Inside was a folded envelope, brittle with age, sealed with a strip of yellowed tape.
For a moment, I just held it there, my fingers trembling inside the lining of the coat. The room around me blurred—the lawyer still talking, my cousins whispering, someone chuckling—but all I could hear was the faint crackle of paper as I pulled it free.
“Seriously?” his son snorted. “What is it, old coupons?”
I ignored him.
The envelope had my name on it. Not “nephew,” not a nickname—my full name, written in my uncle’s unmistakable, uneven handwriting.
Suddenly, the coat didn’t feel so ridiculous.
I opened it carefully.
Inside was a letter… and something else. A small, cold key slipped into my palm and clinked softly against the table.
I unfolded the letter.
You were the only one who came.
I swallowed.
I know I wasn’t easy to love. Maybe I didn’t deserve it. But you showed up anyway. That matters more than anything I could leave behind.
My chest tightened.
The key is to a safety deposit box. I didn’t trust them not to fight over it, so I made sure they wouldn’t even know it existed.
I glanced up. His children were already arguing over who got which portion of the $40,000.
Inside is something I should’ve given away a long time ago. It’s yours now. Not because you need it—but because you’ll understand it.
The letter ended simply:
Thank you for seeing me when no one else did.
I folded it slowly, my hands steadier now.
“Hey,” his son said, eyeing the key. “What’s that?”
I slipped it into my pocket and shrugged. “Just part of the coat.”
He laughed again, already losing interest.
But I knew better.
For the first time since he died, I felt like my uncle hadn’t played a prank at all.
He’d told the truth.
