I buried my mother with her most precious heirloom 25 years ago—placing it in her coffin myself. So imagine my shock when my son’s fiancée showed up wearing that exact necklace. Same green stone, same hidden hinge. It couldn’t be possible… but it was.
At dinner, I could barely focus. After they left, I checked old photos—my mother wore that necklace everywhere. I knew I wasn’t wrong. Claire said her father gave it to her as a child, which meant he’d had it for decades.
The next day, I called him. His answers were vague, uneasy. So I went to see him in person, bringing proof. Faced with the photos, he admitted he’d bought it 25 years ago from a man named Dan.
My brother.
I drove straight to him. At first, he denied everything. Then he broke. The night before our mother’s funeral, he had swapped the necklace with a replica and sold the real one for $25,000, believing it was being wasted in the ground.
Later, I found my mother’s diary. She had wanted the necklace buried—not out of sentiment, but to prevent it from tearing her children apart.
In the end, I forgave him.
And somehow, after all those years, the necklace found its way back to our family—through love, not greed.