The day my father returned from the hospital, he arrived quietly, left a document on the table: a promissory note for 900 thousand pesos, signed by him as a debtor. My two older brothers and I stared at each other, looking for excuses. The eldest said that he was spending everything on his children’s university; the second had just opened a hardware store and had no capital.

I—the youngest—had just gotten married and was still paying the mortgage. But seeing his completely gray hair and hunched back, I couldn’t say no. I took the promissory note, signed to assume the debt, and arranged for him to come and live with me, so I could take care of him.
A year passed, and life was not easy at all. I worked from dawn to dusk to pay off the debt; many times the food was just a plate of boiled nopales or beans. My wife stopped buying clothes, even sold the new motorcycle we had bought. In return, I saw a strange but sincere smile on my father’s face, enjoying spending time with his grandchildren.
On the exact day that marked one year since I signed the promissory note, my dad called me into his room and asked me to sit down. He took out of a drawer a letter-sized sheet folded in two and carefully placed it in front of me.
“Read it,” he said.
I opened it… and froze.
It wasn’t a promissory note. Nor was it a letter of thanks. It was a will—specifying that the entire three-story house in the center of town and a 300-square-meter plot of land in the town’s most commercial area would be left to me.
I looked up, and before I could say anything, my dad smiled,
“All my life I just wanted to know… who, in the hard times, would really support me.
At that moment I was moved and with moist eyes. And just then I heard footsteps at the door: they were my two older brothers. Their gazes were fixed on the will in his hands, and their faces changed color.
They stood still, motionless. The expression they had was no longer the indifference of a year ago, but a mixture of regret and bewilderment.
The eldest cleared his throat:
“Dad… why did he do that? We are his children too.
My father raised his head and, in a slow but firm voice, said,
“I know everyone has their problems. But when I really needed them, only the youngest dared to take them on. This house and this land are the reward for that sacrifice.
The second wanted to say something, but he was silent. They both turned and left, dragging their sandals on the floor, as if they weighed tons.
I was still sitting, my hands shaking as I held the will. My dad put his hand on my shoulder and squeezed it tightly:
“You don’t have to pay that debt anymore. That money… it was a test. I paid it off a long time ago.
It was then that I understood that that year had not only been a way to pay off a loan, but a test of loyalty to see who truly valued blood and family.
The next day, the news of the will spread throughout the family. Some said that my father had been wise, others accused him of being unfair. But I continued to take care of him as always, because I knew that the most valuable inheritance I had received… was not the house or the land, but the total trust that he had given me.
And that… no one could ever take it away from me.
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