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I swallowed hard. My husband wasn’t like that. But maybe she saw shadows I didn’t.
“So instead of loving you, I judged you. Your clothes, your laugh, your ambition. I pretended you weren’t enough, when deep down I knew you were more than I ever dared to be. And I regret that.”
“The necklace was mine once. A gift from a man I loved before I met my husband. His name was Lucas. The L was for him. I added the T later—for the daughter I never had. I wanted a girl I could raise to be strong. I never had her. But in a strange way… I see her in you.”
That was the end. No signature. No goodbye. Just that.
I didn’t sleep much that night.
The next morning, I wore the necklace to breakfast. My husband looked surprised. “She gave you that?”
I nodded. “And a letter.”
He didn’t ask what it said. I didn’t offer. Not yet.
Days passed. My anger softened into confusion, then into something closer to grief.
A week later, we got a call from her lawyer. There was a reading of the will. She hadn’t left much—just the house, a modest savings, some jewelry.
That was me.
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