When We Cleared Out

The owner turned it over again and asked where the rest of the set was.

I told him I had no idea there even was a set.

He stared at me for a second, then carefully pointed to the bottom where he’d scratched away a tiny spot of paint. Underneath wasn’t ceramic at all. It was metal.

“These were cast from bronze,” he said. “Then painted so they looked like cheap hobby pieces.”

I laughed because I honestly thought he was joking.

He wasn’t.

According to him, the figurine I’d brought in was part of a limited collection made by a sculptor whose work had become surprisingly valuable over the years. Not museum-level money, but enough that collectors actively searched for complete sets.

The important words were complete sets.

He asked how many figurines had been in the box.

I thought about it.

Six.

Maybe seven.

The antique dealer immediately told me to go home and find every single one before donating anything.

That weekend I dumped the entire box onto my living-room floor.

The yarn.

The buttons.

The cracked craft supplies.

Everything.

Hidden among all the junk were six more figurines wrapped separately in old newspaper.

Some had chips. One had a broken corner. But they were all there.

A month later I sold the collection through an auction house.

The final amount was more money than my sister had gotten for most of the furniture she fought so hard to keep.

I didn’t call her.

I didn’t brag.

But family news travels fast.

A few weeks later she phoned and casually asked whether I’d ever gone through that craft box.

I said yes.

Then she asked if there had been anything interesting inside.

For the first time since Mom died, I actually smiled during one of our conversations.

“Not really,” I said. “Just some of Mom’s little hobbies.”

Then I hung up before she could ask another question.

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