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𝗦𝗔𝗬 π—¬π—˜π—¦ π—œπ—™ 𝗬𝗒𝗨 π—Ÿπ—’π—©π—˜ Days of Our Lives #DOOL

After losing my wife, I stayed silent about the second house and the $480,000 she left me. a week later, my son told me to get ready to leave. he didn’t know I had already prepared for something very different…..
The funeral flowers had only just begun to fade when the calls started. Two weeks after we buried Helen, I was in my kitchen when the phone rang.
β€œDad, we need to talk about the house.” My son Mark’s voice carried the impatient tone of a teenager asking for money. Only now, at 38, he wasn’t asking.
β€œGood morning to you, too, Mark.”
β€œDad, let’s be strategic,” he said, ignoring me. β€œThe house is an underperforming asset. Selling now is the only logical move. We’ve already had it appraised.”
β€œThere is no mortgage,” I said, a fact I’d never shared with them.
He scoffed. β€œDad, please. We know you’re under strain. The money from the sale could help with Emily’s tuition, and…”
I stopped listening. I could picture him, sitting before a spreadsheet labeled: Dad’s House Sale, Proceeds, Split.
The next call came moments later. My daughter, Laura.
β€œDad,” she began, her voice syrupy sweet. β€œThink of it! You’d be right here with us, in our finished basement. And we could use the equity to… reinvest in the family. It’s about securing all our futures. A win-win!”
β€œLaura,” I said, β€œwhen was the last time you called me to talk about something other than money?”
β€œThat’s not fair,” she protested.
β€œIt’s been two months.”
I hung up. I stood in the hallway, staring at Helen’s reading glasses, still folded neatly on a paperback she’d never finish. My feet carried me to her study. The room still smelled of her perfume.
I pulled open the bottom desk drawer and my fingers found a pale blue folder. On the front, a yellow sticky note in Helen’s neat handwriting: If you’re reading this, you need to know what’s inside….. Watch: [in comment] – Made with AI