woman in a burgundy coat smiled warmly.

“Remember me?” she said. “You almost buried me.”

Her name was Caroline Hayes. The woman he’d nearly put in the ground. Now alive, with color in her cheeks and fire in her voice. They drank tea in chipped mugs while she told her story—how greedy relatives had tried to erase her for money, how a doctor had faked her death.

When Ellie burst through the door, Caroline’s eyes lit up.

“My other savior.”

Hearing they were headed to town to shop for school, Caroline insisted on driving. In the city, she bought Ellie a wardrobe’s worth of clothes and supplies—more than Sam could have dreamed of. At a café, Ellie ate her first-ever sundae, eyes shining.

Then came the hitch. “Which school will she go to?” Caroline asked.

Sam froze. He hadn’t thought about documents. Ellie’s mother wouldn’t lift a finger. His joy turned heavy with dread.

That night, Caroline couldn’t sleep. Her home was beautiful, but empty. Her second chance at life couldn’t be wasted.

By sunrise, she was at Ellie’s house. The place stank of liquor and rot. Her mother took the documents in exchange for cash without a second thought.

Caroline walked away with the papers—and a promise to give Ellie a real life. Weeks of court hearings followed. She filed for guardianship. Sam helped where he could. On September 1st, Caroline arrived at the cemetery, exhausted but glowing.

“It’s official,” she said. “She’s mine now.”

Sam’s heart swelled and sank at once.

“Come with us,” Caroline added gently. “She needs a grandfather. I… I need family, too.”

He hesitated—then nodded, his eyes wet. The next morning, the three of them walked to Ellie ’s new school. Caroline in heels. Ellie with bows in her hair. Sam in his best suit, back straight as ever.

As they stepped into the crowd of chattering families, Sam leaned toward Caroline.

“Look at her,” he whispered. “Ours is the prettiest of them all.”

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