I Left $4.3M to Triplets I Have Never Seen, None of My Children Will Inherit a Dime

At 87, I left my $4.3M fortune to three young boys I’ve never met. My greedy kids called my lawyer to ask if I was dead yet so they could inherit my estate. They were about to discover who these triplets really were, and why I owe them everything.

I’m Carlyle, and I built my fortune from scratch. I spent 60 years turning a small manufacturing business into an empire worth $4.3 million. My wife, Marcy, stood beside me through every struggle, every triumph, and every sleepless night when we didn’t know if we’d make it.

We raised two children who had everything handed to them on a silver platter. Caroline, my daughter, dated a corporate lawyer and lived in a mansion three towns over. Ralph, my son, ran a hedge fund and drove cars that cost more than most people’s houses.

They never settled for anything average, and maybe that was the problem. When I collapsed in my study six months ago, my housekeeper found me and called the ambulance. The doctors said I’d had a minor stroke, nothing too serious, but I needed rest and monitoring.

I spent two weeks in that sterile hospital room with its beeping machines and antiseptic smell. Caroline called once. “Dad, I’m swamped at work right now, but I’ll try to visit soon.”

She never did.

Ralph sent flowers with a card that read: “Get well soon, Dad.” He didn’t call at all. When Marcy got sick three months later, that’s when I truly saw who my children had become. Marcy had been feeling tired for weeks, dismissing it as age catching up with her.

Then she fainted in the garden while tending her roses, and the tests came back showing late-stage cancer. The doctors gave her three months, maybe four if we were lucky. I called Caroline immediately.

“Your mother is dying. She needs you.”

“Oh God, that’s terrible,” Caroline said, her voice distant and distracted. “I’ll try to come by this weekend, Dad.

I have this huge presentation at work, and…”

“Your mother is dying,” I repeated, my voice breaking. “I know, I know. I’ll be there soon, I promise.”

But she never came.

Ralph answered my call on the fourth ring. “Dad, hey, what’s up?”

“Your mother has cancer. Stage four.

She doesn’t have much time.”

Silence stretched between us for several long seconds. “That’s really rough, Dad,” he finally said. “Listen, I’m actually in the middle of closing a major deal right now.

Can I call you back later?”

He didn’t call back. Marcy died on a Tuesday morning in October, the autumn sun streaming through the bedroom window she loved. I held her hand as she took her last breath, and in that moment, I had never felt more alone in my life.

I waited for my children to call, show up, and acknowledge that their mother had left this world. The phone rang two days later. I grabbed it, hoping it was Caroline or Ralph finally calling to grieve with their father.

It was my lawyer, sounding uncomfortable. “Carlyle, I need to tell you something that’s rather disturbing,” he said slowly. “Your children have been calling my office repeatedly, asking if you’re still alive.”

“What?” I couldn’t process what I was hearing.

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