The Inheritance
Some legacies are better left untouched.

When Claire returned to her grandfather’s mansion in Normandy, the house felt more like a mausoleum than a home. Dust floated in the golden light of sunset, and the walls seemed to whisper with the weight of unspoken stories. She’d come to sign a few papers, collect her inheritance, and leave — nothing more.
The lawyer handed her a small key, tarnished with age. “Your grandfather asked that you open the safe yourself,” he said, avoiding her eyes. In the study, behind the old bookshelf, she found it — a heavy iron door she’d never noticed before. The key fit perfectly.
Inside, there was no gold, no bonds, no family jewels — only a single envelope with her name, and a leather-bound ledger. The letter was short: “This is the price of what made us rich.”
Her curiosity burned stronger than fear. She opened the ledger — and froze. Each page was filled with names, dates, and places. Hundreds of them. Her family’s fortune hadn’t come from trade or business as she’d been told, but from wartime deals, smuggling, and betrayal.
She stared at the names until they blurred into ghosts. Then, with trembling hands, she lit a match and dropped it onto the pages. The flames rose fast, swallowing the truth her grandfather had left behind.
When the firemen arrived an hour later, the mansion was gone. Only the iron door of the safe remained, standing in the ruins, blackened but intact.
Inside, untouched by fire, lay the key.



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