Lily used to burst through our front door like Christmas morning. “GRANDPA!” she’d shout, throwing herself into Jim’s arms. She adored him — his old baseball cap, his card tricks, the way he let her win at Go Fish. He was her “favorite person.” So when she came to stay for a week and refused to hug him goodnight, something inside me froze. At first, everything seemed normal. Pancakes, laughter, Lily narrating Jim’s coffee routine like a cooking show. But by the fourth day, she grew quiet. At dinner she barely spoke. When Jim asked to play cards, she whispered, “Maybe later.”
That night, he waited for her usual hug.
She stopped in the hallway. Looked at him. Shook her head.
Later, as I tucked her in, she whispered, “Grandma… he’s different.”
“Different how?”
“He was crying,” she said softly. “In the kitchen. He looked small.”
My heart sank.
The next morning I watched Jim closely — the forgotten sugar, the frustration during a simple card trick, the papers he hid too quickly. After Lily slept, I found them.
Neurology. Cognitive assessment. Follow-up.
“Early dementia,” he admitted quietly. “Maybe Alzheimer’s. I didn’t want it to be real.”
The next day we told the family. That evening, I explained gently to Lily that Grandpa’s brain was going through something hard.
“Is he still Grandpa?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said.
She walked to him, studied his face, then hugged him tight.
“No more secrets,” she said.
He held her, eyes shining. “No more secrets.”
For now, he was still here.
And for now, that was enough.