My mother passed away one morning in late autumn, as gently as an oil lamp slowly going out. Throughout her life, she worked tirelessly and left no fortune, only a small, dilapidated house and a few old belongings.
The funeral was simple. My two older brothers and I—the eldest brother, the second brother, and I—sat down and talked about how to divide the few things that remained.
In the small room, apart from an old wooden wardrobe, there was nothing of value.
Only three worn wool blankets that my mother had carefully folded. I stared silently, my heart heavy. For me, those blankets were my entire childhood.
But my older brother mocked:
“Why keep these torn blankets? Better to throw them away.”
The second added:
“Exactly, they’re not worth a cent.” Whoever wants them, take them. I’m not going to carry trash.
Their words hurt me deeply.
Had they forgotten those winter nights when the whole family slept together and Mom covered each of us with those blankets while she shivered in her old patched coat?
I pressed my lips together and said,
“If you don’t want them, I’ll take them.”
The eldest waved his hand:
“Whatever you want, trash after all.”
The next day, I took the three blankets back to my small apartment. I planned to wash them and keep them as souvenirs. When I shook one of them vigorously, I heard a dry, “clack!” sound, as if something hard had fallen to the floor.
I bent down, my heart pounding. Inside the torn lining was a small, hand-sewn brown cloth bag.
With trembling hands, I opened it: inside were several old savings accounts and a few ounces of gold, carefully wrapped. The total sum exceeded one hundred thousand dollars.
I gasped.
Mom, who had lived her entire life in austerity, without luxuries, had quietly saved every penny, hiding her fortune in those old blankets.
I wept uncontrollably. All the images of the past came flooding back: the days when she sold vegetables at the market to earn a few coins, the times she rummaged through her purse to give me my school money. I always thought she had nothing… but in reality, she had saved it all for us.
When I went through the other two blankets, I found two more bags.
In total, almost three hundred thousand dollars.
The news didn’t take long to spread. My oldest and second brothers came to my house one night, their faces hardened.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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