Part 2: The man in the navy suit stared at the photograph like it was a weapon.
Part 2: The man in the navy suit stared at the photograph like it was a weapon.
His face lost all color.
The old woman held it steady in her hand: a faded image of a younger version of herself, a little boy in expensive clothes, and the boy’s father — smiling in front of a building that did not yet exist.
The same building they were standing in now.
“That’s impossible,” the man whispered.
“No,” the woman said quietly. “What’s impossible is how long your family believed they buried the truth.”
Security officers began rushing down the marble hallway, but no one dared touch her now. Not after the scanner accepted her. Not after the system locked down under her hand.
The man swallowed hard. “Who are you?”
Her eyes did not leave his.
“I’m the woman your father trusted before your mother betrayed him.”
The words hit him like a blow.
For years, he had been told his father was a criminal who stole from his partners, destroyed lives, and died where he belonged. That lie had built the family empire he now protected with tailored suits and private doors.
But the woman stepped closer and opened the cloth bag wider.
Inside was not money.
Not jewelry.
Not blackmail.
Just files.
Old paper files, worn by time, tied with string.
Evidence.
Bank transfers.
False signatures.
A prison confession that was never filed.
And one DNA report.
His hands started trembling before he even reached for it.
“What is this?” he asked.
The old woman’s voice softened for the first time.
“It’s proof your father never stole a thing. He was framed.”
The man looked shattered.
Then he saw the final page.
A birth certificate.
Not his.
A second child.
Born in secret the same year his father was sent away.
He looked up slowly, unable to speak.
The woman’s eyes filled, but her voice stayed steady.
“You spent your life guarding your father’s prison.”
She paused, then delivered the truth that broke him completely:
“And the only person who can save this empire now… is the sister you never knew existed.”
"THE REJECTED GIFT " - Full story

The mansion of the renowned millionaire was suffocating with tension. Seven-year-old Chloe stood trembling before her father, her eyes red and welling with tears. In her tiny hands, she held a simple gift wrapped in brown butcher paper, tied with a thin piece of twine. Sobbing, Chloe cried out for her dad, hoping he would accept the token she had painstakingly crafted all week.
But before her father could even reach for it, another hand violently snatched the package away. It was Elena—the sharp, cold stepmother. Without a moment's hesitation, Elena threw the little girl’s gift straight into the stainless steel trash can in the corner. The metallic clang of the lid slamming shut echoed cruelly through the lavish room.
Chloe screamed in sheer agony, a heartbroken wail filling the space. Disregarding the dirt, the little girl lunged forward, shoving her small arms deep into the trash bin to rescue her gift. As she tore away the crumpled brown paper, it revealed a naive crayon drawing: three figures holding hands beneath a rainbow.
The father rushed over, taking the drawing from his daughter's hands. Looking at the innocent, crumpled strokes, his eyes grew bloodshot with emotion and rage. When Elena stepped up, curling her lip in disgust, "It’s just a mess...", the father could no longer contain himself. He stood up abruptly, shielding his sobbing daughter behind his back, and roared directly into his wife's face with absolute fury: "OUR DAUGHTER DREW THIS FOR US!"
PART 2: “SHE’S ALIVE!”

“STOP—DON’T BURY HER!!!”
The sound hit like a shockwave.
The camera snapped violently—
A woman ran into frame, desperate, unstoppable, and threw herself onto the coffin as if her life depended on it.
“SHE’S ALIVE!”
Gasps erupted. People stepped back. The priest froze mid-prayer.
The father lunged forward instantly, rage overpowering his pain. He grabbed her hard, trying to rip her away.
“GET OUT OF HERE!”
But she clung to the coffin, her fingers digging into the wood, her whole body shaking.
“I saw her move… I swear…”
Her voice cracked, but something in it refused to break.

The wind sharpened under the open sky.
The brightness felt wrong now.
Too still.
Too quiet.
The father’s expression shifted—just slightly.
Doubt.
Then—
KNOCK.
A hollow, unmistakable sound.
From inside the coffin.
Everything stopped.
No movement. No breath.
“…what…?”
His voice came out broken, barely there.
Then again—
KNOCK… KNOCK…
Louder this time. Real.
Panic spread like fire. Someone dropped something. The crowd pulled back in fear.
The father climbed onto the coffin, hands shaking uncontrollably.
“OPEN IT! OPEN IT NOW!”
His voice cracked, desperate, terrified.
And then—
From inside—
A faint, muffled voice.
“…dad…”
The world collapsed into silence.
And for the first time…
the father realized the worst thing wasn’t losing her.