Emma went out to throw out the trash one evening. The yard was ordinary, quiet, and gray. An old sofa and a few bags were sitting near the dumpsters. At that moment, a small truck pulled up to the dumpster. Two guys got out, quickly unloaded the battered chair, and drove off without even looking back.
Emma walked closer. The chair was old, the fabric was worn, the armrest was torn, but the shape was sturdy and the frame was intact.
“Strange, why throw something like that away,” she thought. “A little effort, and it will be as good as new.”
She stood there for a couple of minutes, then made up her mind and dragged the chair to the entrance. With difficulty, she dragged it into the apartment.
“Are you serious?” “Her husband, Daniel, was surprised when he saw the find. “Are we collecting furniture from the street now?”
“Look closely,” Emma replied calmly. “The frame is sturdy. We’ll replace the upholstery, and it’ll be a great chair. You won’t be able to get up from it.”
Daniel shook his head, but smiled.
“Okay, since you brought it, let’s try it. Only if there are cockroaches in it, I’m taking it back.”

They carried the chair into the room. Daniel took his tools and began carefully removing the old fabric. Emma, meanwhile, took out some thick, light-colored fabric, some thread, and set the sewing machine on the table.
“Who even assembled this?” Daniel grumbled, ripping out the staples. “It’s firmly attached, but it’s done haphazardly. It’s clear the work wasn’t done by a professional.”
He removed the upholstery from the backrest and moved on to the seat. When the fabric was almost gone, he suddenly froze.
“Emma… come here. Quickly.”
There was something strange in his voice. Emma walked over and leaned toward the chair.
What they saw inside sent a chill through them. 

He pulled back the stuffing, revealing a package. Then a second. And a third.
They were neatly folded wads of hundred-dollar bills, tied with rubber bands.
Emma and Daniel looked at each other silently.
“Where are they from?” Emma asked quietly.
“If the chair was thrown out, that means no one wants it…” Daniel said slowly. “That means whoever threw it out didn’t know about the money. Or…”
He fell silent.
“Or maybe it’s someone’s evidence,” Emma finished. “Maybe it’s related to the crime.”
The room grew unusually quiet.
“What should we do? Call the police?” she asked.
Daniel ran his hand through his hair and looked at the money again.
“Or… maybe buy tickets and go on vacation?”
They stood in the middle of the room, and on the floor lay something that could either change their lives or ruin it.
After I Gave Birth To My Kid Alone, My Mom Wrote “I Need $2,6K For New iPhones For Your Sisters Kids
Two weeks after I gave birth by myself, my mother sent me a message: “I need $2,600 to buy new iPhones for your sister’s kids. Christmas is important for them.”
I stared at the screen, reading the text over and over again.
My newborn daughter was asleep in my arms.
$2,600. For iPhones.
From the same mother who hadn’t called me once during my entire pregnancy. The same woman who ignored my calls when I went into labor at 3 a.m. and had to take an Uber to the hospital because I had no one else.
And now she wanted money.
My name is Maya. I’m 20 years old, and two weeks ago I gave birth to the most beautiful baby girl completely alone.
No mother holding my hand.
No father waiting nervously outside the delivery room.
Just me, a nurse named Patricia who stayed late because she felt sorry for me, and the overwhelming fear of becoming a parent when I still felt like a child myself.
Six months earlier, I told my boyfriend Derek that I was pregnant. We had been together for almost two years, and I honestly thought he would be happy.
Instead, he looked at me like I had just told him I was sick.
Three days later, all of his things were gone from our apartment. He moved to Portland with a girl he met online and blocked me everywhere.
Just like that, the father of my child disappeared.
That night I called my mother, crying so hard I could barely breathe.
You know what she said?
“Maya, I already have enough problems. Your sister Lauren just got divorced and is moving back home with her three kids. I can’t deal with your drama right now.”
Drama.
My entire life falling apart was “drama.”
My father spoke to me for about 45 seconds.
“You made your choices, Maya. You’re an adult now. Figure it out.”
I could hear a football game playing in the background.
The only person who truly helped me was my cousin Jesse.
He checked on me. He brought groceries when I couldn’t afford them.
“You’ve got this, Maya,” he would say. “That baby is lucky to have you.”
Sometimes I believed him.
The pregnancy was incredibly hard. I worked at a call center until I was eight months pregnant. I lived off instant noodles and free food samples from Costco.
At night I would lie awake with my hand on my stomach, thinking thoughts that frightened me.
But I tried to push those thoughts away.
Meanwhile, my parents helped Lauren with everything.
They co-signed her mortgage.
They babysat her kids every weekend.
They threw huge baby showers for her.
For me?