The passbook stayed in my nightstand drawer beneath spare keys, old receipts, and a watch I only wore on rare occasions, and over time it became something I thought about less often, though never completely forgot.

What I never stopped doing was visiting my grandfather every Sunday, because for twelve years those visits became the one constant in my life that nothing else ever replaced.

We sat on his porch in the summer with cold lemonade, inside at his kitchen table in the winter with strong coffee, and we talked about everything from work to family to the small details of everyday life that most people overlook.

“You keep things working,” he told me once, watching me describe a long day on a job site, “do not let anyone ever make that sound small, because the world depends on people who fix what breaks.”

He lived in the same modest house on the east side of Denver for decades, drove the same old truck for years, and wore clothes that seemed unchanged by time, and nothing about him ever suggested wealth of any kind.

Then he passed away in February, quietly in his sleep, leaving behind a silence that felt heavier than anything I had expected.