The dedication ceremony ended with applause, photographs, and speeches that would appear in local newspapers for a few days before being replaced by newer stories. Yet as the crowd dispersed from the Nana Rose Center for Justice, I remained standing in the lobby, staring at the bronze plaque mounted on the wall. People kept stopping to shake my hand. Veterans thanked me. Reporters asked questions. Law students requested photographs. Through it all, I found myself thinking not about the courtroom victory, the inheritance, or even my grandmother’s final act of trust.
I thought about an old woman sitting beside a nursing home window, quietly watching snowfall collect on the branches outside while her own son and daughter-in-law rarely bothered to visit. The irony was almost unbearable. During her lifetime, Nana Rose had often been treated like an inconvenience. After her death, everyone suddenly wanted to claim a relationship with her. My mother had spent years dismissing Nana’s opinions as outdated and stubborn. My father viewed her mostly as a future financial opportunity. Yet the moment newspapers began publishing articles about the inheritance and the clinic, they started telling anyone who would listen how close they had been to her.