The sting of betrayal cuts deep, especially when it involves something as sacred as family legacy. I've seen this scenario play out in stories and real life—greed often blinds people to the emotional weight of what they're discarding. Maybe the person who did this saw only dollar signs, not the years of sweat and love your father poured into his work. Or perhaps they were desperate, thinking short-term gain outweighed long-term value. It's heartbreaking when sentimental worth gets ignored for cold, hard cash.
What makes it worse is the dismissive attitude—'pennies' implies they didn't even bother to research or respect the legacy's true worth. It reminds me of villains in shows like 'Succession', where family heirlooms become bargaining chips. But unlike fiction, there's no satisfying comeback here—just the ache of watching something precious treated like trash. I'd give anything to shake some sense into whoever did this.
Legacies are tricky—what's priceless to one person is negotiable to another. Maybe the seller didn't grasp its significance, or worse, didn't care. I've watched enough family dramas to know money complicates everything. Could've been spite, shortsightedness, or plain stupidity. What kills me is the 'pennies' part—that deliberate undervaluing feels like adding insult to injury. Like when comic shop owners lowball kids selling their dad's Silver Age Marvel collection. Makes my blood boil.
Ugh, this hits close to home. My uncle once sold my grandpa's vintage guitar collection without telling anyone, claiming 'nobody cared about old junk.' Turns out, one of those guitars was a rare 1959 Les Paul worth six figures. People underestimate legacies because they don't understand them—they see dusty objects, not the stories behind them. Your father's legacy probably represents generations of work, but to an outsider, it's just another asset to liquidate.
I'd bet money the person who did this either lacked context ('just clearing out space') or had some skewed justification ('he would've wanted it this way'). It's the same mentality that drives thrift stores to sell priceless antiques for $5—ignorance mixed with apathy. Makes me think of that episode of 'Antiques Roadshow' where someone almost donated a Picasso sketch to Goodwill. Some people just don't recognize value until it's gone.
2026-06-23 23:07:01
6
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Labeled a Fraud, I Unleash My Fortune
Washing Wheat
0
335
The first time I meet Solana Charvet's childhood friend, Tyson Hatch, he claims that he's the best fraud buster ever.
At the dining table, he keeps lecturing me.
"Men shouldn't overdress, you know. If not for the fact that Solana actually told me that you're her boyfriend, I'd definitely group you up with the gigolos together."
Solana keeps agreeing with everything Tyson says.
"You're far too flashy when it comes to your fashion sense. Just listen to Tyson and change your habits, yeah?"
I can't be bothered to listen to a word Tyson says, so I come up with an excuse to use the toilet. But on the way back, I hear Tyson giving Solana his verdict as a fraud buster.
"Solana, Charles' posture and the way he speaks are all clear indicators that he's a fake heir who has undergone training. He intends to get close to you for your money, you know!
"That watch he's wearing? And the sports car that's worth over a million dollars? How is it possible for a doctor like him to afford all these things?"
Fury burns in my gut. I can no longer tolerate Tyson's nonsense, so I dial my mom's number right away.
Right, have I mentioned that my mom's the richest woman in the country?
"Mom, give me five million dollars right now. I want to buy an agency that specializes in fraud busting and teach a certain someone a lesson!"
My father, Benjamin Ward, was bedridden, paralyzed, and unable to move.
The AI model he spent his entire life developing—a model powerful enough to cure terminal diseases—had been stolen and published under someone else's name.
Humiliated beyond endurance, he suffered a stroke and collapsed.
He couldn't speak. He couldn't even write.
I swore I'd find the thief who destroyed him. My girlfriend, Maris Dawn, wept and promised to help me uncover the truth.
But at a dinner party, when her first love proudly announced that he'd been specially recruited by a national research lab thanks to that very model, she immediately grabbed my arm, whispering, "Don't make a scene. Grayson just wants a good future. Don't ruin his life."
Grayson Vale smirked with disdain. "The old man was about to retire anyway. Think of it as recycling waste."
