He Arrived At His Mother’s Estate Auction With The Bag They Told Him Was Worthless

Chapter 1: The Auction Had Already Started When Samuel Arrived

The auctioneer had the old television in his hand before Samuel reached the tent.

Not in his hand exactly—the thing was too heavy for that—but his fingers were already hooked around the lot card taped to its dusty gray side, lifting the number toward the crowd like it belonged to anyone who could raise a paddle fast enough.

Samuel stepped off the gravel and into the shade of the white canvas tent with his dark bag banging against his knee.

“Lot thirty-four,” the auctioneer called. “Vintage television set, nonworking, estate condition. We’ll start at ten.”

Samuel stopped so hard the man behind him bumped his shoulder.

The television sat on a wooden barrel near the front table, its curved glass screen filmed with dust, its boxy back turned slightly toward the aisle. There was a crack in the plastic trim near the channel dial. A strip of masking tape clung to the top where his mother had once written, in blue marker, DO NOT MOVE WITHOUT SAM.

Someone had peeled the tape off.

A bidder in a tan cowboy hat chuckled. “Ten.”

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