My half-sister Alyssa always had a way of making people feel small. Even at our father’s funeral, while everyone else spoke softly and avoided eye contact, she stood tall and confident—already certain of what she believed she deserved. When the will was read, her confidence turned into a smirk.
She inherited ninety thousand dollars. I inherited Dad’s cactus. For illustrative purposes only
Alyssa actually laughed.
“I have kids,” she said casually, as if explaining something obvious. “You’re forty-two and didn’t give him a legacy. The plant can keep you company.”
I didn’t argue.
I didn’t cry in front of her either. I just nodded, took the cactus, and went home. That night, I cried quietly on my kitchen floor, the cactus sitting on the table like a silent witness.
I felt dismissed—not just by Alyssa, but by life itself. Still, that plant mattered to me. My dad had kept it for years, watering it carefully, moving it into the sun every morning.
It felt like the last piece of him I could still touch. So I cared for it. I talked to it.
I treated it gently, the way he always had. Three days later, Alyssa called. Her tone was different—tight, rushed.
“Hey… listen, I’ve been thinking. That cactus would look really nice in my living room. As décor.
I’ll come get it.”
The request felt wrong. Sudden. Desperate.
I told her no. She hung up without saying goodbye. Nine weeks passed.
Life settled into a quiet routine again—until one afternoon, when I decided to repot the cactus. As I loosened the soil, my fingers brushed against something hard at the bottom of the pot. It wasn’t a rock.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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