Throwing his wife and their little son out into the street in the middle of winter, Artyom brought his mistress home and decided to brag to her about his wealth. But the moment he opened the family safe, he froze in horror
On that December evening, when Artyom shoved his wife and their six-year-old son outside, he didn’t even look back. Minus sixteen, snow, a wind that cut the face.
In his wife’s hands — just a thin jacket, the child’s little coat, and an inhaler. The boy was coughing so hard it seemed the next asthma attack might completely shut off his breathing.
Ignoring his wife’s pleas, Artyom slammed the door right in their faces. His new mistress’s bright laughter echoed through the apartment.
“Alright, let them go,” he said, wrapping his arm around her. “Now our new life begins. Want me to show you something?”
He led her to his study, slid aside the painting that covered the safe, and entered the familiar code. A click sounded — the door opened slightly.
Inside, there was nothing. Not a single saved penny. No documents for the apartment he inherited from his mother. No papers for the house in the countryside.
Only an old black-and-white photo: a man in work overalls smiling next to a lathe. On the back, neat handwriting: “This is your real inheritance. Nothing more.”
Artyom turned pale. Shock froze in his eyes. Everything he had betrayed his family for vanished in a second.
“Who’s that dirty worker?” the mistress scoffed. “Are you from some kind of dump?”
Artyom didn’t answer. Blood pounded in his temples. Panic swept over him — the lie he had built for years had collapsed.
Suddenly, loud, insistent knocking at the door.
“Artyom!” — his wife’s voice was calm but icy. “Open up. I need our son’s documents. Unless you’d prefer I call the police and explain how you threw a sick child out into the freezing cold?”
The mistress stepped back in fear. Artyom opened the door — his wife walked in without looking at him. She quickly gathered the passports, the birth certificate… and picked up the fallen photograph.
Then she turned and, without hesitation, said:
“This was the last time you saw us.”
She left without looking back.
When Artyom looked into the safe again, almost hoping he had made a mistake, he froze… In the back of the metal box, something glimmered… Continued in the first comment
Artyom stood motionless before the open safe. Empty shelves. No money. No documents.
Only the old black-and-white photo: a man in work clothes beside a lathe, mustache, honest and steady gaze.
It was his grandfather — a man who had worked his whole life in a factory and left the family a single inheritance: his lathe. The lathe that still stood in the old shed behind his grandmother’s house in the village.
Inside the safe was also a note. On the back — a familiar woman’s handwriting:
“If my son chooses the path of betrayal, let him know this: he will get nothing except what he earns himself.”
Signed: his mother.
Artyom went even paler. He gripped the safe door as if hoping a bundle of money would suddenly appear. But there was only dust.
“I don’t get it… is this it?” — the mistress pulled him by the shoulder. “Where are your millions? Where’s your house? Your apartment?”
Artyom exhaled slowly. He remembered how his mother had begged him to protect his family. How she warned him: “If you go down the wrong path, I won’t know you anymore.”
He had laughed in her face. And she… had transferred everything to her daughter-in-law. To the woman he had just thrown out along with their sick child.
The mistress snorted in disgust:
“Incredible. I ended up with a pauper.”
She grabbed her bag and slammed the door so hard the window rattled.
Artyom was left alone. With an empty safe. With his grandfather’s photo — the only thing that truly belonged to him.


