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We sat in silence, surrounded by the few belongings that once filled our childhood home with warmth. There wasn’t much—an old wardrobe, a few faded photos, and three wool blankets neatly folded in a corner.
Those blankets had seen everything. The winters when we slept huddled together, the nights when our mother stayed up mending torn edges, the mornings when she covered us before leaving for the market.
My eldest brother scoffed.
“Why keep these old things? They’re worthless.”
The second nodded, waving his hand dismissively.
“Who would bother with that junk? Whoever wants them can take them. I’m not hauling trash.”
I swallowed my anger and said quietly, “If you don’t want them, I’ll take them.”
But as it turned out, those blankets were far more valuable than any of us could have imagined.