Stories: My half-sister got everything when Dad died

My half-sister got everything when Dad died—his savings, the house, the jewelry.

All I got was a cactus.

She smirked as she handed it to me, the pot still dusty from Dad’s windowsill.
“I have kids,” she said, like that explained everything. “You’re 42 and you didn’t give him a legacy. The plant can keep you company.”

I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just carried it home like it was something fragile and sacred.

Three days later, she called me—voice shaking, suddenly sweet.
“Listen… I’ve been thinking. Dad loved that cactus. It should stay in the family. I’ll buy it from you.”

“No,” I said.

Her tone flipped instantly. “You’re being petty. It’s just a stupid plant.”

But I kept it anyway. I watered it carefully, turned it toward the sun, even talked to it sometimes when the house felt too quiet.

Nine weeks passed.

One Saturday morning, I decided to repot it. The cactus had grown crooked, leaning like it was trying to escape its own pot. I laid newspapers on the floor and gently tipped it out.

That’s when I saw something that made my stomach drop.

Taped to the bottom of the inner pot was a small envelope, yellowed at the edges, sealed tight. My name was written on it in my father’s handwriting.

My hands trembled as I opened it.

Inside was a folded letter, and behind it… a key.

The letter was short.

“If you’re reading this, it means you didn’t trade what I gave you for quick comfort. I’m proud of you.
This key opens the safe deposit box at First Federal. It’s in your name. Don’t tell your sister. She already took what she wanted.
You take what you deserve.”

I stared at the words until my eyes burned.

The next day, I went to the bank.

The box was real.

Inside was a neatly stacked file of documents—Dad’s private savings account, untouched, with me listed as the sole beneficiary. There was also a small velvet pouch containing Mom’s wedding ring… the one my half-sister swore “went missing years ago.”

I walked out of the bank feeling something I hadn’t felt in months.

Safe.

That evening, my phone rang.

My half-sister again.

“I heard you went to First Federal,” she hissed. “What did you find?”

I looked at the cactus on my windowsill, standing tall and sharp like it had been guarding the truth the whole time.

And for the first time, I smiled for real.

“Nothing you need to worry about,” I said… and hung up.

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