With Only $900 Left, Divorced Mom Bought an Abandoned Home – What She Finds Inside Changes Everything
“Oh, just old stories, nothing to worry about. It’s been empty a long time, that’s all.”
As Maya left the courthouse, key in hand, she felt a strange mixture of elation and terror. She had just spent every penny she had on a house she had never even seen up close.
She sat in her old car, then pulled out her phone and called Ethan’s school.
“This is Maya Coleman. I need to pick up my son early today. Yes, it’s a family emergency—a good one, actually.”
Twenty minutes later, Ethan climbed into the car, his face worried.
“Mom, what’s going on? Are you okay?”
Maya turned to him, hardly believing what she was about to say.
“Ethan, we have a home. A real home that belongs to us. No one can ever make us leave again.”
His eyes widened.
“You bought a house? How? With what money?”
“With all our money,” she admitted. “I took a huge chance. Do you want to see it?”
As they drove, Maya tried to prepare him.
“It needs a lot of work, honey. It’s been empty for years, but it’s on three acres of land and it’s all ours.”,
“Does it have a yard? Can we get a dog now?” Ethan asked.
“It has more than a yard, it has land. And maybe someday we can get a dog, but first we need to make it livable.”
The GPS directed them down a long, overgrown driveway nearly hidden from the main road. As they rounded a bend, the house came into view.
Maya’s heart sank. It looked even worse than in the photos. The white paint had peeled away, several windows were broken, and the front porch sagged dangerously.
She glanced at Ethan, whose excited expression had morphed into shock.
“Mom, we’re going to live here?” His voice was small.
Maya forced a smile.
“It needs work, but it’s ours. No rent, no landlord, just us.”
The front door creaked ominously as Maya turned the key. The musty smell of abandonment—dust, mold, and animals—hit them immediately.
They stepped cautiously into a large front room. Maya used the flashlight on her phone to look around at the fallen plaster, animal droppings, and debris.
Old furniture remained in some rooms: a sagging couch, a wooden rocking chair, and bookshelves with moldy books still in place.
Despite the mess, Maya could see that the house had once been beautiful, with detailed woodwork around the doorways.,
“Can we go upstairs?” Ethan asked, his voice echoing.
“Let me check if it’s safe first,” Maya said, placing her foot tentatively on the first step.
Upstairs they found four bedrooms. In one room, faded flower wallpaper peeled from the walls; in another, what looked like a child’s drawings could still be seen.
Suddenly, Ethan began to cough—deep, wheezing coughs that Maya recognized as an asthma attack triggered by the dust and mold.
“Let’s get out of here,” she said urgently. “We need to get you to fresh air.”
Outside, she retrieved his inhaler from the car. As his breathing returned to normal, Maya surveyed the property with a sinking feeling.
How could they possibly live here, especially with Ethan’s asthma?
As the sun began to set, reality set in. They couldn’t stay in the house tonight; it wasn’t safe or healthy. But they had nowhere else to go and no money for a hotel.
“We’ll sleep in the car tonight,” Maya decided. “Tomorrow we’ll figure things out.”
As Ethan drifted off to sleep under an emergency blanket, Maya stared at the dark silhouette of their house. Tears slid silently down her cheeks.
Had she made a terrible mistake? Had she risked everything only to end up homeless anyway?
In the morning, they were awakened by an old pickup truck. An elderly woman with silver hair emerged carrying a basket.
“Good morning,” the woman called. “I’m Iris Barnes. I live down the road. Brought you some breakfast, figured you might need it.”
Maya accepted the basket of warm muffins and coffee.
“Thank you. I’m Maya Coleman and this is my son, Ethan. We just bought this place.”
Iris raised her eyebrows.
“Did you now? Well, you’re the first person brave enough to step foot in there since Josephine Mercer disappeared.”
“Disappeared?” Maya repeated.
“Back in ’89, Josephine just vanished one day,” Iris nodded. “Left everything behind. Police investigated but never found a trace.”
She lowered her voice.
“That’s why folks around here say the place is cursed.”
“Do you think it’s really cursed?” Ethan asked.
Iris smiled at him.
“I don’t believe in curses, young man. But I do believe some houses hold on to memories. Josephine was an herbalist; she grew all sorts of medicinal plants on this property.”
As they spoke, another truck approached. A man with graying hair and a teenage girl stepped out.
“Morning, Iris,” the man called. “Sam Reynolds. This is my daughter, Lily.”
Maya recognized the name.
“Were you at the auction yesterday?”
Sam nodded.
“That was me. I flip houses sometimes, but when I saw you were so determined to get this one—well, seemed like you needed it more than I did.”
Maya felt a rush of gratitude.
“Thank you. I don’t know what to say.”
“Don’t thank me yet,” Sam replied with a smile. “This place is a monster. Brought some tools to help you assess what you’re dealing with.”
Maya hesitated.
“I can’t pay anyone to help. I spent every cent on buying the house.”
“Did I ask to be paid?” Sam said gruffly. “It’s just being neighborly.”,
For the first time since the auction, Maya felt a glimmer of hope.
Over the next few days, Maya discovered how enormous the task would be. Sam, a contractor by trade, gave her the truth.
“The good news is the foundation is solid. The bad news is pretty much everything else,” he explained. “The roof needs replacement, the wiring is dangerous, plumbing’s shot, and there’s enough mold in here to make anyone sick.”
“How much would it cost to fix all that?” Maya’s heart sank.
Sam hesitated.
“Minimum $30,000, and that’s with me doing the work at cost and you helping.”
The number hit Maya like a physical blow. She didn’t have that kind of money, and no bank would loan it to her.,
Sam scratched his beard.
“I’ve got a camping trailer you can use for now. It’s not fancy, but it’s clean and it’s got working plumbing.”
Maya swallowed her pride.
“We’ll pay you back somehow.”
“We’ll figure it out,” was all Sam said.
Meanwhile, Ethan and Lily had been exploring. They discovered an old well and remains of a large garden.
“Lily says some of the plants growing everywhere are herbs, not just weeds,” Ethan called out.
Lily nodded.
“My grandma taught me about herbs. There’s lavender, thyme, mint, and some others I don’t recognize growing all over back there.”,
Maya remembered what Iris had said about Josephine being an herbalist. Knowing the previous owner had been a healer like herself—a nurse—created a strange connection across time.
That evening, Maya and Ethan settled into the trailer.
“Why did you buy this place, Mom? Really?” Ethan asked.
“Because I was desperate,” she finally admitted. “Because I was about to lose everything. I’m sorry if I made the wrong choice.”
“You didn’t,” Ethan said with conviction. “This place feels important somehow, like we’re supposed to be here.”
The following days established a routine. Maya worked her morning shift, then cleaned the house in the afternoon. Sam tackled the most dangerous structural issues.
Iris brought food and more stories about Josephine Mercer, describing her as a brilliant, independent woman with a PhD in botanical biochemistry from Cornell.,
“She came here looking for peace,” Iris explained. “Beautiful woman, tall, with the most striking eyes—one blue, one brown.”
One evening, while cleaning what would be Ethan’s bedroom, Maya noticed a floorboard that moved slightly. She pried it up and found a small space underneath.
Heart pounding, she shown her flashlight into the cavity. There was a tarnished tin box, about the size of a thick book.
Maya hesitated, then opened the latch. Inside were three items: a leatherbound journal, a stack of photographs, and an ornate brass key.
Opening the journal, she read:
“Property of Josephine Eleanor Mercer, 1982.”