My vision went red. I charged at him, ready to make him pay for what he'd done to my father.
Maris tripped me before I could reach him.
She threw a check for ten million in my face. "Here's for your dad's medical care. Don't be shameless, alright? Grayson is a rising star. You're just a broke grad student. You should learn your place."
I tore the check apart, piece by piece.
That check could never buy the Dawn family a future in the world of science.
My fiancé of three years, Julius, sold me. To a black market auction in Vegas.
I was sold to another man for five million dollars.
Julius was begging me. "I owe five million," he pleaded. "If I don't pay up, they're gonna dump me in the river."
"You're a dead ringer for the Don of the Norling family's late wife. All you have to do is keep him happy, and my debt gets wiped clean."
"Don't worry," he said. "When he gets tired of you, I won't think any less of you. We'll still get married."
So they drugged me and delivered me to an estate that was all too familiar.
But here’s what he didn't know. The Don of the Norling family would kill for his daughter.
And I'm that daughter. The one he’s kept hidden all these years.
As soon as I receive my year-end bonus, I transfer 100 thousand dollars to my wife, Zoe Steele, so that she can prepare the holiday gifts for both families right away. I even tell her to buy the best quality gifts for our parents, especially the box of premium liquor meant for my dad.
On New Year's Eve, I rush home to have dinner with my parents. But weirdly enough, Dad, who's an avid drinker, starts having tea instead of liquor at the dining table.
This leaves me perplexed. "Dad, why aren't you cracking open a bottle of liquor for yourself during the holidays?"
With a smile on my face, I get up to my feet so that I can carry the box of liquor over.
"Zoe had someone buy the liquor for you, you know. I hear that the taste is exceptional."
"Stop!"
Dad slams his pipe against the table loudly, his face a starking shade of crimson.
"Edgar, don't ever send such gifts home. I know that life is difficult for you in the city and that making money is hard. We Kennedys may be poor, but we are people with pride!
"Now, everyone in the village is gossiping about us behind our backs! They claim that I've been boasting about your wealth!"
Dad's words confuse me to no end. After I unscrew a bottle of liquor, I sip from it, only to feel thunderstruck.
This isn't premium liquor at all! This is just mineral water packaged as liquor!
After my wife, Shannon Stewart, suggests that we each support our own parents, I set up a million-dollar retirement fund for my dad.
However, when I review this month's household expenses, I notice that every single payment is made for the father of Sean Gardner, her childhood friend.
"Sean's family is struggling. Why wouldn't I help them out? It's not like it's a lot of money." Shannon brushes it off.
There are 13 separate expenses of around 100 dollars each in a single month.
Yet when my dad needs 300 for medical bills, she prints out the receipt and tells me to reimburse the household account.
Tired of arguing, I toss the statement aside and head inside.
Then my dad's condition suddenly worsens, and he's hospitalized again. I rush to the bank to withdraw money from the retirement fund.
"Your father isn't the beneficiary of this fund," the bank employee states coldly. "Are you sure you have the right account?"
My mind goes blank.
How is that possible? Every cent in that account is my hard-earned cash.
The employee impatiently turns the computer monitor toward me.
The account name on the screen clearly reads, "James Gardner's Retirement Fund."
James is Sean's dad.
Fake Heir’s Two Hundred Fifty Bonus Sparked My Family’s Downfall
Ten Thousand Miles
0
217
I was the real son of the Lane family, lost and left outside for 27 years.
A year after I was brought back, I helped the Lane family’s company break into overseas markets, tripling its annual sales. However, at the end of the year, even the outsourced janitors got a 13th-month bonus, while the fake heir gave me just 250 dollars.
“The company made money, sure, but there are expenses everywhere. You’re just a low-level salesperson. All you do is talk. You should be grateful you got that much.”
I could not swallow it, so I went to argue with my biological sister, the general manager. She did not even look up. “Clive didn’t do anything wrong. You don’t have much education and no core skills. You were never qualified for management bonuses.”
