He was forty at the time. Single. Working a decent job in tech. Living comfortably, but nothing extraordinary.
After the funeral, I met with our lawyer, Mr. Harrison, who had known Robert for decades.
“I’ll be direct,” he said, opening a thick folder. “Your husband left a considerable estate.”
Considerable was an understatement.
The factory alone was worth over a million dollars.
Our home, fully paid off and renovated, was worth nearly three million.
We owned a rental apartment bringing in steady monthly income.
There were investments. Savings. Even a piece of land inherited from his parents.
In total—over five million.
I sat frozen.
“There’s more,” Mr. Harrison added, sliding me a sealed envelope. “Your husband’s will.”
My hands trembled as I opened it.
“Leave everything to you,” Robert had written. “Daniel will receive his share when he’s ready—when he proves he can value what we built.”
I folded the letter and hid it away.
I didn’t tell my son.
Not yet.
I continued living simply. Same house. Same habits. The factory ran under a trusted manager. The income came quietly each month.
Daniel assumed I was living off a small pension.
He even offered to help me financially sometimes.
“I’m fine, son,” I would say. “Don’t worry.”
I believed I was protecting him.
But six months later, everything changed.
He showed up one afternoon, smiling in a way I hadn’t seen before.
“Mom, I want you to meet someone.”