My parents did not care either. They were too busy planning which country to take the fake heir to for the holidays.
I did not argue or make a scene. I just turned around and called Lane Corporation’s biggest rival.
“A salesperson who brought in 30 million dollars in the last year is looking to jump ship. Interested? I don’t have any other demands. I just want to see Lewis Corporation go under as soon as possible!”
The moment he decided to sell my father's legacy, it felt like a betrayal carved straight into my ribs. My dad spent decades building that collection—first edition books, handwritten notes, even framed sketches from artists he befriended. Every piece had a story, like the dog-eared copy of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' he read to me when I was sick, or the vintage 'Star Wars' poster signed by Carrie Fisher after some random con in '98. And this guy? He just saw dollar signs. Posted everything online in bulk lots, didn’t even separate the rare stuff. I found out when a stranger messaged me, thrilled about their 'steal' of a signed Bukowski collection. My dad would’ve wept.
What stung worse was the silence afterward. No apology, no acknowledgment that he’d auctioned off memories like they were bulk warehouse leftovers. I spent weeks tracking down buyers, begging to repurchase things—some refused, others jacked up prices. Reclaimed maybe 30% of it. The rest? Gone, scattered to strangers who’ll never know how my dad laughed when he found that 'Blade Runner' concept art at a flea market, or how he whispered 'this one’s for you' when he added my favorite manga volume to the shelf. Now I keep what’s left in a fireproof safe. Not because of value. Because it’s all I have left.
That line hits hard because it feels ripped from a family drama where buried secrets and generational tensions collide. I haven't heard of a specific true story matching it exactly, but it echoes so many real-life tales of inheritance disputes. My cousin went through something similar when her uncle tried to liquidate her grandfather's antique shop for quick cash, ignoring its sentimental value. Stories like 'Succession' or even classic novels like 'Buddenbrooks' tap into this universal fear—someone monetizing your history without understanding its worth.
What fascinates me is how often this theme appears in fiction. In manga like 'Oishinbo,' there's an entire arc about a character fighting to preserve their father's restaurant legacy from corporate buyouts. The emotional core rings true even if the details aren't biographical. Makes me wonder if the line you mentioned came from a screenplay or novel—it has that punchy, dramatic flair writers love for conflict.
Man, I stumbled upon this title 'he tried to sell my father's legacy for pennies' a while back when I was deep-diving into indie web novels. It’s one of those hidden gems that doesn’t get enough hype, but the emotional punch it packs is unreal. From what I recall, it’s a revenge-driven family drama with layers of betrayal and legacy—kinda like if 'Succession' had a baby with a gritty noir novella. The prose is raw, and the protagonist’s voice sticks with you long after you finish.
I think I first read it on a niche platform like RoyalRoad or ScribbleHub, but it might’ve migrated to Tapas by now. Some indie authors cross-post to maximize reach. If you’re into morally gray characters and themes of inheritance, it’s worth the hunt. Just be ready for some heavy moments—the title doesn’t lie about the stakes.
I just finished reading 'He Tried to Sell My Father’s Legacy' last week, and the antagonist really stuck with me. It’s this ruthless corporate figure, Vincent Graves, who’s obsessed with acquiring the protagonist’s family estate purely for profit. What makes him so infuriating isn’t just his greed—it’s the way he manipulates legal loopholes and plays mind games, pretending to care about preserving history while secretly planning to bulldoze everything. The author does a fantastic job of making him feel like a real-life villain, the kind you might encounter in a bitter inheritance dispute.
Vincent’s backstory adds depth, too. He wasn’t always this way; flashbacks show how his own family’s financial ruin twisted his worldview. It doesn’t excuse his actions, but it makes him more than a one-dimensional bad guy. The tension peaks when he starts gaslighting the protagonist into doubting their own memories of the estate’s sentimental value. By the final confrontation, I was practically cheering when his schemes unraveled.